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Chemical reaction

A chemical reaction is a process that leads to the chemical transformation of one set of chemical substances to another.[1] Classically, chemical reactions encompass changes that only involve the positions of electrons in the forming and breaking of chemical bonds between atoms, with no change to the nuclei (no change to the elements present), and can often be described by a chemical equation. Nuclear chemistry is a sub-discipline of chemistry that involves the chemical reactions of unstable and radioactive elements where both electronic and nuclear changes can occur.

A thermite reaction using iron(III) oxide. The sparks flying outwards are globules of molten iron trailing smoke in their wake.

The substance (or substances) initially involved in a chemical reaction are called reactants or reagents. Chemical reactions are usually characterized by a chemical change, and they yield one or more products, which usually have properties different from the reactants. Reactions often consist of a sequence of individual sub-steps, the so-called elementary reactions, and the information on the precise course of action is part of the reaction mechanism. Chemical reactions are described with chemical equations, which symbolically present the starting materials, end products, and sometimes intermediate products and reaction conditions.

Chemical reactions happen at a characteristic reaction rate at a given temperature and chemical concentration. Typically, reaction rates increase with increasing temperature because there is more thermal energy available to reach the activation energy necessary for breaking bonds between atoms.

A reaction may be classified as redox in which oxidation and reduction occur or non-redox in which there is no oxidation and reduction occurring. Most simple redox reactions may be classified as a combination, decomposition, or single displacement reaction.

Different chemical reactions are used during chemical synthesis in order to obtain the desired product. In biochemistry, a consecutive series of chemical reactions (where the product of one reaction is the reactant of the next reaction) form metabolic pathways. These reactions are often catalyzed by protein enzymes. Enzymes increase the rates of biochemical reactions, so that metabolic syntheses and decompositions impossible under ordinary conditions can occur at the temperature and concentrations present within a cell.

The general concept of a chemical reaction has been extended to reactions between entities smaller than atoms, including nuclear reactions, radioactive decays and reactions between elementary particles, as described by quantum field theory.

History

 
Antoine Lavoisier developed the theory of combustion as a chemical reaction with oxygen.

Chemical reactions such as combustion in fire, fermentation and the reduction of ores to metals were known since antiquity. Initial theories of transformation of materials were developed by Greek philosophers, such as the Four-Element Theory of Empedocles stating that any substance is composed of the four basic elements – fire, water, air and earth. In the Middle Ages, chemical transformations were studied by alchemists. They attempted, in particular, to convert lead into gold, for which purpose they used reactions of lead and lead-copper alloys with sulfur.[2]

The artificial production of chemical substances already was a central goal for medieval alchemists.[3] Examples include the synthesis of ammonium chloride from organic substances as described in the works (c. 850–950) attributed to Jābir ibn Ḥayyān,[4] or the production of mineral acids such as sulfuric and nitric acids by later alchemists, starting from c. 1300.[5] The production of mineral acids involved the heating of sulfate and nitrate minerals such as copper sulfate, alum and saltpeter. In the 17th century, Johann Rudolph Glauber produced hydrochloric acid and sodium sulfate by reacting sulfuric acid and sodium chloride. With the development of the lead chamber process in 1746 and the Leblanc process, allowing large-scale production of sulfuric acid and sodium carbonate, respectively, chemical reactions became implemented into the industry. Further optimization of sulfuric acid technology resulted in the contact process in the 1880s,[6] and the Haber process was developed in 1909–1910 for ammonia synthesis.[7]

From the 16th century, researchers including Jan Baptist van Helmont, Robert Boyle, and Isaac Newton tried to establish theories of experimentally observed chemical transformations. The phlogiston theory was proposed in 1667 by Johann Joachim Becher. It postulated the existence of a fire-like element called "phlogiston", which was contained within combustible bodies and released during combustion. This proved to be false in 1785 by Antoine Lavoisier who found the correct explanation of the combustion as a reaction with oxygen from the air.[8]

Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac recognized in 1808 that gases always react in a certain relationship with each other. Based on this idea and the atomic theory of John Dalton, Joseph Proust had developed the law of definite proportions, which later resulted in the concepts of stoichiometry and chemical equations.[9]

Regarding the organic chemistry, it was long believed that compounds obtained from living organisms were too complex to be obtained synthetically. According to the concept of vitalism, organic matter was endowed with a "vital force" and distinguished from inorganic materials. This separation was ended however by the synthesis of urea from inorganic precursors by Friedrich Wöhler in 1828. Other chemists who brought major contributions to organic chemistry include Alexander William Williamson with his synthesis of ethers and Christopher Kelk Ingold, who, among many discoveries, established the mechanisms of substitution reactions.

Characteristics

The general characteristics of chemical reactions are:

Equations

 
As seen from the equation CH4 + 2O2 → CO2 + 2 H2O, a coefficient of 2 must be placed before the oxygen gas on the reactants side and before the water on the products side in order for, as per the law of conservation of mass, the quantity of each element does not change during the reaction

Chemical equations are used to graphically illustrate chemical reactions. They consist of chemical or structural formulas of the reactants on the left and those of the products on the right. They are separated by an arrow (→) which indicates the direction and type of the reaction; the arrow is read as the word "yields".[10] The tip of the arrow points in the direction in which the reaction proceeds. A double arrow (⇌) pointing in opposite directions is used for equilibrium reactions. Equations should be balanced according to the stoichiometry, the number of atoms of each species should be the same on both sides of the equation. This is achieved by scaling the number of involved molecules (A, B, C and D in a schematic example below) by the appropriate integers a, b, c and d.[11]

a A + b B → c C + d D

More elaborate reactions are represented by reaction schemes, which in addition to starting materials and products show important intermediates or transition states. Also, some relatively minor additions to the reaction can be indicated above the reaction arrow; examples of such additions are water, heat, illumination, a catalyst, etc. Similarly, some minor products can be placed below the arrow, often with a minus sign.

 
An example of organic reaction: oxidation of ketones to esters with a peroxycarboxylic acid

Retrosynthetic analysis can be applied to design a complex synthesis reaction. Here the analysis starts from the products, for example by splitting selected chemical bonds, to arrive at plausible initial reagents. A special arrow (⇒) is used in retro reactions.[12]

Elementary reactions

The elementary reaction is the smallest division into which a chemical reaction can be decomposed, it has no intermediate products.[13] Most experimentally observed reactions are built up from many elementary reactions that occur in parallel or sequentially. The actual sequence of the individual elementary reactions is known as reaction mechanism. An elementary reaction involves a few molecules, usually one or two, because of the low probability for several molecules to meet at a certain time.[14]

 
Isomerization of azobenzene, induced by light (hν) or heat (Δ)

The most important elementary reactions are unimolecular and bimolecular reactions. Only one molecule is involved in a unimolecular reaction; it is transformed by isomerization or a dissociation into one or more other molecules. Such reactions require the addition of energy in the form of heat or light. A typical example of a unimolecular reaction is the cis–trans isomerization, in which the cis-form of a compound converts to the trans-form or vice versa.[15]

In a typical dissociation reaction, a bond in a molecule splits (ruptures) resulting in two molecular fragments. The splitting can be homolytic or heterolytic. In the first case, the bond is divided so that each product retains an electron and becomes a neutral radical. In the second case, both electrons of the chemical bond remain with one of the products, resulting in charged ions. Dissociation plays an important role in triggering chain reactions, such as hydrogen–oxygen or polymerization reactions.

 
Dissociation of a molecule AB into fragments A and B

For bimolecular reactions, two molecules collide and react with each other. Their merger is called chemical synthesis or an addition reaction.

 

Another possibility is that only a portion of one molecule is transferred to the other molecule. This type of reaction occurs, for example, in redox and acid-base reactions. In redox reactions, the transferred particle is an electron, whereas in acid-base reactions it is a proton. This type of reaction is also called metathesis.

 

for example

 

Chemical equilibrium

Most chemical reactions are reversible; that is, they can and do run in both directions. The forward and reverse reactions are competing with each other and differ in reaction rates. These rates depend on the concentration and therefore change with the time of the reaction: the reverse rate gradually increases and becomes equal to the rate of the forward reaction, establishing the so-called chemical equilibrium. The time to reach equilibrium depends on parameters such as temperature, pressure, and the materials involved, and is determined by the minimum free energy. In equilibrium, the Gibbs free energy must be zero. The pressure dependence can be explained with the Le Chatelier's principle. For example, an increase in pressure due to decreasing volume causes the reaction to shift to the side with fewer moles of gas.[16]

The reaction yield stabilizes at equilibrium but can be increased by removing the product from the reaction mixture or changed by increasing the temperature or pressure. A change in the concentrations of the reactants does not affect the equilibrium constant but does affect the equilibrium position.

Thermodynamics

Chemical reactions are determined by the laws of thermodynamics. Reactions can proceed by themselves if they are exergonic, that is if they release free energy. The associated free energy change of the reaction is composed of the changes of two different thermodynamic quantities, enthalpy and entropy:[17]

 .
G: free energy, H: enthalpy, T: temperature, S: entropy, Δ: difference (change between original and product)

Reactions can be exothermic, where ΔH is negative and energy is released. Typical examples of exothermic reactions are combustion, precipitation and crystallization, in which ordered solids are formed from disordered gaseous or liquid phases. In contrast, in endothermic reactions, heat is consumed from the environment. This can occur by increasing the entropy of the system, often through the formation of gaseous or dissolved reaction products, which have higher entropy. Since the entropy term in the free-energy change increases with temperature, many endothermic reactions preferably take place at high temperatures. On the contrary, many exothermic reactions such as crystallization occur preferably at lower temperatures. A change in temperature can sometimes reverse the sign of the enthalpy of a reaction, as for the carbon monoxide reduction of molybdenum dioxide:

 ;  

This reaction to form carbon dioxide and molybdenum is endothermic at low temperatures, becoming less so with increasing temperature.[18] ΔH° is zero at 1855 K, and the reaction becomes exothermic above that temperature.

