Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Development of a reaction scheme

A reaction scheme is a set of equations, which describes the relationship between the products and the reactants, without involving transient species of very high reactivity, such as free radicals. For this case, reaction mechanisms would have to be dealt with. [Pg.78]

The development of a reaction scheme is based upon the analysis of experimental selectivities, which allows those products which are of, for example, a primary, secondary or tertiary nature to be identified amongst the products of the reaction. These classes of constituents will now be defined. [Pg.78]

Let A be a constituent of the load introduced into the reactor, B be a primary product, C be a secondary product, D a tertiary product. [Pg.78]

The following very simple reaction scheme involves these four categories of constituents  [Pg.78]

The primary product B results from the initial reactant A the secondary product C is formed from the primary product B the tertiary product D is derived from the secondary product C. [Pg.78]


In the present paper we have tried to describe our development of a reaction scheme for the pyrolysis of ethylbenzene. It seemed to us that this reaction was complicated enough to get sufficient details and some of them with more general significance. On the other hand, we hoped that, due to a single initiation reaction within a fairly wide temperature range, the reaction would be relatively easily covered by the methods applied. [Pg.313]


See other pages where Development of a reaction scheme is mentioned: [Pg.78]    [Pg.78]   


SEARCH



A scheme

Reaction scheme

Scheme of reactions

© 2024 chempedia.info