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  2. Enzyme catalysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzyme_catalysis

    where S 1 is a polypeptide, P 1 and P 2 are products. The first chemical step includes the formation of a covalent acyl-enzyme intermediate. The second step is the deacylation step. It is important to note that the group H+, initially found on the enzyme, but not in water, appears in the product before the step of hydrolysis, therefore it may ...

  3. Catalytic cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalytic_cycle

    In chemistry, a catalytic cycle is a multistep reaction mechanism that involves a catalyst. [1] The catalytic cycle is the main method for describing the role of catalysts in biochemistry, organometallic chemistry, bioinorganic chemistry, materials science, etc. Since catalysts are regenerated, catalytic cycles are usually written as a sequence ...

  4. Catalysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalysis

    The reaction occurs in two steps: 2 NO + O 2 → 2 NO 2 (rate-determining) NO 2 + SO 2 → NO + SO 3 (fast) The NO catalyst is regenerated. The overall rate is the rate of the slow step [15] v=2k 1 [NO] 2 [O 2]. An example of heterogeneous catalysis is the reaction of oxygen and hydrogen on the surface of titanium dioxide (TiO 2, or titania) to ...

  5. Acid catalysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid_catalysis

    In these reactions, the conjugate acid of the carbonyl group is a better electrophile than the neutral carbonyl group itself. Depending on the chemical species that act as the acid or base, catalytic mechanisms can be classified as either specific catalysis and general catalysis. Many enzymes operate by general catalysis.

  6. Hydrogen auto-transfer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_auto-transfer

    [1] [2] Mechanism of one type of carbonyl addition hydrogen auto-transfer reaction involving hydrometalation (step 2). [ 3 ] Hydrogen auto-transfer , also known as borrowing hydrogen , is the activation of a chemical reaction by temporary transfer of two hydrogen atoms from the reactant to a catalyst and return of those hydrogen atoms back to a ...

  7. Heterogeneous catalysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterogeneous_catalysis

    Hydrogenation of ethene on a catalytic solid surface (1) Adsorption (2) Reaction (3) Desorption. Heterogeneous catalysis is catalysis where the phase of catalysts differs from that of the reagents or products. [1] The process contrasts with homogeneous catalysis where the reagents, products and catalyst exist in the same phase.

  8. Enzyme kinetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzyme_kinetics

    Although these mechanisms are often a complex series of steps, there is typically one rate-determining step that determines the overall kinetics. This rate-determining step may be a chemical reaction or a conformational change of the enzyme or substrates, such as those involved in the release of product(s) from the enzyme.

  9. Active site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_site

    In biology and biochemistry, the active site is the region of an enzyme where substrate molecules bind and undergo a chemical reaction. The active site consists of amino acid residues that form temporary bonds with the substrate, the binding site, and residues that catalyse a reaction of that substrate, the catalytic site.