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A reaction involves the following elementary steps.

A. Provide the elementary steps.
B. Define the rate-determining step.
C. Determine the overall reaction order.
D. Identify the catalyst.

User Quentin CG
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1 Answer

6 votes

Final answer:

The question is about reaction mechanisms where the rate-determining step is the slowest step, affecting the overall reaction order, with a catalyst being a substance that modifies the reaction rate without being consumed.

Step-by-step explanation:

The student's question pertains to the understanding of reaction mechanisms, the rate-determining step, the overall reaction order, and the identification of a catalyst.

The elementary steps in a reaction mechanism are the series of individual reactions that show the progression of a chemical reaction from reactants to products.

The rate-determining step is the slowest step in the sequence of a reaction mechanism, analogous to the slowest car that dictates the flow of traffic on a one-lane road.

The overall reaction order is determined by adding the exponents of the concentration terms in the rate law of the rate-determining step.

A catalyst is a substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction without being consumed. It does this by providing a path with a lower activation energy for the reaction to follow, thus changing the reaction mechanism.

User Argelis
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