Changes in temperature can also reverse the direction tendency of a reaction. For example, the water gas shift reaction

 

is favored by low temperatures, but its reverse is favored by high temperatures. The shift in reaction direction tendency occurs at 1100 K.[18]

Reactions can also be characterized by their internal energy change, which takes into account changes in the entropy, volume and chemical potentials. The latter depends, among other things, on the activities of the involved substances.[19]

 
U: internal energy, S: entropy, p: pressure, μ: chemical potential, n: number of molecules, d: small change sign

Kinetics

The speed at which reactions take place is studied by reaction kinetics. The rate depends on various parameters, such as:

  • Reactant concentrations, which usually make the reaction happen at a faster rate if raised through increased collisions per unit of time. Some reactions, however, have rates that are independent of reactant concentrations, due to a limited number of catalytic sites. These are called zero order reactions.
  • Surface area available for contact between the reactants, in particular solid ones in heterogeneous systems. Larger surface areas lead to higher reaction rates.
  • Pressure – increasing the pressure decreases the volume between molecules and therefore increases the frequency of collisions between the molecules.
  • Activation energy, which is defined as the amount of energy required to make the reaction start and carry on spontaneously. Higher activation energy implies that the reactants need more energy to start than a reaction with lower activation energy.
  • Temperature, which hastens reactions if raised, since higher temperature increases the energy of the molecules, creating more collisions per unit of time,
  • The presence or absence of a catalyst. Catalysts are substances that make weak bonds with reactants or intermediates and change the pathway (mechanism) of a reaction which in turn increases the speed of a reaction by lowering the activation energy needed for the reaction to take place. A catalyst is not destroyed or changed during a reaction, so it can be used again.
  • For some reactions, the presence of electromagnetic radiation, most notably ultraviolet light, is needed to promote the breaking of bonds to start the reaction. This is particularly true for reactions involving radicals.

Several theories allow calculating the reaction rates at the molecular level. This field is referred to as reaction dynamics. The rate v of a first-order reaction, which could be the disintegration of a substance A, is given by:

 

Its integration yields:

 

Here k is the first-order rate constant, having dimension 1/time, [A](t) is the concentration at a time t and [A]0 is the initial concentration. The rate of a first-order reaction depends only on the concentration and the properties of the involved substance, and the reaction itself can be described with a characteristic half-life. More than one time constant is needed when describing reactions of higher order. The temperature dependence of the rate constant usually follows the Arrhenius equation:

 

where Ea is the activation energy and kB is the Boltzmann constant. One of the simplest models of reaction rate is the collision theory. More realistic models are tailored to a specific problem and include the transition state theory, the calculation of the potential energy surface, the Marcus theory and the Rice–Ramsperger–Kassel–Marcus (RRKM) theory.[20]

Reaction types

Four basic types

 
Representation of four basic chemical reactions types: synthesis, decomposition, single replacement and double replacement.

Synthesis

In a synthesis reaction, two or more simple substances combine to form a more complex substance. These reactions are in the general form:

 

Two or more reactants yielding one product is another way to identify a synthesis reaction. One example of a synthesis reaction is the combination of iron and sulfur to form iron(II) sulfide:

 

Another example is simple hydrogen gas combined with simple oxygen gas to produce a more complex substance, such as water.[21]

Decomposition

A decomposition reaction is when a more complex substance breaks down into its more simple parts. It is thus the opposite of a synthesis reaction and can be written as[21]

 

One example of a decomposition reaction is the electrolysis of water to make oxygen and hydrogen gas:

 

Single displacement

In a single displacement reaction, a single uncombined element replaces another in a compound; in other words, one element trades places with another element in a compound[21] These reactions come in the general form of:

 

One example of a single displacement reaction is when magnesium replaces hydrogen in water to make magnesium hydroxide and hydrogen gas:

 

Double displacement

In a double displacement reaction, the anions and cations of two compounds switch places and form two entirely different compounds. These reactions are in the general form:[21]

 

For example, when barium chloride (BaCl2) and magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) react, the SO42− anion switches places with the 2Cl anion, giving the compounds BaSO4 and MgCl2.

Another example of a double displacement reaction is the reaction of lead(II) nitrate with potassium iodide to form lead(II) iodide and potassium nitrate:

 

Forward and backward reactions

According to Le Châtelier's Principle, reactions may proceed in the forward or reverse direction until they end or reach equilibrium.[22]

Forward reactions

Reactions that proceed in the forward direction to approach equilibrium are often called spontaneous reactions, that is,   is negative, which means that if they occur at constant temperature and pressure, they decrease the Gibbs free energy of the reaction. They don't require much energy to proceed in the forward direction.[23] Most reactions are forward reactions. Examples:

  • Reaction of hydrogen and oxygen to form water.
2H
2
+ O
2
2H
2
O
CH
3
COOH
+ H
2
O
CH
3
COO
+ H
3
O+

Backward reactions

Reactions that proceed in the backward direction to approach equilibrium are often called non-spontaneous reactions, that is,   is positive, which means that if they occur at constant temperature and pressure, they increase the Gibbs free energy of the reaction. They require input of energy to proceed in the forward direction.[23][24] Examples include:

CO2carbon
dioxide
+ H2O water + photonslight energy[CH2O]carbohydrate + O2 oxygen

Combustion

In a combustion reaction, an element or compound reacts with an oxidant, usually oxygen, often producing energy in the form of heat or light. Combustion reactions frequently involve a hydrocarbon. For instance, the combustion of 1 mole (114 g) of octane in oxygen

 

releases 5500 kJ. A combustion reaction can also result from carbon, magnesium or sulfur reacting with oxygen.[27]

 
 

Oxidation and reduction

 
Illustration of a redox reaction
 
Sodium chloride is formed through the redox reaction of sodium metal and chlorine gas

Redox reactions can be understood in terms of the transfer of electrons from one involved species (reducing agent) to another (oxidizing agent). In this process, the former species is oxidized and the latter is reduced. Though sufficient for many purposes, these descriptions are not precisely correct. Oxidation is better defined as an increase in oxidation state of atoms and reduction as a decrease in oxidation state. In practice, the transfer of electrons will always change the oxidation state, but there are many reactions that are classed as "redox" even though no electron transfer occurs (such as those involving covalent bonds).[28][29]

In the following redox reaction, hazardous sodium metal reacts with toxic chlorine gas to form the ionic compound sodium chloride, or common table salt:

 

In the reaction, sodium metal goes from an oxidation state of 0 (as it is a pure element) to +1: in other words, the sodium lost one electron and is said to have been oxidized. On the other hand, the chlorine gas goes from an oxidation of 0 (it is also a pure element) to −1: the chlorine gains one electron and is said to have been reduced. Because the chlorine is the one reduced, it is considered the electron acceptor, or in other words, induces oxidation in the sodium – thus the chlorine gas is considered the oxidizing agent. Conversely, the sodium is oxidized or is the electron donor, and thus induces a reduction in the other species and is considered the reducing agent.

Which of the involved reactants would be a reducing or oxidizing agent can be predicted from the electronegativity of their elements. Elements with low electronegativities, such as most metals, easily donate electrons and oxidize – they are reducing agents. On the contrary, many oxides or ions with high oxidation numbers of their non-oxygen atoms, such as H
2
O
2
, MnO
4
, CrO
3
, Cr
2
O2−
7
, or OsO
4
, can gain one or two extra electrons and are strong oxidizing agents.

For some main-group elements the number of electrons donated or accepted in a redox reaction can be predicted from the electron configuration of the reactant element. Elements try to reach the low-energy noble gas configuration, and therefore alkali metals and halogens will donate and accept one electron, respectively. Noble gases themselves are chemically inactive.[30]

The overall redox reaction can be balanced by combining the oxidation and reduction half-reactions multiplied by coefficients such that the number of electrons lost in the oxidation equals the number of electrons gained in the reduction.

An important class of redox reactions are the electrolytic electrochemical reactions, where electrons from the power supply at the negative electrode are used as the reducing agent and electron withdrawal at the positive electrode as the oxidizing agent. These reactions are particularly important for the production of chemical elements, such as chlorine[31] or aluminium. The reverse process, in which electrons are released in redox reactions and chemical energy is converted to electrical energy, is possible and used in batteries.

Complexation

 
Ferrocene – an iron atom sandwiched between two C5H5 ligands

In complexation reactions, several ligands react with a metal atom to form a coordination complex. This is achieved by providing lone pairs of the ligand into empty orbitals of the metal atom and forming dipolar bonds. The ligands are Lewis bases, they can be both ions and neutral molecules, such as carbon monoxide, ammonia or water. The number of ligands that react with a central metal atom can be found using the 18-electron rule, saying that the valence shells of a transition metal will collectively accommodate 18 electrons, whereas the symmetry of the resulting complex can be predicted with the crystal field theory and ligand field theory. Complexation reactions also include ligand exchange, in which one or more ligands are replaced by another, and redox processes which change the oxidation state of the central metal atom.[32]

Acid–base reactions

In the Brønsted–Lowry acid–base theory, an acid–base reaction involves a transfer of protons (H+) from one species (the acid) to another (the base). When a proton is removed from an acid, the resulting species is termed that acid's conjugate base. When the proton is accepted by a base, the resulting species is termed that base's conjugate acid.[33] In other words, acids act as proton donors and bases act as proton acceptors according to the following equation:

 

The reverse reaction is possible, and thus the acid/base and conjugated base/acid are always in equilibrium. The equilibrium is determined by the acid and base dissociation constants (Ka and Kb) of the involved substances. A special case of the acid-base reaction is the neutralization where an acid and a base, taken at the exact same amounts, form a neutral salt.

