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Homogeneous catalysis apparent reaction order

Unusual reaction orders are found in product-promoted or reactant-inhibited ("autocatalytic") reactions, the former with positive apparent order with respect to a product, the latter with negative apparent order with respect to a reactant (see Section 8.9). An example of a product-promoted reaction is acid-catalyzed ester hydrolysis. An example of a reactant-inhibited reaction has already been encountered, namely, olefin hydroformylation, whose order with respect to CO is negative (see eqn 6.12 in Section 6.3). Such behavior is also not uncommon in heterogeneous catalysis (see Section 9.3.2) and enzyme catalysis ("substrate-inhibited" reactions in biochemistry lingo, Section 8.3). A reaction having an order with respect to a silent partner—CO in a homogeneous hydrogenation—will be examined in some detail later in this chapter (see Examples 7.3 and 7.4). [Pg.165]


See other pages where Homogeneous catalysis apparent reaction order is mentioned: [Pg.151]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.123]    [Pg.193]    [Pg.813]    [Pg.302]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.449 ]




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