User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
See also
- unimolecular
- bimolecular
- trimolecular
- Higher molecularities are probably unknown
Extensive Definition
Molecularity in chemistry is the number of
colliding molecular
entities that are involved in a single reaction
step. While the order
of a reaction is derived experimentally, the molecularity is a
theoretical concept and can only be applied to elementary
reactions. In elementary reactions, the reaction order,
the molecularity and the stoichiometric
coefficient are the same, although only numerically, because
they are different concepts.
- A reaction involving one molecular entity is called unimolecular.
- A reaction involving two molecular entities is called bimolecular.
- A reaction involving three molecular entities is called termolecular. Termolecular reactions in solutions or gas mixtures are very rare, because of the improbability of three molecular entities simultaneously colliding . However the term termolecular is also used to refer to three body association reactions of the type:
- A + B \overset C
The reaction can be explained as two consecutive
reactions:
- A + B \to AB^*
- AB^* + M \to C + M
These reactions frequently have a pressure and
temperature dependence region of transition between second and
third order kinetics.
Notes and references
See also
molecularity in German:
Molekularität