Acid-base reactions can have different definitions depending on the acid-base concept employed. Some of the most common are:

  • Arrhenius definition: Acids dissociate in water releasing H3O+ ions; bases dissociate in water releasing OH ions.
  • Brønsted–Lowry definition: Acids are proton (H+) donors, bases are proton acceptors; this includes the Arrhenius definition.
  • Lewis definition: Acids are electron-pair acceptors, and bases are electron-pair donors; this includes the Brønsted-Lowry definition.

Precipitation

 
Precipitation

Precipitation is the formation of a solid in a solution or inside another solid during a chemical reaction. It usually takes place when the concentration of dissolved ions exceeds the solubility limit[34] and forms an insoluble salt. This process can be assisted by adding a precipitating agent or by the removal of the solvent. Rapid precipitation results in an amorphous or microcrystalline residue and a slow process can yield single crystals. The latter can also be obtained by recrystallization from microcrystalline salts.[35]

Solid-state reactions

Reactions can take place between two solids. However, because of the relatively small diffusion rates in solids, the corresponding chemical reactions are very slow in comparison to liquid and gas phase reactions. They are accelerated by increasing the reaction temperature and finely dividing the reactant to increase the contacting surface area.[36]

Reactions at the solid/gas interface

The reaction can take place at the solid|gas interface, surfaces at very low pressure such as ultra-high vacuum. Via scanning tunneling microscopy, it is possible to observe reactions at the solid|gas interface in real space, if the time scale of the reaction is in the correct range.[37][38] Reactions at the solid|gas interface are in some cases related to catalysis.

Photochemical reactions

 
In this Paterno–Büchi reaction, a photoexcited carbonyl group is added to an unexcited olefin, yielding an oxetane.

In photochemical reactions, atoms and molecules absorb energy (photons) of the illumination light and convert it into an excited state. They can then release this energy by breaking chemical bonds, thereby producing radicals. Photochemical reactions include hydrogen–oxygen reactions, radical polymerization, chain reactions and rearrangement reactions.[39]

Many important processes involve photochemistry. The premier example is photosynthesis, in which most plants use solar energy to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose, disposing of oxygen as a side-product. Humans rely on photochemistry for the formation of vitamin D, and vision is initiated by a photochemical reaction of rhodopsin.[15] In fireflies, an enzyme in the abdomen catalyzes a reaction that results in bioluminescence.[40] Many significant photochemical reactions, such as ozone formation, occur in the Earth atmosphere and constitute atmospheric chemistry.

Catalysis

 
Schematic potential energy diagram showing the effect of a catalyst in an endothermic chemical reaction. The presence of a catalyst opens a different reaction pathway (in red) with lower activation energy. The final result and the overall thermodynamics are the same.
 
Solid heterogeneous catalysts are plated on meshes in ceramic catalytic converters in order to maximize their surface area. This exhaust converter is from a Peugeot 106 S2 1100

In catalysis, the reaction does not proceed directly, but through a reaction with a third substance known as catalyst. Although the catalyst takes part in the reaction, forming weak bonds with reactants or intermediates, it is returned to its original state by the end of the reaction and so is not consumed. However, it can be inhibited, deactivated or destroyed by secondary processes. Catalysts can be used in a different phase (heterogeneous) or in the same phase (homogeneous) as the reactants. In heterogeneous catalysis, typical secondary processes include coking where the catalyst becomes covered by polymeric side products. Additionally, heterogeneous catalysts can dissolve into the solution in a solid-liquid system or evaporate in a solid–gas system. Catalysts can only speed up the reaction – chemicals that slow down the reaction are called inhibitors.[41][42] Substances that increase the activity of catalysts are called promoters, and substances that deactivate catalysts are called catalytic poisons. With a catalyst, a reaction that is kinetically inhibited by high activation energy can take place in the circumvention of this activation energy.

Heterogeneous catalysts are usually solids, powdered in order to maximize their surface area. Of particular importance in heterogeneous catalysis are the platinum group metals and other transition metals, which are used in hydrogenations, catalytic reforming and in the synthesis of commodity chemicals such as nitric acid and ammonia. Acids are an example of a homogeneous catalyst, they increase the nucleophilicity of carbonyls, allowing a reaction that would not otherwise proceed with electrophiles. The advantage of homogeneous catalysts is the ease of mixing them with the reactants, but they may also be difficult to separate from the products. Therefore, heterogeneous catalysts are preferred in many industrial processes.[43]

Reactions in organic chemistry

In organic chemistry, in addition to oxidation, reduction or acid-base reactions, a number of other reactions can take place which involves covalent bonds between carbon atoms or carbon and heteroatoms (such as oxygen, nitrogen, halogens, etc.). Many specific reactions in organic chemistry are name reactions designated after their discoverers.

Substitution

In a substitution reaction, a functional group in a particular chemical compound is replaced by another group.[44] These reactions can be distinguished by the type of substituting species into a nucleophilic, electrophilic or radical substitution.

 
SN1 mechanism
 
SN2 mechanism

In the first type, a nucleophile, an atom or molecule with an excess of electrons and thus a negative charge or partial charge, replaces another atom or part of the "substrate" molecule. The electron pair from the nucleophile attacks the substrate forming a new bond, while the leaving group departs with an electron pair. The nucleophile may be electrically neutral or negatively charged, whereas the substrate is typically neutral or positively charged. Examples of nucleophiles are hydroxide ion, alkoxides, amines and halides. This type of reaction is found mainly in aliphatic hydrocarbons, and rarely in aromatic hydrocarbon. The latter have high electron density and enter nucleophilic aromatic substitution only with very strong electron withdrawing groups. Nucleophilic substitution can take place by two different mechanisms, SN1 and SN2. In their names, S stands for substitution, N for nucleophilic, and the number represents the kinetic order of the reaction, unimolecular or bimolecular.[45]

 
The three steps of an SN2 reaction. The nucleophile is green and the leaving group is red
 
SN2 reaction causes stereo inversion (Walden inversion)

The SN1 reaction proceeds in two steps. First, the leaving group is eliminated creating a carbocation. This is followed by a rapid reaction with the nucleophile.[46]

In the SN2 mechanisms, the nucleophile forms a transition state with the attacked molecule, and only then the leaving group is cleaved. These two mechanisms differ in the stereochemistry of the products. SN1 leads to the non-stereospecific addition and does not result in a chiral center, but rather in a set of geometric isomers (cis/trans). In contrast, a reversal (Walden inversion) of the previously existing stereochemistry is observed in the SN2 mechanism.[47]

Electrophilic substitution is the counterpart of the nucleophilic substitution in that the attacking atom or molecule, an electrophile, has low electron density and thus a positive charge. Typical electrophiles are the carbon atom of carbonyl groups, carbocations or sulfur or nitronium cations. This reaction takes place almost exclusively in aromatic hydrocarbons, where it is called electrophilic aromatic substitution. The electrophile attack results in the so-called σ-complex, a transition state in which the aromatic system is abolished. Then, the leaving group, usually a proton, is split off and the aromaticity is restored. An alternative to aromatic substitution is electrophilic aliphatic substitution. It is similar to the nucleophilic aliphatic substitution and also has two major types, SE1 and SE2[48]

 
Mechanism of electrophilic aromatic substitution

In the third type of substitution reaction, radical substitution, the attacking particle is a radical.[44] This process usually takes the form of a chain reaction, for example in the reaction of alkanes with halogens. In the first step, light or heat disintegrates the halogen-containing molecules producing radicals. Then the reaction proceeds as an avalanche until two radicals meet and recombine.[49]

 
 
Reactions during the chain reaction of radical substitution

Addition and elimination

The addition and its counterpart, the elimination, are reactions that change the number of substituents on the carbon atom, and form or cleave multiple bonds. Double and triple bonds can be produced by eliminating a suitable leaving group. Similar to the nucleophilic substitution, there are several possible reaction mechanisms that are named after the respective reaction order. In the E1 mechanism, the leaving group is ejected first, forming a carbocation. The next step, the formation of the double bond, takes place with the elimination of a proton (deprotonation). The leaving order is reversed in the E1cb mechanism, that is the proton is split off first. This mechanism requires the participation of a base.[50] Because of the similar conditions, both reactions in the E1 or E1cb elimination always compete with the SN1 substitution.[51]

 
E1 elimination
 
E1cb elimination
 
E2 elimination

The E2 mechanism also requires a base, but there the attack of the base and the elimination of the leaving group proceed simultaneously and produce no ionic intermediate. In contrast to the E1 eliminations, different stereochemical configurations are possible for the reaction product in the E2 mechanism, because the attack of the base preferentially occurs in the anti-position with respect to the leaving group. Because of the similar conditions and reagents, the E2 elimination is always in competition with the SN2-substitution.[52]

 
Electrophilic addition of hydrogen bromide

The counterpart of elimination is an addition where double or triple bonds are converted into single bonds. Similar to substitution reactions, there are several types of additions distinguished by the type of the attacking particle. For example, in the electrophilic addition of hydrogen bromide, an electrophile (proton) attacks the double bond forming a carbocation, which then reacts with the nucleophile (bromine). The carbocation can be formed on either side of the double bond depending on the groups attached to its ends, and the preferred configuration can be predicted with the Markovnikov's rule.[53] This rule states that "In the heterolytic addition of a polar molecule to an alkene or alkyne, the more electronegative (nucleophilic) atom (or part) of the polar molecule becomes attached to the carbon atom bearing the smaller number of hydrogen atoms."[54]

