Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Double well potential chemical reactions

Aside from merely calculational difficulties, the existence of a low-temperature rate-constant limit poses a conceptual problem. In fact, one may question the actual meaning of the rate constant at r = 0, when the TST conditions listed above are not fulfilled. If the potential has a double-well shape, then quantum mechanics predicts coherent oscillations of probability between the wells, rather than the exponential decay towards equilibrium. These oscillations are associated with tunneling splitting measured spectroscopically, not with a chemical conversion. Therefore, a simple one-dimensional system has no rate constant at T = 0, unless it is a metastable potential without a bound final state. In practice, however, there are exchange chemical reactions, characterized by symmetric, or nearly symmetric double-well potentials, in which the rate constant is measured. To account for this, one has to admit the existence of some external mechanism whose role is to destroy the phase coherence. It is here that the need to introduce a heat bath arises. [Pg.20]

A chemical reaction, for instance, an intramolecular reaction R P, is viewed as a one-dimensional motion in the phase space of a particle in a double-well potential and undergoing Markovian random forces. The dynamics of the particle are described in terms of the Kramers equation (4.160), and the rate of reaction can, in principle, be calculated from the knowledge of the probability density function p(x0 t, x).16,147... [Pg.111]

THE THEORY OF CHEMICAL REACTION RATES rical double-well potential. [Pg.413]

The formation of 2D Meads phases on a foreign substrate, S, in the underpotential range can be well described considering the substrate-electrolyte interface as an ideally polarizable electrode as shown in Section 8.2. In this case, only sorption processes of electrolyte constituents, but no Faradaic redox reactions or Me-S alloy formation processes are allowed to occur, The electrochemical double layer at the interface can be thermodynamically considered as a separate interphase [3.54, 3.212, 3.213]. This interphase comprises regions of the substrate and of the electrolyte with gradients of intensive system parameters such as chemical potentials of ions and electrons, electric potentials, etc., and contains all adsorbates and all surface energy. Furthermore, it is assumed that the chemical potential //Meads is a definite function of the Meads surface concentration, F, and the electrode potential, E, at constant temperature and pressure Meads (7", ). Such a model system can only be... [Pg.43]


See other pages where Double well potential chemical reactions is mentioned: [Pg.97]    [Pg.97]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.402]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.589]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.97]    [Pg.330]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.214]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.626]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.870]    [Pg.354]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.607]    [Pg.356]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.572]    [Pg.1166]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.188]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.373]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.566]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.219]    [Pg.766]    [Pg.231]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.320 , Pg.321 , Pg.322 , Pg.323 , Pg.324 , Pg.325 , Pg.326 , Pg.327 , Pg.328 , Pg.329 , Pg.330 ]




SEARCH



Chemical reactions double

Potential double-well

Reaction double

© 2024 chempedia.info