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  2. Chemisorption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemisorption

    Chemisorption is a kind of adsorption which involves a chemical reaction between the surface and the adsorbate. New chemical bonds are generated at the adsorbent surface. Examples include macroscopic phenomena that can be very obvious, like corrosion [clarification needed], and subtler effects associated with heterogeneous catalysis, where the catalyst and reactants are in different pha

  3. Heterogeneous catalysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterogeneous_catalysis

    Typical energies for chemisorption range from 20 to 100 kcal/mol. [2] Two cases of chemisorption are: Molecular adsorption: the adsorbate remains intact. An example is alkene binding by platinum. Dissociation adsorption: one or more bonds break concomitantly with adsorption. In this case, the barrier to dissociation affects the rate of adsorption.

  4. Langmuir adsorption model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Langmuir_adsorption_model

    Langmuir published two papers that confirmed the assumption that adsorbed films do not exceed one molecule in thickness. The first experiment involved observing electron emission from heated filaments in gases. [3] The second, a more direct evidence, examined and measured the films of liquid onto an adsorbent surface layer.

  5. Dissociative adsorption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissociative_adsorption

    Breaking the atomic bonds of the dissociating molecule requires a large amount of energy, thus dissociative adsorption is an example of chemisorption, where strong adsorbate-substrate bonds are created. [1] These bonds can be atomic, ionic or metallic in nature. In contrast to dissociative adsorption, in molecular adsorption the adsorbate stays ...

  6. BET theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BET_theory

    BET model of multilayer adsorption, that is, a random distribution of sites covered by one, two, three, etc., adsorbate molecules. The concept of the theory is an extension of the Langmuir theory, which is a theory for monolayer molecular adsorption, to multilayer adsorption with the following hypotheses:

  7. Adsorption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adsorption

    Two adsorbate nitrogen molecules adsorbing onto a tungsten adsorbent from the precursor state around an island of previously adsorbed adsorbate (left) and via random adsorption (right) In other instances, molecular interactions between gas molecules previously adsorbed on a solid surface form significant interactions with gas molecules in the ...

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  9. Lindemann mechanism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lindemann_mechanism

    It breaks down an apparently unimolecular reaction into two elementary steps, with a rate constant for each elementary step. The rate law and rate equation for the entire reaction can be derived from the rate equations and rate constants for the two steps. The Lindemann mechanism is used to model gas phase decomposition or isomerization reactions.