Dictionary Definition
catalyst
Noun
1 (chemistry) a substance that initiates or
accelerates a chemical reaction without itself being affected [syn:
accelerator] [ant:
anticatalyst]
2 something that causes an important event to
happen; "the invasion acted as a catalyst to unite the
country"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ˈkæt.əˌlɪst/
Noun
- A substance which increases the rate of a chemical reaction without being consumed in the process.
- A catalytic converter.
- Someone or something that helps or encourages progress or change.
- I hope the new CEO will be a catalyst for change.
- Economic development and integration are working as a catalyst for peace.
- I hope the new CEO will be a catalyst for change.
Translations
substance which increases the rate of a chemical
reaction without being consumed in the process
- Czech: katalyzátor
- Finnish: katalyytti
- French: catalyseur
- German: Katalysator
- Italian: catalizzatore
- Polish: katalizator
- Portuguese: catalisador
- Spanish: catalizador
- Telugu: ఉత్ప్రేరకం
automotive: a catalytic converter
- Finnish: katalysaattori
someone or something that helps or encourages
progress or change
- Finnish: katalysaattori, katalyytti
- Italian: catalizzatore
Antonyms
Extensive Definition
Catalysis is the process by which the rate of a
chemical
reaction (or biological
process) is increased by means of the addition of a species
known as a catalyst to the reaction. What makes a catalyst
different from a chemical reagent is that whilst it participates in
the reaction, it is not consumed in the reaction. That is, the
catalyst may undergo several chemical transformations during the
reaction, but at the conclusion of the reaction, the catalyst is
regenerated unchanged. As a catalyst is regenerated in a reaction,
often only a very small amount is needed to increase the rate of
the reaction.
Overview
A catalyst works by providing an alternative reaction pathway to the reaction product. The rate of the reaction is increased as this alternative route has a lower activation energy than the reaction route not mediated by the catalyst. The lower the activation energy, the faster the rate of the reaction.- 2 H2O2 → 2 H2O + O2
Whilst the above reaction is favoured in the
sense that reaction products are more stable than the starting
material, the reaction is slow. This can be seen by the fact that
hydrogen peroxide is often available for purchase on the high-street in
bottles as a disinfectant.
However, upon the addition of a small amount of
manganese
dioxide, the hydrogen peroxide undergoes a rapid reaction,
which can be readily seen by the effervescence
of oxygen. The manganese dioxide may be recovered unchanged, and
re-used indefinitely, and thus is not consumed in the reaction.
Accordingly, manganese dioxide catalyses this reaction.
In a more general sense, anything that increases
the rate of any process is commonly called a "catalyst" (From the
Greek
καταλύειν, meaning to annul or to untie or to pick up). For
example a matchmaker
might be called a catalyst, as he or she brings two people together
who otherwise might not meet, with the matchmaker being unaltered
by the matching process.
The opposite of a catalyst is an inhibitor
which slows the rate of a reaction without itself being
consumed.
History
The phrase catalysed processes was coined by Jöns Jakob Berzelius in 1836 to describe reactions which are accelerated by substances which remain unchanged after the reaction. Other early chemists involved in catalysis were Alexander Mitscherlich who in 1831 referred to contact processes and Johann Wolfgang Döbereiner who spoke of contact action and whose lighter based on hydrogen and a platinum sponge became a huge commercial success in the 1820’s. Humphrey Davy discovered the use of platinum in catalysis. In the 1880s, Wilhelm Ostwald at Leipzig University started a series of systematic investigations into reactions that were catalyzed by the presence of acids and bases, and found both that chemical reactions occur at finite rates, and that these rates can be used to determine the strengths of acids and bases. For this work, Ostwald was awarded the 1909 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.Typical mechanism
Catalysts generally react with one or more
reactants to form an intermediate that subsequently give the final
reaction product, in the process regenerating the catalyst. The
following is a typical reaction scheme, where C represents the
catalyst, A and B are reactants, and D is the product of the
reaction of A and B:
- A + C → AC (1)
- B + AC → ABC (2)
- ABC → CD (3)
- CD → C + D (4)
- B + AC → ABC (2)
Although the catalyst (C) is consumed by reaction
1, it is subsequently produced by reaction 4, so for the overall
reaction:
- A + B → D
Catalytic cycles
A catalytic cycle or catalytic mechanism is a reaction mechanism which involves a catalyst. Catalytic cycles are central to any discussion of catalysis, be it in biochemistry, organometallic chemistry, or solid state chemistry.Often, a so-called sacrificial catalyst is also
part of the reaction system with the purpose of regenerating the
true catalyst in each cycle. As the name implies the sacrificial
catalyst is not regenerated and is instead irreversibly consumed.
