enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Endothermic process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endothermic_process

    If the energy of the forming bonds is greater than the energy of the breaking bonds, then energy is released. This is known as an exothermic reaction. However, if more energy is needed to break the bonds than the energy being released, energy is taken up. Therefore, it is an endothermic reaction. [7]

  3. Thermal decomposition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_decomposition

    The reaction is usually endothermic as heat is required to break chemical bonds in the compound undergoing decomposition. If decomposition is sufficiently exothermic, a positive feedback loop is created producing thermal runaway and possibly an explosion or other chemical reaction. Thermal decomposition is a chemical reaction where heat is a ...

  4. Enthalpy change of solution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enthalpy_change_of_solution

    Breaking solvent-solvent attractions (endothermic), for instance, that of hydrogen bonding Forming solvent-solute attractions ( exothermic ), in solvation . The value of the enthalpy of solvation is the sum of these individual steps.

  5. Chemical decomposition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_decomposition

    The details of a decomposition process are not always well defined. Nevertheless, some activation energy is generally needed to break the involved bonds and as such, higher temperatures generally accelerates decomposition. The net reaction can be an endothermic process, or in the case of spontaneous decompositions, an exothermic process.

  6. Starch gelatinization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starch_gelatinization

    Starch gelatinization is a process of breaking down of intermolecular bonds of starch molecules in the presence of water and heat, allowing the hydrogen bonding sites (the hydroxyl hydrogen and oxygen) to engage more water. This irreversibly dissolves the starch granule in water. Water acts as a plasticizer.

  7. Hammond's postulate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammond's_postulate

    The adjustment involves much breaking of the bond more easily broken, and a small amount of breaking of the bond which requires more energy. [16] This conclusion by Bunnett is a contradiction from the Hammond postulate. The Hammond postulate is the opposite of what Bunnett theorized.

  8. Bond energy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bond_energy

    The bond energy for H 2 O is the average energy required to break each of the two O–H bonds in sequence: Although the two bonds are the equivalent in the original symmetric molecule, the bond-dissociation energy of an oxygen–hydrogen bond varies slightly depending on whether or not there is another hydrogen atom bonded to the oxygen atom.

  9. Homolysis (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homolysis_(chemistry)

    Bond cleavage is also possible by a process called heterolysis. The energy involved in this process is called bond dissociation energy (BDE). [ 2 ] BDE is defined as the " enthalpy (per mole ) required to break a given bond of some specific molecular entity by homolysis," symbolized as D . [ 3 ]