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Reaction cavity, high pressure chemical effects

According to the model, a perturbation at one site is transmitted to all the other sites, but the key point is that the propagation occurs via all the other molecules as a collective process as if all the molecules were connected by a network of springs. It can be seen that the model stresses the concept, already discussed above, that chemical processes at high pressure cannot be simply considered mono- or bimolecular processes. The response function X representing the collective excitations of molecules in the lattice may be viewed as an effective mechanical susceptibility of a reaction cavity subjected to the mechanical perturbation produced by a chemical reaction. It can be related to measurable properties such as elastic constants, phonon frequencies, and Debye-Waller factors and therefore can in principle be obtained from the knowledge of the crystal structure of the system of interest. A perturbation of chemical nature introduced at one site in the crystal (product molecules of a reactive process, ionized or excited host molecules, etc.) acts on all the surrounding molecules with a distribution of forces in the reaction cavity that can be described as a chemical pressure. [Pg.168]


See other pages where Reaction cavity, high pressure chemical effects is mentioned: [Pg.75]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.2811]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.333]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.573]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.441]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.443]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.323]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.167 , Pg.168 ]




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