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dissociation
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dissociation

In chemistry, the process whereby a single compound splits into two or more smaller products, which may be capable of recombining to form the reactant.

Where dissociation is incomplete (not all the compound's molecules dissociate), a chemical equilibrium exists between the compound and its dissociation products. The extent of incomplete dissociation is defined by a numerical value (dissociation constant).



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Indeed, Stratton's difficulty in locating his limbs in the upside-down world of his experiment recalls a bad trip, if not the dissociations of psychosis.
These dissociations provide evidence for a separate pathway in humans for sensing the orientation relative to gravity that is apart from the well-known pathway for orientation perception of the visual world.
Suslick counters that because chemical dissociations occur in mere femtoseconds, reactions would have been well under way even in the acetone bubbles.
 
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