If the addition of a functional group takes place at the less substituted carbon atom of the double bond, then the electrophilic substitution with acids is not possible. In this case, one has to use the hydroboration–oxidation reaction, wherein the first step, the boron atom acts as electrophile and adds to the less substituted carbon atom. In the second step, the nucleophilic hydroperoxide or halogen anion attacks the boron atom.[55]

While the addition to the electron-rich alkenes and alkynes is mainly electrophilic, the nucleophilic addition plays an important role in the carbon-heteroatom multiple bonds, and especially its most important representative, the carbonyl group. This process is often associated with elimination so that after the reaction the carbonyl group is present again. It is, therefore, called an addition-elimination reaction and may occur in carboxylic acid derivatives such as chlorides, esters or anhydrides. This reaction is often catalyzed by acids or bases, where the acids increase the electrophilicity of the carbonyl group by binding to the oxygen atom, whereas the bases enhance the nucleophilicity of the attacking nucleophile.[56]

 
Acid-catalyzed addition-elimination mechanism

Nucleophilic addition of a carbanion or another nucleophile to the double bond of an alpha, beta-unsaturated carbonyl compound can proceed via the Michael reaction, which belongs to the larger class of conjugate additions. This is one of the most useful methods for the mild formation of C–C bonds.[57][58][59]

Some additions which can not be executed with nucleophiles and electrophiles can be succeeded with free radicals. As with the free-radical substitution, the radical addition proceeds as a chain reaction, and such reactions are the basis of the free-radical polymerization.[60]

Other organic reaction mechanisms

 
The Cope rearrangement of 3-methyl-1,5-hexadiene
 
Mechanism of a Diels-Alder reaction
 
Orbital overlap in a Diels-Alder reaction

In a rearrangement reaction, the carbon skeleton of a molecule is rearranged to give a structural isomer of the original molecule. These include hydride shift reactions such as the Wagner-Meerwein rearrangement, where a hydrogen, alkyl or aryl group migrates from one carbon to a neighboring carbon. Most rearrangements are associated with the breaking and formation of new carbon-carbon bonds. Other examples are sigmatropic reaction such as the Cope rearrangement.[61]

Cyclic rearrangements include cycloadditions and, more generally, pericyclic reactions, wherein two or more double bond-containing molecules form a cyclic molecule. An important example of cycloaddition reaction is the Diels–Alder reaction (the so-called [4+2] cycloaddition) between a conjugated diene and a substituted alkene to form a substituted cyclohexene system.[62]

Whether a certain cycloaddition would proceed depends on the electronic orbitals of the participating species, as only orbitals with the same sign of wave function will overlap and interact constructively to form new bonds. Cycloaddition is usually assisted by light or heat. These perturbations result in a different arrangement of electrons in the excited state of the involved molecules and therefore in different effects. For example, the [4+2] Diels-Alder reactions can be assisted by heat whereas the [2+2] cycloaddition is selectively induced by light.[63] Because of the orbital character, the potential for developing stereoisomeric products upon cycloaddition is limited, as described by the Woodward–Hoffmann rules.[64]

Biochemical reactions

 
Illustration of the induced fit model of enzyme activity

Biochemical reactions are mainly controlled by enzymes. These proteins can specifically catalyze a single reaction so that reactions can be controlled very precisely. The reaction takes place in the active site, a small part of the enzyme which is usually found in a cleft or pocket lined by amino acid residues, and the rest of the enzyme is used mainly for stabilization. The catalytic action of enzymes relies on several mechanisms including the molecular shape ("induced fit"), bond strain, proximity and orientation of molecules relative to the enzyme, proton donation or withdrawal (acid/base catalysis), electrostatic interactions and many others.[65]

The biochemical reactions that occur in living organisms are collectively known as metabolism. Among the most important of its mechanisms is the anabolism, in which different DNA and enzyme-controlled processes result in the production of large molecules such as proteins and carbohydrates from smaller units.[66] Bioenergetics studies the sources of energy for such reactions. Important energy sources are glucose and oxygen, which can be produced by plants via photosynthesis or assimilated from food and air, respectively. All organisms use this energy to produce adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which can then be used to energize other reactions.

Applications

 
Thermite reaction proceeding in railway welding. Shortly after this, the liquid iron flows into the mould around the rail gap.

Chemical reactions are central to chemical engineering, where they are used for the synthesis of new compounds from natural raw materials such as petroleum, mineral ores, and oxygen in air. It is essential to make the reaction as efficient as possible, maximizing the yield and minimizing the number of reagents, energy inputs and waste. Catalysts are especially helpful for reducing the energy required for the reaction and increasing its reaction rate.[67][68]

Some specific reactions have their niche applications. For example, the thermite reaction is used to generate light and heat in pyrotechnics and welding. Although it is less controllable than the more conventional oxy-fuel welding, arc welding and flash welding, it requires much less equipment and is still used to mend rails, especially in remote areas.[69]

Monitoring

Mechanisms of monitoring chemical reactions depend strongly on the reaction rate. Relatively slow processes can be analyzed in situ for the concentrations and identities of the individual ingredients. Important tools of real-time analysis are the measurement of pH and analysis of optical absorption (color) and emission spectra. A less accessible but rather efficient method is the introduction of a radioactive isotope into the reaction and monitoring how it changes over time and where it moves to; this method is often used to analyze the redistribution of substances in the human body. Faster reactions are usually studied with ultrafast laser spectroscopy where utilization of femtosecond lasers allows short-lived transition states to be monitored at a time scaled down to a few femtoseconds.[70]