This sacrificial compound is also known as a stoichiometric
catalyst when added in stoichiometric quantities
compared to the main reactant. Usually the true catalyst is an
expensive and complex molecule and added in quantities as small as
possible. The stoichiometric catalyst on the other hand should be
cheap and abundant.The reaction moves slowly thens curves into the
respiratory system.
Catalysts and reaction energetics
Catalysts work by providing an (alternative) mechanism involving a different transition state and lower activation energy. The effect of this is that more molecular collisions have the energy needed to reach the transition state. Hence, catalysts can perform reactions that, albeit thermodynamically feasible, would not run without the presence of a catalyst, or perform them much faster, more specific, or at lower temperatures. This can be observed on a Boltzmann distribution and energy profile diagram. This means that catalysts reduce the amount of energy needed to start a chemical reaction.Catalysts cannot make energetically unfavorable
reactions possible — they have no effect on the chemical
equilibrium of a reaction because the rate of both the forward
and the reverse reaction are equally affected (see also thermodynamics). The net
free energy change of a reaction is the same whether a catalyst is
used or not; the catalyst just makes it easier to activate.
The SI derived
unit for measuring the catalytic activity of a catalyst is the
katal, which is moles per
second. The degree of activity of a catalyst can also be described
by the turn over
number (or TON) and the catalytic efficiency by the turn over
frequency (TOF). The biochemical equivalent is the enzyme
unit.
For more information on the efficiency of
enzymatic catalysis see the Enzyme#Kinetics
section.
Autocatalysis
In autocatalysis, a reaction produces catalysts.Types of catalysts
Catalysts can be either heterogeneous or homogeneous. Biocatalysts are often seen as a separate group.Heterogeneous catalysts are present in different
phases
from the reactants
(for example, a solid
catalyst in a liquid
reaction
mixture), whereas homogeneous catalysts are in the same phase
(for example, a dissolved catalyst in a liquid
reaction mixture).
Heterogeneous catalysts
A simple model for heterogeneous catalysis involves the catalyst providing a surface on which the reactants (or substrates) temporarily become adsorbed. [[bonds between the products and the catalyst are weaker, so the products are released. Different possible mechanisms for reactions on surfaces are known, depending on how the adsorption takes place (Langmuir-Hinshelwood and Eley-Rideal).For example, in the Haber
process to manufacture ammonia, finely divided iron acts as a heterogeneous
catalyst. Active sites on the metal allow partial weak bonding to
the reactant gases, which
are adsorbed onto the
metal surface. As a result, the bond within the molecule of a
reactant is weakened and the reactant molecules are held in close
proximity to each other. In this way the particularly strong
triple
bond in nitrogen is weakened and the hydrogen and nitrogen
molecules are brought closer together than would be the case in the
gas phase, so the rate of reaction increases.
Other heterogeneous catalysts include vanadium(V)
oxide in the contact
process, nickel in
the manufacture of margarine, alumina and silica in the cracking of alkanes and platinum, rhodium and palladium in catalytic
converters. Mesoporous
silicates have found utility in heterogeneous reaction
catalysis because their large accessible surface area allows for
high catalyst loading.
In car engines, incomplete combustion of the fuel produces carbon
monoxide, which is toxic. The electric spark and high
temperatures also allow oxygen and nitrogen to react and form
nitrogen
monoxide and nitrogen
dioxide, which are responsible for photochemical smog and acid rain.
Catalytic converters reduce such emissions by adsorbing CO and
NO
onto catalytic surface, where the gases undergo a redox
reaction. Carbon
dioxide and nitrogen are desorbed from the surface and emitted
as relatively harmless gases:
- 2CO + 2NO → 2CO2 + N2'''
Many catalysts used in refineries and in
petrochemical applications are regenerated and reused multiple
times to save costs and energy and to reduce environmental impact
from recycling or disposal of spent catalysts.
