Page 15 - Principles of Catalyst Development
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CATALYTIC  FUNCTIONS


            What the  Catalyst Does







            1.1.  A  DEFINITION

           This  chapter deals  with  what  a  catalyst does  and what it  can  be  expected
           to  do  or not do.  We  start the  discussion with  a  definition:
                A  catalyst  is  a  substance  that  increases  tile  rate  at  which  a  chemical  reaction
                approaches  equilibrium  without  itself  becoming  permallently  involved  in  the
                reaction.
                Key words in the definition are italicized. A catalyst is  itself a chemical
           substance  and  as  such  becomes  involved  in  the  reaction,  although  not
           permanently. The chemical state of the catalyst is  subject to all  the rules of
           chemistry  in  its  interaction  with  reactants  but  remains  unchanged  at  the
           end  of the  reaction.  Primarily,  the  catalyst  accelerates  the  kinetics  of the
           reaction  toward thermodynamic completion by  introducing a  less  difficult
           path  for  molecules  to  follow.  Figure  1.1  illustrates  this  feature  with  an
           industrially important reaction, the  synthesis of ammonia 'l ):

                                                                          (1.1)

                Nitrogen  and  hydrogen  molecules  combine  homogeneously  (without
            a catalyst) at an extremely slow rate.  Breaking their bonds to form  reactive
            fragments requires large amounts of energy, leading to an activation energy
           of 57 kcal mole -1.  The  probability  of finding  these  fragments  together  is
           small.  Spontaneous  ammonia  formation  at  moderate  conditions  is
           infinitesimal. The catalyst, however, assists dissociation through chemisorp-
           tion and recombination with  a  series  of surface interactions:
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