See also

References

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Bibliography

chemical, reaction, this, currently, being, merged, after, discussion, consensus, merge, this, with, content, from, chemical, change, found, help, implement, merge, following, instructions, help, merging, resolution, discussion, process, started, 2023, chemica. This is currently being merged After a discussion consensus to merge this with content from Chemical change was found You can help implement the merge by following the instructions at Help Merging and the resolution on the discussion Process started in May 2023 A chemical reaction is a process that leads to the chemical transformation of one set of chemical substances to another 1 Classically chemical reactions encompass changes that only involve the positions of electrons in the forming and breaking of chemical bonds between atoms with no change to the nuclei no change to the elements present and can often be described by a chemical equation Nuclear chemistry is a sub discipline of chemistry that involves the chemical reactions of unstable and radioactive elements where both electronic and nuclear changes can occur A thermite reaction using iron III oxide The sparks flying outwards are globules of molten iron trailing smoke in their wake The substance or substances initially involved in a chemical reaction are called reactants or reagents Chemical reactions are usually characterized by a chemical change and they yield one or more products which usually have properties different from the reactants Reactions often consist of a sequence of individual sub steps the so called elementary reactions and the information on the precise course of action is part of the reaction mechanism Chemical reactions are described with chemical equations which symbolically present the starting materials end products and sometimes intermediate products and reaction conditions Chemical reactions happen at a characteristic reaction rate at a given temperature and chemical concentration Typically reaction rates increase with increasing temperature because there is more thermal energy available to reach the activation energy necessary for breaking bonds between atoms A reaction may be classified as redox in which oxidation and reduction occur or non redox in which there is no oxidation and reduction occurring Most simple redox reactions may be classified as a combination decomposition or single displacement reaction Different chemical reactions are used during chemical synthesis in order to obtain the desired product In biochemistry a consecutive series of chemical reactions where the product of one reaction is the reactant of the next reaction form metabolic pathways These reactions are often catalyzed by protein enzymes Enzymes increase the rates of biochemical reactions so that metabolic syntheses and decompositions impossible under ordinary conditions can occur at the temperature and concentrations present within a cell The general concept of a chemical reaction has been extended to reactions between entities smaller than atoms including nuclear reactions radioactive decays and reactions between elementary particles as described by quantum field theory Contents 1 History 2 Characteristics 3 Equations 4 Elementary reactions 5 Chemical equilibrium 6 Thermodynamics 7 Kinetics 8 Reaction types 8 1 Four basic types 8 1 1 Synthesis 8 1 2 Decomposition 8 1 3 Single displacement 8 1 4 Double displacement 8 2 Forward and backward reactions 8 2 1 Forward reactions 8 2 2 Backward reactions 8 3 Combustion 8 4 Oxidation and reduction 8 5 Complexation 8 6 Acid base reactions 8 7 Precipitation 8 8 Solid state reactions 8 9 Reactions at the solid gas interface 8 10 Photochemical reactions 9 Catalysis 10 Reactions in organic chemistry 10 1 Substitution 10 2 Addition and elimination 10 3 Other organic reaction mechanisms 11 Biochemical reactions 12 Applications 13 Monitoring 14 See also 15 References 16 BibliographyHistory nbsp Antoine Lavoisier developed the theory of combustion as a chemical reaction with oxygen Chemical reactions such as combustion in fire fermentation and the reduction of ores to metals were known since antiquity Initial theories of transformation of materials were developed by Greek philosophers such as the Four Element Theory of Empedocles stating that any substance is composed of the four basic elements fire water air and earth In the Middle Ages chemical transformations were studied by alchemists They attempted in particular to convert lead into gold for which purpose they used reactions of lead and lead copper alloys with sulfur 2 The artificial production of chemical substances already was a central goal for medieval alchemists 3 Examples include the synthesis of ammonium chloride from organic substances as described in the works c 850 950 attributed to Jabir ibn Ḥayyan 4 or the production of mineral acids such as sulfuric and nitric acids by later alchemists starting from c 1300 5 The production of mineral acids involved the heating of sulfate and nitrate minerals such as copper sulfate alum and saltpeter In the 17th century Johann Rudolph Glauber produced hydrochloric acid and sodium sulfate by reacting sulfuric acid and sodium chloride With the development of the lead chamber process in 1746 and the Leblanc process allowing large scale production of sulfuric acid and sodium carbonate respectively chemical reactions became implemented into the industry Further optimization of sulfuric acid technology resulted in the contact process in the 1880s 6 and the Haber process was developed in 1909 1910 for ammonia synthesis 7 From the 16th century researchers including Jan Baptist van Helmont Robert Boyle and Isaac Newton tried to establish theories of experimentally observed chemical transformations The phlogiston theory was proposed in 1667 by Johann Joachim Becher It postulated the existence of a fire like element called phlogiston which was contained within combustible bodies and released during combustion This proved to be false in 1785 by Antoine Lavoisier who found the correct explanation of the combustion as a reaction with oxygen from the air 8 Joseph Louis Gay Lussac recognized in 1808 that gases always react in a certain relationship with each other Based on this idea and the atomic theory of John Dalton Joseph Proust had developed the law of definite proportions which later resulted in the concepts of stoichiometry and chemical equations 9 Regarding the organic chemistry it was long believed that compounds obtained from living organisms were too complex to be obtained synthetically According to the concept of vitalism organic matter was endowed with a vital force and distinguished from inorganic materials This separation was ended however by the synthesis of urea from inorganic precursors by Friedrich Wohler in 1828 Other chemists who brought major contributions to organic chemistry include Alexander William Williamson with his synthesis of ethers and Christopher Kelk Ingold who among many discoveries established the mechanisms of substitution reactions CharacteristicsThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2020 The general characteristics of chemical reactions are Evolution of a gas Formation of a precipitate Change in temperature Change in stateEquations nbsp As seen from the equation CH4 2O2 CO2 2 H2O a coefficient of 2 must be placed before the oxygen gas on the reactants side and before the water on the products side in order for as per the law of conservation of mass the quantity of each element does not change during the reactionMain article Chemical equation Chemical equations are used to graphically illustrate chemical reactions They consist of chemical or structural formulas of the reactants on the left and those of the products on the right They are separated by an arrow which indicates the direction and type of the reaction the arrow is read as the word yields 10 The tip of the arrow points in the direction in which the reaction proceeds A double arrow pointing in opposite directions is used for equilibrium reactions Equations should be balanced according to the stoichiometry the number of atoms of each species should be the same on both sides of the equation This is achieved by scaling the number of involved molecules A B C and D in a schematic example below by the appropriate integers a b c and d 11 a A b B c C d DMore elaborate reactions are represented by reaction schemes which in addition to starting materials and products show important intermediates or transition states Also some relatively minor additions to the reaction can be indicated above the reaction arrow examples of such additions are water heat illumination a catalyst etc Similarly some minor products can be placed below the arrow often with a minus sign nbsp An example of organic reaction oxidation of ketones to esters with a peroxycarboxylic acid Retrosynthetic analysis can be applied to design a complex synthesis reaction Here the analysis starts from the products for example by splitting selected chemical bonds to arrive at plausible initial reagents A special arrow is used in retro reactions 12 Elementary reactionsThe elementary reaction is the smallest division into which a chemical reaction can be decomposed it has no intermediate products 13 Most experimentally observed reactions are built up from many elementary reactions that occur in parallel or sequentially The actual sequence of the individual elementary reactions is known as reaction mechanism An elementary reaction involves a few molecules usually one or two because of the low probability for several molecules to meet at a certain time 14 nbsp Isomerization of azobenzene induced by light hn or heat D The most important elementary reactions are unimolecular and bimolecular reactions Only one molecule is involved in a unimolecular reaction it is transformed by isomerization or a dissociation into one or more other molecules Such reactions require the addition of energy in the form of heat or light A typical example of a unimolecular reaction is the cis trans isomerization in which the cis form of a compound converts to the trans form or vice versa 15 In a typical dissociation reaction a bond in a molecule splits ruptures resulting in two molecular fragments The splitting can be homolytic or heterolytic In the first case the bond is divided so that each product retains an electron and becomes a neutral radical In the second case both electrons of the chemical bond remain with one of the products resulting in charged ions Dissociation plays an important role in triggering chain reactions such as hydrogen oxygen or polymerization reactions AB A B displaystyle ce AB gt A B nbsp Dissociation of a molecule AB into fragments A and BFor bimolecular reactions two molecules collide and react with each other Their merger is called chemical synthesis or an addition reaction A B AB displaystyle ce A B gt AB nbsp Another possibility is that only a portion of one molecule is transferred to the other molecule This type of reaction occurs for example in redox and acid base reactions In redox reactions the transferred particle is an electron whereas in acid base reactions it is a proton This type of reaction is also called metathesis HA B A HB displaystyle ce HA B gt A HB nbsp for example NaCl AgNO 3 NaNO 3 AgCl displaystyle ce NaCl AgNO3 gt NaNO3 AgCl v nbsp Chemical equilibriumMain article Chemical equilibrium Most chemical reactions are reversible that is they can and do run in both directions The forward and reverse reactions are competing with each other and differ in reaction rates These rates depend on the concentration and therefore change with the time of the reaction the reverse rate gradually increases and becomes equal to the rate of the forward reaction establishing the so called chemical equilibrium The time to reach equilibrium depends on parameters such as temperature pressure and the materials involved and is determined by the minimum free energy In equilibrium the Gibbs free energy must be zero The pressure dependence can be explained with the Le Chatelier s principle For example an increase in pressure due to decreasing volume causes the reaction to shift to the side with fewer moles of gas 16 The reaction yield stabilizes at equilibrium but can be increased by removing the product from the reaction mixture or changed by increasing the temperature or pressure A change in the concentrations of the reactants does not affect the equilibrium constant but does affect the equilibrium position ThermodynamicsChemical reactions are determined by the laws of thermodynamics Reactions can proceed by themselves if they are exergonic that is if they release free energy The associated free energy change of the reaction is composed of the changes of two different