Homogeneous catalysts
Homogeneous catalysts are in the same phase as
the reactants.
In homogeneous catalysis the catalyst is a
molecule which
facilitates the reaction. The catalyst initiates reaction with one
or more reactants to form intermediate(s) and in some cases one or
more products. Subsequent steps lead to the formation of remaining
products and to the regeneration of the catalyst.
Examples of homogeneous catalysts are:
1) The ion H+(aq) which acts as a catalyst
in esterification, as well
as in the inverse reaction - hydrolysis of esters such as methyl
acetate is catalysed by H+
2) Chlorine free
radicals in the break down of ozone. These radicals are formed
by the action of ultraviolet radiation on chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs). They react with ozone to form oxygen molecules and
regenerate the catalyst radicals. This process destroys the thin
layer of stratospheric
ozone.
- Cl· + O3 → ClO· + O2
- ClO· + O· → Cl· + O2
3) Oxides
of nitrogen in the oxidation of sulfur
dioxide to sulfur
trioxide by dioxygen in the chamber
process.
Biocatalysts
In nature enzymes are catalysts in metabolism. In biochemistry catalysis is
also observed with abzymes and ribozymes, deoxyribozymes have also
been created in the laboratory.
Biocatalysts can be thought of as a mixture of a
homogenous and heterogeneous catalyst. This is because the enzyme
is in solution itself, but the reaction takes place on the enzyme
surface. Several factors affect the activity of enzymes. The most
important are:
- Temperature
- pH
- Enzyme concentration
- Substrate concentration
Electrocatalysts
In the context of electrochemistry, specifically in fuel cell engineering, various metal-rich catalysts are used to promote the efficiency of a half reaction that occurs within the fuel cell. One common type of fuel cell electrocatalyst is based upon tiny nanoparticles of platinum which adorn slightly larger carbon particles. When this type of platinum electrocatalyst is in contact with one of the electrodes in a fuel cell, it increases the rate of the redox half reaction in which oxygen gas is reduced to water (or hydroxide or hydrogen peroxide).Significance
Catalysis is of paramount importance in the chemical industry. The production of most industrially important chemicals involves catalysis. Two notable commercial processes are the Haber process for ammonia synthesis and the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. Research into catalysis is a major field in applied science, and involves many fields of chemistry, notably in organometallic chemistry, and physics. Catalysis is important in many aspects of environmental science, from the catalytic converter in automobiles to the alleged causes of the ozone hole. Catalytic, rather than stoichiometric reactions are preferred in environmentally friendly green chemistry due to the reduced amount of waste generated.Notable examples
Estimates are that 90% of all commercially produced chemical products involve catalysts at some stage in the process of their manufacture.Manganese
dioxide is used in the laboratory to prepare oxygen by the decomposition of
hydrogen
peroxide to oxygen
and water.
Well-known applications of synthetic catalysts
are:
- Catalytic converters made from platinum and manganese break down some of the more harmful byproducts of automobile exhaust. The catalysts used are micro-engineered to have large surface areas.
- the Haber process for the synthesis of ammonia from nitrogen and hydrogen, where iron is the catalyst.
Examples of catalysts that perform specific
transformations on functional groups:
- Transformations of olefinic groups:
- the Ziegler-Natta catalyst used to mass produce polyethylene and polypropylene.
- the Grubbs' catalyst for olefin metathesis.
- the Monsanto process
- the Wacker process
- the Heck reaction.
The most common catalyst is the proton. Many
transition
metals and transition metal complexes
are used in catalysis as well.
New directions - organocatalysis
While transition metal catalysts are well established, a new trend is toward organocatalysis which use comparatively simple organic molecules as catalysts. While typically, catalyst loading is much higher than transition metal-based catalysts, the catalysts are usually commercially available in bulk, helping to reduce costs drastically. Organocatalysts of the "new generation" are competitive to traditional metal-containing catalysts and are owing to low product inhibition applicable in substoichiometric quantities. The chemical character of organocatalysts offers new and attractive perspectives and advantages to synthesis chemists.Catalytic processes
In 2005, Catalytic processes generated about $900 billion in products worldwide.(pdf)- Acid-base catalysis
- Catalytic converters made from platinum and rhodium break down some of the more harmful byproducts of automobile exhaust.
