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activation energy |
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activation energyIn chemistry, the minimum energy required in order to start a chemical reaction. Some elements and compounds will react together merely by bringing them into contact (spontaneous reaction). For others it is necessary to supply energy (heat, radiation, or electrical charge) in order to start the reaction, even if there is ultimately a net output of energy. This initial energy is the activation energy. The point at which the reaction begins is known as the energy barrier. When the energy barrier is reached, the chemical bonds in the reactants are broken, enabling them to proceed from reactants to products. In some reactions, such as the combustion of fuels, the activation energy required for the chemical reaction to take place is very small, resulting in a rapid reaction. Other chemical reactions, such as the rusting of iron (a type of oxidation) have a very large energy barrier and take place slowly. A chemical equation only describes the energy of reaction; the activation energy is not shown. The total chemical energy involved can be represented in an energy level diagram; this also shows whether a reaction is exothermic (giving off energy) or endothermic (absorbing energy).
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? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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In order to obtain an insight on the mechanism of
vulcanization, an 'apparent' activation energy was calculated
by rearrangement of the Arrhenius equation 2 solving for [E. 0] is a normalization
constant, M is mass, E is the activation energy, k is Boltzmann's
constant, and T is body temperature in kelvins.
Table 2
Principal properties in the HTS an SCD databases
Category Examples
Physical Crystallography, grain size,
density, porosity
Mechanical Elasticity (a), strength,
hardness, toughness, creep
Thermal Conductivity, diffusivity,
expansion, specific heat
Corrosion (b) Rate, activation energy, products
Conduction (c) [T. |
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