thermodynamic quantities enthalpy and entropy 17 D G D H T D S displaystyle Delta G Delta H T cdot Delta S nbsp G free energy H enthalpy T temperature S entropy D difference change between original and product dd Reactions can be exothermic where DH is negative and energy is released Typical examples of exothermic reactions are combustion precipitation and crystallization in which ordered solids are formed from disordered gaseous or liquid phases In contrast in endothermic reactions heat is consumed from the environment This can occur by increasing the entropy of the system often through the formation of gaseous or dissolved reaction products which have higher entropy Since the entropy term in the free energy change increases with temperature many endothermic reactions preferably take place at high temperatures On the contrary many exothermic reactions such as crystallization occur preferably at lower temperatures A change in temperature can sometimes reverse the sign of the enthalpy of a reaction as for the carbon monoxide reduction of molybdenum dioxide 2 CO g MoO 2 s 2 CO 2 g Mo s displaystyle ce 2CO g MoO2 s gt 2CO2 g Mo s nbsp D H o 21 86 kJ at 298 K displaystyle Delta H o 21 86 text kJ at 298 K nbsp This reaction to form carbon dioxide and molybdenum is endothermic at low temperatures becoming less so with increasing temperature 18 DH is zero at 1855 K and the reaction becomes exothermic above that temperature Changes in temperature can also reverse the direction tendency of a reaction For example the water gas shift reaction CO g H 2 O v CO 2 g H 2 g displaystyle ce CO g H2O v lt gt CO2 g H2 g nbsp is favored by low temperatures but its reverse is favored by high temperatures The shift in reaction direction tendency occurs at 1100 K 18 Reactions can also be characterized by their internal energy change which takes into account changes in the entropy volume and chemical potentials The latter depends among other things on the activities of the involved substances 19 d U T d S p d V m d n displaystyle d U T cdot d S p cdot d V mu cdot d n nbsp U internal energy S entropy p pressure m chemical potential n number of molecules d small change sign dd KineticsThe speed at which reactions take place is studied by reaction kinetics The rate depends on various parameters such as Reactant concentrations which usually make the reaction happen at a faster rate if raised through increased collisions per unit of time Some reactions however have rates that are independent of reactant concentrations due to a limited number of catalytic sites These are called zero order reactions Surface area available for contact between the reactants in particular solid ones in heterogeneous systems Larger surface areas lead to higher reaction rates Pressure increasing the pressure decreases the volume between molecules and therefore increases the frequency of collisions between the molecules Activation energy which is defined as the amount of energy required to make the reaction start and carry on spontaneously Higher activation energy implies that the reactants need more energy to start than a reaction with lower activation energy Temperature which hastens reactions if raised since higher temperature increases the energy of the molecules creating more collisions per unit of time The presence or absence of a catalyst Catalysts are substances that make weak bonds with reactants or intermediates and change the pathway mechanism of a reaction which in turn increases the speed of a reaction by lowering the activation energy needed for the reaction to take place A catalyst is not destroyed or changed during a reaction so it can be used again For some reactions the presence of electromagnetic radiation most notably ultraviolet light is needed to promote the breaking of bonds to start the reaction This is particularly true for reactions involving radicals Several theories allow calculating the reaction rates at the molecular level This field is referred to as reaction dynamics The rate v of a first order reaction which could be the disintegration of a substance A is given by v d A d t k A displaystyle v frac d ce A dt k cdot ce A nbsp Its integration yields A t A 0 e k t displaystyle ce A t ce A 0 cdot e k cdot t nbsp Here k is the first order rate constant having dimension 1 time A t is the concentration at a time t and A 0 is the initial concentration The rate of a first order reaction depends only on the concentration and the properties of the involved substance and the reaction itself can be described with a characteristic half life More than one time constant is needed when describing reactions of higher order The temperature dependence of the rate constant usually follows the Arrhenius equation k k 0 e E a k B T displaystyle k k 0 e E a k B T nbsp where Ea is the activation energy and kB is the Boltzmann constant One of the simplest models of reaction rate is the collision theory More realistic models are tailored to a specific problem and include the transition state theory the calculation of the potential energy surface the Marcus theory and the Rice Ramsperger Kassel Marcus RRKM theory 20 Reaction typesFour basic types nbsp Representation of four basic chemical reactions types synthesis decomposition single replacement and double replacement Synthesis Main article Synthesis reaction In a synthesis reaction two or more simple substances combine to form a more complex substance These reactions are in the general form A B AB displaystyle ce A B gt AB nbsp Two or more reactants yielding one product is another way to identify a synthesis reaction One example of a synthesis reaction is the combination of iron and sulfur to form iron II sulfide 8 Fe S 8 8 FeS displaystyle ce 8Fe S8 gt 8FeS nbsp Another example is simple hydrogen gas combined with simple oxygen gas to produce a more complex substance such as water 21 Decomposition Main article Decomposition reaction A decomposition reaction is when a more complex substance breaks down into its more simple parts It is thus the opposite of a synthesis reaction and can be written as 21 AB A B displaystyle ce AB gt A B nbsp One example of a decomposition reaction is the electrolysis of water to make oxygen and hydrogen gas 2 H 2 O 2 H 2 O 2 displaystyle ce 2H2O gt 2H2 O2 nbsp Single displacement In a single displacement reaction a single uncombined element replaces another in a compound in other words one element trades places with another element in a compound 21 These reactions come in the general form of A BC AC B displaystyle ce A BC gt AC B nbsp One example of a single displacement reaction is when magnesium replaces hydrogen in water to make magnesium hydroxide and hydrogen gas Mg 2 H 2 O Mg OH 2 H 2 displaystyle ce Mg 2H2O gt Mg OH 2 H2 nbsp Double displacement In a double displacement reaction the anions and cations of two compounds switch places and form two entirely different compounds These reactions are in the general form 21 AB CD AD CB displaystyle ce AB CD gt AD CB nbsp For example when barium chloride BaCl2 and magnesium sulfate MgSO4 react the SO42 anion switches places with the 2Cl anion giving the compounds BaSO4 and MgCl2 Another example of a double displacement reaction is the reaction of lead II nitrate with potassium iodide to form lead II iodide and potassium nitrate Pb NO 3 2 2 KI PbI 2 2 KNO 3 displaystyle ce Pb NO3 2 2KI gt PbI2 v 2KNO3 nbsp Forward and backward reactions According to Le Chatelier s Principle reactions may proceed in the forward or reverse direction until they end or reach equilibrium 22 Forward reactions Reactions that proceed in the forward direction to approach equilibrium are often called spontaneous reactions that is D G displaystyle Delta G nbsp is negative which means that if they occur at constant temperature and pressure they decrease the Gibbs free energy of the reaction They don t require much energy to proceed in the forward direction 23 Most reactions are forward reactions Examples Reaction of hydrogen and oxygen to form water 2H2 O2 2H2 ODissociation of acetic acid in water into acetate ions and hydronium ions CH3 COOH H2 O CH3 COO H3 O Backward reactions Reactions that proceed in the backward direction to approach equilibrium are often called non spontaneous reactions that is D G displaystyle Delta G nbsp is positive which means that if they occur at constant temperature and pressure they increase the Gibbs free energy of the reaction They require input of energy to proceed in the forward direction 23 24 Examples include Charging a normal DC battery consisting of electrolytic cells from an external electrical power source 25 Photosynthesis driven by absorption of electromagnetic radiation usually in the form of sunlight 26 CO2 carbondioxide H2O water photons light energy CH2O carbohydrate O2 oxygenCombustion In a combustion reaction an element or compound reacts with an oxidant usually oxygen often producing energy in the form of heat or light Combustion reactions frequently involve a hydrocarbon For instance the combustion of 1 mole 114 g of octane in oxygenC 8 H 18 l 25 2 O 2 g 8 CO 2 9 H 2 O l displaystyle ce C8H18 l 25 2 O2 g gt 8CO2 9H2O l nbsp releases 5500 kJ A combustion reaction can also result from carbon magnesium or sulfur reacting with oxygen 27 2 Mg s O 2 2 MgO s displaystyle ce 2Mg s O2 gt 2MgO s nbsp S s O 2 g SO 2 g displaystyle ce S s O2 g gt SO2 g nbsp Oxidation and reduction nbsp Illustration of a redox reaction nbsp Sodium chloride is formed through the redox reaction of sodium metal and chlorine gasRedox reactions can be understood in terms of the transfer of electrons from one involved species reducing agent to another oxidizing agent In this process the former species is oxidized and the latter is reduced Though sufficient for many purposes these descriptions are not precisely correct Oxidation is better defined as an increase in oxidation state of atoms and reduction as a decrease in oxidation state In practice the transfer of electrons will always change the oxidation state but there are many reactions that are classed as redox even though no electron transfer occurs such as those involving covalent bonds 28 29 In the following redox reaction hazardous sodium metal reacts with toxic chlorine gas to form the ionic compound sodium chloride or common table salt 2 Na s Cl 2 g 2 NaCl s displaystyle ce 2Na s Cl2 g gt 2NaCl s nbsp In the reaction sodium metal goes from an oxidation state of 0 as it is a pure element to 1 in other words the sodium lost one electron and is said to have been oxidized On the other hand the chlorine gas goes from an oxidation of 0 it is also a pure element to 1 the chlorine gains one electron and is said to have been reduced Because the chlorine is the one reduced it is considered the electron acceptor or in other words induces oxidation in the sodium thus the chlorine gas is considered the oxidizing agent Conversely the sodium is oxidized or is the electron donor and thus induces a reduction in the other species and is considered the reducing agent Which of the involved reactants would be a reducing or oxidizing agent can be predicted from the electronegativity of their elements Elements with low electronegativities such as most metals easily donate electrons and oxidize they are reducing agents On the contrary many oxides or ions with high oxidation numbers of their non oxygen atoms such as H2 O2 MnO 4 CrO3 Cr2 O2 7 or OsO4 can gain one or two extra electrons and are strong oxidizing agents For some main group elements the number of electrons donated or accepted in a redox reaction can be predicted from the electron configuration of the reactant element Elements try to reach the low energy noble gas configuration and therefore alkali metals and halogens will donate and accept one electron respectively Noble gases themselves are chemically inactive 30 The overall redox reaction can be balanced by combining the oxidation and reduction half reactions multiplied by coefficients such that the number of electrons lost in the oxidation equals the number of electrons gained in the reduction An important class of redox reactions are the electrolytic electrochemical reactions where electrons from the power supply at the negative electrode are used as the reducing agent and electron withdrawal at the positive electrode as the oxidizing agent These reactions are particularly important for the production of chemical elements such as chlorine 31 or aluminium The reverse process in which electrons are released in redox reactions and chemical energy is converted to electrical energy is possible and used in batteries Complexation nbsp Ferrocene an iron atom sandwiched between two C5H5 ligandsIn complexation reactions several ligands react with a metal atom to form a coordination complex This is achieved by providing lone pairs of the