Catalysts (AQA A Level Chemistry)
Revision Note
Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution Curve - Catalyst
Catalysis is the process in which the rate of a chemical reaction is increased, by adding a catalyst
A catalyst increases the rate of a reaction by providing the reactants with an alternative reaction pathway which is lower in activation energy than the uncatalysed reaction
Catalysts can be divided into two types:
Homogeneous catalysts
Heterogeneous catalysts
Homogeneous means that the catalyst is in the same phase as the reactants
For example, the reactants and the catalysts are all in solution
Heterogeneous means that the catalyst is in a different phase to the reactants
For example, the reactants are gases but the catalyst used is a solid
The diagram shows that the catalyst allows the reaction to take place through a different mechanism, which has a lower activation energy than the original reaction
Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution curve
Catalysts provide the reactants another pathway which has a lower activation energy
By lowering Ea, a greater proportion of molecules in the reaction mixture have the activation energy, and therefore have sufficient energy for an effective collision
As a result of this, the rate of the catalysed reaction is increased compared to the uncatalyzed reaction
The diagram shows that the total shaded area (both dark and light shading) under the curve shows the number of particles with energy greater than the Ea when a catalyst is present. This area is much larger than the dark shaded area which shows the number of particles with energy greater than the Ea without a catalyst
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