- Fuel cells
- Fischer-Tropsch synthesis.
- Haber process (synthesis of ammonia from nitrogen and hydrogen, where ordinary iron is used as a catalyst)
- Hydrogenation
- Methanol synthesis
- Nitric acid production
- Petroleum
refining and processing
- Alkylation
- Catalytic cracking - breaking long-chain hydrocarbons into smaller pieces
- Naphtha reforming
- Steam reforming of hydrocarbons to produce synthesis gas
- Sulfuric acid production
- Transesterification
- Olefin polymerisation
See also
- Autocatalysis
- BIG-NSE (Berlin Graduate School of Natural Sciences and Engineering)
- Catalysts and Catalysed Reactions (a chemistry journal)
- Environmental triggers
- Enzyme
- Enzyme catalysis
- Phase Boundary Catalysis
- Phase transfer catalyst
- Ribozyme (RNA Biocatalysis)
- SUMO enzymes
References
External links
- Science Aid: Catalysts Page for high school level science
- W.A. Herrmann Technische Universität presentation http://aci.anorg.chemie.tu-muenchen.de/wah/vortraege/catalysis.pdf
- Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis Group, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
- Centre for Surface Chemistry and Catalysis
- Carbons & Catalysts Group, University of Concepcion, Chile
catalyst in Bosnian: Katalizator
catalyst in Bulgarian: Катализа
catalyst in Catalan: Catalitzador
catalyst in Czech: Katalyzátor
catalyst in Welsh: Catalysis
catalyst in German: Katalysator
catalyst in Estonian: Katalüsaator
catalyst in Modern Greek (1453-):
Καταλύτης
catalyst in Spanish: Catalizador
catalyst in Esperanto: Katalizilo
catalyst in French: Catalyse
catalyst in Galician: Catalizador
catalyst in Korean: 촉매
catalyst in Croatian: Katalizator
catalyst in Ido: Katalizo
catalyst in Indonesian: Katalis
catalyst in Icelandic: Hvati
catalyst in Italian: Catalisi
catalyst in Hebrew: זרז
catalyst in Latvian: Katalizators
catalyst in Lithuanian: Katalizatorius
catalyst in Macedonian: Катализатор
catalyst in Dutch: Katalysator
catalyst in Japanese: 触媒
catalyst in Norwegian: Katalysator
catalyst in Norwegian Nynorsk: Katalysator
catalyst in Novial: Katalise
catalyst in Polish: Katalizator
catalyst in Portuguese: Catalisador
catalyst in Russian: Катализатор
catalyst in Albanian: Katalizatori
catalyst in Simple English: Catalyst
catalyst in Slovak: Katalyzátor (chémia)
catalyst in Serbian: Катализатор
catalyst in Sundanese: Katalis
catalyst in Finnish: Katalyytti
catalyst in Swedish: Katalysator
catalyst in Tamil: வினைவேக மாற்றி
catalyst in Turkish: Katalizör
catalyst in Ukrainian: Каталізатор
catalyst in Chinese: 催化剂
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
agent,
agent provocateur, agitator, agitprop, alterant, alterative, alterer, author, begetter, beginner, catalysis, catalytic agent,
causer, creator, decay, demagogue, dialysis, dissociation, effector, engenderer, exciter, father, ferment, firebrand, fission, fomenter, generator, goad, hydrolysis, hydrolyst, impetus, impulse, incendiary, incentive, incitation, incitement, inciter, inflamer, innovationist, innovator, inspirer, instigator, introducer, leaven, maker, mischief-maker, modificator, modifier, mother, motivation, mover, originator, parent, photolysis, precursor, prime mover, primum
mobile, producer,
provocateur,
provoker,
rabble-rouser, ringleader, rouser, seditionary, seditionist, sire, splitting, spur, stimulant, thermolysis, transformer, transmogrifier, troublemaker, urger, yeast