ligand into empty orbitals of the metal atom and forming dipolar bonds The ligands are Lewis bases they can be both ions and neutral molecules such as carbon monoxide ammonia or water The number of ligands that react with a central metal atom can be found using the 18 electron rule saying that the valence shells of a transition metal will collectively accommodate 18 electrons whereas the symmetry of the resulting complex can be predicted with the crystal field theory and ligand field theory Complexation reactions also include ligand exchange in which one or more ligands are replaced by another and redox processes which change the oxidation state of the central metal atom 32 Acid base reactions In the Bronsted Lowry acid base theory an acid base reaction involves a transfer of protons H from one species the acid to another the base When a proton is removed from an acid the resulting species is termed that acid s conjugate base When the proton is accepted by a base the resulting species is termed that base s conjugate acid 33 In other words acids act as proton donors and bases act as proton acceptors according to the following equation HA acid B base A conjugated base HB conjugated acid displaystyle ce underset acid HA underset base B lt gt underset conjugated base A underset conjugated acid HB nbsp The reverse reaction is possible and thus the acid base and conjugated base acid are always in equilibrium The equilibrium is determined by the acid and base dissociation constants Ka and Kb of the involved substances A special case of the acid base reaction is the neutralization where an acid and a base taken at the exact same amounts form a neutral salt Acid base reactions can have different definitions depending on the acid base concept employed Some of the most common are Arrhenius definition Acids dissociate in water releasing H3O ions bases dissociate in water releasing OH ions Bronsted Lowry definition Acids are proton H donors bases are proton acceptors this includes the Arrhenius definition Lewis definition Acids are electron pair acceptors and bases are electron pair donors this includes the Bronsted Lowry definition Precipitation nbsp PrecipitationPrecipitation is the formation of a solid in a solution or inside another solid during a chemical reaction It usually takes place when the concentration of dissolved ions exceeds the solubility limit 34 and forms an insoluble salt This process can be assisted by adding a precipitating agent or by the removal of the solvent Rapid precipitation results in an amorphous or microcrystalline residue and a slow process can yield single crystals The latter can also be obtained by recrystallization from microcrystalline salts 35 Solid state reactions Reactions can take place between two solids However because of the relatively small diffusion rates in solids the corresponding chemical reactions are very slow in comparison to liquid and gas phase reactions They are accelerated by increasing the reaction temperature and finely dividing the reactant to increase the contacting surface area 36 Reactions at the solid gas interface The reaction can take place at the solid gas interface surfaces at very low pressure such as ultra high vacuum Via scanning tunneling microscopy it is possible to observe reactions at the solid gas interface in real space if the time scale of the reaction is in the correct range 37 38 Reactions at the solid gas interface are in some cases related to catalysis Photochemical reactions nbsp In this Paterno Buchi reaction a photoexcited carbonyl group is added to an unexcited olefin yielding an oxetane In photochemical reactions atoms and molecules absorb energy photons of the illumination light and convert it into an excited state They can then release this energy by breaking chemical bonds thereby producing radicals Photochemical reactions include hydrogen oxygen reactions radical polymerization chain reactions and rearrangement reactions 39 Many important processes involve photochemistry The premier example is photosynthesis in which most plants use solar energy to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose disposing of oxygen as a side product Humans rely on photochemistry for the formation of vitamin D and vision is initiated by a photochemical reaction of rhodopsin 15 In fireflies an enzyme in the abdomen catalyzes a reaction that results in bioluminescence 40 Many significant photochemical reactions such as ozone formation occur in the Earth atmosphere and constitute atmospheric chemistry CatalysisMain article Catalysis Further information Reaction Progress Kinetic Analysis nbsp Schematic potential energy diagram showing the effect of a catalyst in an endothermic chemical reaction The presence of a catalyst opens a different reaction pathway in red with lower activation energy The final result and the overall thermodynamics are the same nbsp Solid heterogeneous catalysts are plated on meshes in ceramic catalytic converters in order to maximize their surface area This exhaust converter is from a Peugeot 106 S2 1100In catalysis the reaction does not proceed directly but through a reaction with a third substance known as catalyst Although the catalyst takes part in the reaction forming weak bonds with reactants or intermediates it is returned to its original state by the end of the reaction and so is not consumed However it can be inhibited deactivated or destroyed by secondary processes Catalysts can be used in a different phase heterogeneous or in the same phase homogeneous as the reactants In heterogeneous catalysis typical secondary processes include coking where the catalyst becomes covered by polymeric side products Additionally heterogeneous catalysts can dissolve into the solution in a solid liquid system or evaporate in a solid gas system Catalysts can only speed up the reaction chemicals that slow down the reaction are called inhibitors 41 42 Substances that increase the activity of catalysts are called promoters and substances that deactivate catalysts are called catalytic poisons With a catalyst a reaction that is kinetically inhibited by high activation energy can take place in the circumvention of this activation energy Heterogeneous catalysts are usually solids powdered in order to maximize their surface area Of particular importance in heterogeneous catalysis are the platinum group metals and other transition metals which are used in hydrogenations catalytic reforming and in the synthesis of commodity chemicals such as nitric acid and ammonia Acids are an example of a homogeneous catalyst they increase the nucleophilicity of carbonyls allowing a reaction that would not otherwise proceed with electrophiles The advantage of homogeneous catalysts is the ease of mixing them with the reactants but they may also be difficult to separate from the products Therefore heterogeneous catalysts are preferred in many industrial processes 43 Reactions in organic chemistryMain article Organic reaction In organic chemistry in addition to oxidation reduction or acid base reactions a number of other reactions can take place which involves covalent bonds between carbon atoms or carbon and heteroatoms such as oxygen nitrogen halogens etc Many specific reactions in organic chemistry are name reactions designated after their discoverers Substitution In a substitution reaction a functional group in a particular chemical compound is replaced by another group 44 These reactions can be distinguished by the type of substituting species into a nucleophilic electrophilic or radical substitution nbsp SN1 mechanism nbsp SN2 mechanism In the first type a nucleophile an atom or molecule with an excess of electrons and thus a negative charge or partial charge replaces another atom or part of the substrate molecule The electron pair from the nucleophile attacks the substrate forming a new bond while the leaving group departs with an electron pair The nucleophile may be electrically neutral or negatively charged whereas the substrate is typically neutral or positively charged Examples of nucleophiles are hydroxide ion alkoxides amines and halides This type of reaction is found mainly in aliphatic hydrocarbons and rarely in aromatic hydrocarbon The latter have high electron density and enter nucleophilic aromatic substitution only with very strong electron withdrawing groups Nucleophilic substitution can take place by two different mechanisms SN1 and SN2 In their names S stands for substitution N for nucleophilic and the number represents the kinetic order of the reaction unimolecular or bimolecular 45 nbsp The three steps of an SN2 reaction The nucleophile is green and the leaving group is red nbsp SN2 reaction causes stereo inversion Walden inversion The SN1 reaction proceeds in two steps First the leaving group is eliminated creating a carbocation This is followed by a rapid reaction with the nucleophile 46 In the SN2 mechanisms the nucleophile forms a transition state with the attacked molecule and only then the leaving group is cleaved These two mechanisms differ in the stereochemistry of the products SN1 leads to the non stereospecific addition and does not result in a chiral center but rather in a set of geometric isomers cis trans In contrast a reversal Walden inversion of the previously existing stereochemistry is observed in the SN2 mechanism 47 Electrophilic substitution is the counterpart of the nucleophilic substitution in that the attacking atom or molecule an electrophile has low electron density and thus a positive charge Typical electrophiles are the carbon atom of carbonyl groups carbocations or sulfur or nitronium cations This reaction takes place almost exclusively in aromatic hydrocarbons where it is called electrophilic aromatic substitution The electrophile attack results in the so called s complex a transition state in which the aromatic system is abolished Then the leaving group usually a proton is split off and the aromaticity is restored An alternative to aromatic substitution is electrophilic aliphatic substitution It is similar to the nucleophilic aliphatic substitution and also has two major types SE1 and SE2 48 nbsp Mechanism of electrophilic aromatic substitution In the third type of substitution reaction radical substitution the attacking particle is a radical 44 This process usually takes the form of a chain reaction for example in the reaction of alkanes with halogens In the first step light or heat disintegrates the halogen containing molecules producing radicals Then the reaction proceeds as an avalanche until two radicals meet and recombine 49 X R H X H R displaystyle ce X R H gt X H R nbsp R X 2 R X X displaystyle ce R X2 gt R X X nbsp Reactions during the chain reaction of radical substitution dd Addition and elimination The addition and its counterpart the elimination are reactions that change the number of substituents on the carbon atom and form or cleave multiple bonds Double and triple bonds can be produced by eliminating a suitable leaving group Similar to the nucleophilic substitution there are several possible reaction mechanisms that are named after the respective reaction order In the E1 mechanism the leaving group is ejected first forming a carbocation The next step the formation of the double bond takes place with the elimination of a proton deprotonation The leaving order is reversed in the E1cb mechanism that is the proton is split off first This mechanism requires the participation of a base 50 Because of the similar conditions both reactions in the E1 or E1cb elimination always compete with the SN1 substitution 51 nbsp E1 elimination nbsp E1cb elimination nbsp E2 eliminationThe E2 mechanism also requires a base but there the attack of the base and the elimination of the leaving group proceed simultaneously and produce no ionic intermediate In contrast to the E1 eliminations different stereochemical configurations are possible for the reaction product in the E2 mechanism because the attack of the base preferentially occurs in the anti position with respect to the leaving group Because of the similar conditions and reagents the E2 elimination is always in competition with the SN2 substitution 52 nbsp Electrophilic addition of hydrogen bromideThe counterpart of elimination is an addition where double or triple bonds are converted into single bonds Similar to substitution reactions there are several types of additions distinguished by the type of the attacking particle For example in the electrophilic addition of hydrogen bromide an electrophile proton attacks the double bond forming a carbocation which then reacts with the nucleophile bromine The carbocation can be formed on either side of the double bond depending on the groups attached to its ends and the preferred configuration can be predicted with the Markovnikov s rule 53 This rule states that In the heterolytic addition of a polar molecule to an alkene or alkyne the more electronegative nucleophilic atom or part of the polar molecule becomes attached to the carbon atom bearing the smaller number of hydrogen atoms 54 If the addition of a functional group takes place at the less substituted carbon atom of the double bond then the electrophilic substitution with acids is not possible In this case one has to use the hydroboration oxidation reaction wherein the first step the boron atom acts as electrophile and adds to the less substituted carbon atom In the second step the nucleophilic hydroperoxide or halogen anion attacks the boron atom 55 While the addition to the electron rich alkenes and alkynes is mainly electrophilic the nucleophilic addition plays an important role in the carbon heteroatom multiple bonds and especially its most important representative the carbonyl group This process is often associated with elimination so that after the reaction the carbonyl group is present again It is therefore called an addition elimination reaction and may occur in carboxylic acid derivatives such as chlorides esters or anhydrides This reaction is often catalyzed by acids or bases where the acids increase the electrophilicity of the carbonyl group by binding to the oxygen atom whereas the bases enhance the nucleophilicity of the attacking nucleophile 56 nbsp Acid catalyzed addition elimination mechanism Nucleophilic addition of a carbanion or another nucleophile to the double bond of an alpha beta unsaturated carbonyl compound can proceed via the Michael reaction which belongs to the larger class of conjugate additions This is one of the most useful methods for the mild formation of C C bonds 57 58 59 Some additions which can not be executed with nucleophiles and electrophiles can be succeeded with free radicals As with the free radical substitution the radical addition proceeds as a chain reaction and such reactions are the basis of the free radical polymerization 60 Other organic reaction mechanisms nbsp The Cope rearrangement of 3 methyl 1 5 hexadiene nbsp Mechanism of a Diels Alder reaction nbsp Orbital overlap in a Diels Alder reaction In a rearrangement reaction the carbon skeleton of a molecule is rearranged to give a structural isomer of the original molecule These include hydride shift reactions such as the Wagner Meerwein rearrangement where a hydrogen alkyl or aryl group migrates from one carbon to a neighboring carbon Most rearrangements are associated with the breaking and formation of new carbon carbon bonds Other examples are sigmatropic reaction such as the Cope rearrangement 61 Cyclic rearrangements include cycloadditions and more generally pericyclic reactions wherein two or more double bond containing molecules form a cyclic molecule An important example of cycloaddition reaction is the Diels Alder reaction the so called 4 2 cycloaddition between a conjugated diene and a substituted alkene to form a substituted cyclohexene system 62 Whether a certain cycloaddition would proceed depends on the electronic orbitals of the participating species as only orbitals with the same sign of wave function will overlap and interact constructively to form new bonds Cycloaddition is usually assisted by light or heat These perturbations result in a different arrangement of electrons in the excited state of the involved molecules and therefore in different effects For example the 4 2 Diels Alder reactions can be assisted by heat whereas the 2 2 cycloaddition is selectively induced by light 63 Because of the orbital character the potential for developing stereoisomeric products upon cycloaddition is limited as described by the Woodward Hoffmann rules 64 Biochemical reactions nbsp Illustration of the induced fit model of enzyme activityBiochemical reactions are mainly controlled by enzymes These proteins can specifically catalyze a single reaction so that reactions can be controlled very precisely The reaction takes place in the active site a small part of the enzyme which is usually found in a cleft or pocket lined by amino acid residues and the rest of the enzyme is used mainly for stabilization The catalytic action of enzymes relies on several mechanisms including the molecular shape induced fit bond strain proximity and orientation of molecules relative to the enzyme proton donation or withdrawal acid base catalysis electrostatic interactions and many others 65 The biochemical reactions that occur in living organisms are collectively known as metabolism Among the most important of its mechanisms is the anabolism in which different DNA and enzyme controlled processes result in the production of large molecules such as proteins and carbohydrates from smaller units 66 Bioenergetics studies the sources of energy for such reactions Important energy sources are glucose and oxygen which can be produced by plants via photosynthesis or assimilated from food and air respectively All organisms use this energy to produce adenosine triphosphate ATP which can then be used to energize other reactions Applications nbsp Thermite reaction proceeding in railway welding Shortly after this the liquid iron flows into the mould around the rail gap Chemical reactions are central to chemical engineering where they are used for the synthesis of new compounds from natural raw materials such as petroleum mineral ores and oxygen in air It is essential to make the reaction as efficient as possible maximizing the yield and minimizing the number of reagents energy inputs and waste Catalysts are especially helpful for reducing the energy required for the reaction and increasing its reaction rate 67 68 Some specific reactions have their niche applications For example the thermite reaction is used to generate light and heat in pyrotechnics and welding Although it is less controllable than the more conventional oxy fuel welding arc welding and flash welding it requires much less equipment and is still used to mend rails especially in remote areas 69 MonitoringMechanisms of monitoring chemical reactions depend strongly on the reaction rate Relatively slow processes can be analyzed in situ for the concentrations and identities of the individual ingredients Important tools of real time analysis are the measurement of pH and analysis of optical absorption color and emission spectra A less accessible but rather efficient method is the introduction of a radioactive isotope into the reaction and monitoring how it changes over time and where it moves to this method is often used to analyze the redistribution of substances in the human body Faster reactions are usually studied with ultrafast laser spectroscopy where utilization of femtosecond lasers allows short lived transition states to be monitored at a time scaled down to a few femtoseconds 70 See also nbsp Chemistry portal nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Chemical reaction Chemical equation Chemical reaction Substrate Reagent Catalyst Product Chemical reaction model Chemist Chemistry Combustion Limiting reagent List of organic reactions Mass balance Microscopic reversibility Organic reaction Reaction progress kinetic analysis Reversible reactionReferences IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 chemical reaction doi 10 1351 goldbook C01033 Weyer J 1973 Neuere Interpretationsmoglichkeiten der Alchemie Chemie in unserer Zeit 7 6 177 181 doi 10 1002 ciuz 19730070604 See Newman William R 2004 Promethean Ambitions Alchemy and the Quest to Perfect 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Spontaneous and Nonspontaneous Reactions Chemistry LibreTexts 2016 06 27 Retrieved 2023 04 11 Electrolytic Cells Chemistry LibreTexts 2013 10 02 Retrieved 2023 04 11 Photosynthesis of Exoplanet Plants Chemistry LibreTexts 2016 05 26 Retrieved 2023 04 11 Wilbraham Antony Stanley Dennis Waterman Edward Matta Michael 2012 Chemistry Pearson pp 734 735 ISBN 9780132525763 Glusker Jenny P 1991 Structural Aspects of Metal Liganding to Functional Groups in Proteins In Christian B Anfinsen ed Advances in Protein Chemistry Vol 42 San Diego Academic Press p 7 ISBN 978 0 12 034242 6 Guo Liang Hong Allen H Hill O 1991 Direct Electrochemistry of Proteins and Enzymes In A G Sykes ed Advances in Inorganic Chemistry Vol 36 San Diego Academic Press p 359 ISBN 978 0 12 023636 7 Wiberg pp 289 290 Wiberg p 409 Wiberg pp 1180 1205 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 conjugate acid base pair doi 10 1351 goldbook C01266 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 precipitation doi 10 1351 goldbook P04795 Wingender Jorg Ortanderl Stefanie July 2009 Ausfallung Rompp Chemie Lexikon Thieme Meyer H Jurgen 2007 Festkorperchemie In Erwin Riedel ed Modern Inorganic Chemistry in German 3rd ed de Gruyter p 171 ISBN 978 3 11 019060 1 Wintterlin J 1997 Atomic and Macroscopic Reaction Rates of a Surface Catalyzed Reaction Science 278 5345 1931 4 Bibcode 1997Sci 278 1931W doi 10 1126 science 278 5345 1931 PMID 9395392 Waldmann T Kunzel D Hoster H E Gross A Behm R J R 2012 Oxidation of an Organic Adlayer A Bird s Eye View Journal of the American Chemical Society 134 21 8817 8822 doi 10 1021 ja302593v PMID 22571820 Atkins pp 937 950 Saunders David Stanley 2002 Insect clocks Third ed Amsterdam Elsevier p 179 ISBN 978 0 444 50407 4 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 catalyst doi 10 1351 goldbook C00876 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 inhibitor doi 10 1351 goldbook I03035 Elschenbroich Christoph 2008 Organometallchemie 6th ed Wiesbaden Vieweg Teubner Verlag p 263 ISBN 978 3 8351 0167 8 a b March Jerry 1985 Advanced Organic Chemistry Reactions Mechanisms and Structure 3rd edition New York Wiley ISBN 9780471854722 OCLC 642506595 Hartshorn S R 1973 Aliphatic Nucleophilic Substitution London Cambridge University Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 521 09801 4 Bateman Leslie C Church Mervyn G Hughes Edward D Ingold Christopher K Taher Nazeer Ahmed 1940 188 Mechanism of substitution at a saturated carbon atom Part XXIII A kinetic demonstration of the unimolecular solvolysis of alkyl halides Section E a general discussion Journal of the Chemical Society 979 doi 10 1039 JR9400000979 Bruckner pp 63 77 Bruckner pp 203 206 Bruckner p 16 Bruckner p 192 Bruckner p 183 Bruckner p 172 Wiberg pp 950 1602 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 Markownikoff rule doi 10 1351 goldbook M03707 Bruckner p 125 Latscha Hans Peter Kazmaier Uli Klein Helmut Alfons 2008 Organische Chemie Chemie basiswissen II in German Vol 2 6th ed Springer p 273 ISBN 978 3 540 77106 7 Denmark Scott E ed 2004 Organic Reactions doi 10 1002 0471264180 ISBN 978 0 471 26418 7 Hunt Ian Chapter 18 Enols and Enolates The Michael Addition reaction University of Calgary Bruckner p 580 Lechner Manfred Gehrke Klaus Nordmeier Eckhard 2003 Macromolecular Chemistry 3rd ed Basel Birkhauser pp 53 65 ISBN 978 3 7643 6952 1 Fox Marye Anne Whitesell James K 2004 Organic chemistry Third ed Jones amp Bartlett p 699 ISBN 978 0 7637 2197 8 Diels O Alder K 1928 Synthesen in der hydroaromatischen Reihe Justus Liebig s Annalen der Chemie 460 98 122 doi 10 1002 jlac 19284600106 Bruckner pp 637 647 Woodward R B Hoffmann R 1965 Stereochemistry of Electrocyclic Reactions Journal of the American Chemical Society 87 2 395 397 doi 10 1021 ja01080a054 Karlson Peter Doenecke Detlef Koolman Jan Fuchs Georg Gerok Wolfgang 2005 Karlson Biochemistry and Pathobiochemistry in German 16th ed Thieme pp 55 56 ISBN 978 3 13 357815 8 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 anabolism doi 10 1351 goldbook A00314 Emig Gerhard Klemm Elias 2005 Technical Chemistry in German 5th ed Springer pp 33 34 ISBN 978 3 540 23452 4 Trost B 1991 The atom economy a search for synthetic efficiency Science 254 5037 1471 1477 Bibcode 1991Sci 254 1471T doi 10 1126 science 1962206 PMID 1962206 Weismantel Guy E 1999 John J McKetta ed Encyclopedia of Chemical Processing and Design Vol 67 CRC Press p 109 ISBN 978 0 8247 2618 8 Atkins p 987BibliographyAtkins Peter W Julio de Paula 2006 Physical Chemistry 4th ed Weinheim Wiley VCH ISBN 978 3 527 31546 8 Brock William H 1997 Viewegs Geschichte der Chemie in German Braunschweig Vieweg ISBN 978 3 540 67033 9 Bruckner Reinhard 2004 Reaktionsmechanismen in German 3rd ed Munchen Spektrum Akademischer Verlag ISBN 978 3 8274 1579 0 Wiberg Egon Wiberg Nils and Holleman Arnold Frederick 2001 Inorganic chemistry Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 352651 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Chemical Action Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed 1911 pp 26 33 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chemical reaction amp oldid 1197834118, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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