Example An illustrative example is the effect of catalysts to speed the decomposition of
hydrogen peroxide into water and
oxygen: :2 HO → 2 HO + O This reaction proceeds because the reaction products are more stable than the starting compound, but this decomposition is so slow that hydrogen peroxide solutions are commercially available. In the presence of a catalyst such as
manganese dioxide, this reaction proceeds much more rapidly. This effect is readily seen by the
effervescence of oxygen. The catalyst is not consumed in the reaction, and may be recovered unchanged and re-used indefinitely. Accordingly, manganese dioxide is said to
catalyze this reaction. In living organisms, this reaction is catalyzed by
enzymes (proteins that serve as catalysts) such as
catalase. Another example is the effect of catalysts on air pollution and reducing the amount of carbon monoxide. Development of active and selective catalysts for the conversion of carbon monoxide into desirable products is one of the most important roles of catalysts. Using catalysts for the hydrogenation of carbon monoxide helps remove this toxic gas and produce useful materials.
Units The
SI derived unit for measuring the
catalytic activity of a catalyst is the
katal, which is quantified in moles per second. The productivity of a catalyst can be described by the
turnover number (TON) and the catalytic activity by the
turn over frequency (TOF), which is the TON per time unit. The biochemical equivalent is the
enzyme unit. For more information on the efficiency of enzymatic catalysis, see the article on
enzymes.
Catalytic reaction mechanisms In general, chemical reactions occur faster in the presence of a catalyst because the catalyst provides an alternative
reaction mechanism (reaction pathway) having a lower
activation energy than the noncatalyzed mechanism. In catalyzed mechanisms, the catalyst is regenerated. As a simple example occurring in the gas phase, the reaction can be catalyzed by adding
nitric oxide. The reaction occurs in two steps: : (rate-determining) : (fast) The NO catalyst is regenerated. The overall rate is the rate of the slow step
Reaction energetics Catalysts enable pathways that differ from those of uncatalyzed reactions. These pathways have lower
activation energy. Consequently, more molecular collisions have the energy needed to reach the
transition state. Hence, catalysts can enable reactions that would otherwise be blocked or slowed by a kinetic barrier. The catalyst may increase the reaction rate or selectivity, or enable the reaction at lower temperatures. This effect can be illustrated with an
energy profile diagram. In the catalyzed
elementary reaction, catalysts do
not change the extent of a reaction: they have
no effect on the
chemical equilibrium of a reaction. The ratio of the forward and the reverse reaction rates is unaffected (see also
thermodynamics). The
second law of thermodynamics describes why a catalyst does not change the chemical equilibrium of a reaction. Suppose there was such a catalyst that shifted an equilibrium. Introducing the catalyst to the system would result in a reaction to move to the new equilibrium, producing energy. Production of energy is a necessary result since reactions are spontaneous only if
Gibbs free energy is produced, and if there is no energy barrier, there is no need for a catalyst. Then, removing the catalyst would also result in a reaction, producing energy; i.e. the addition and its reverse process, removal, would both produce energy. Thus, a catalyst that could change the equilibrium would be a
perpetual motion machine, a contradiction to the laws of thermodynamics. Thus, catalysts
do not alter the equilibrium constant. (A catalyst can however change the equilibrium concentrations by reacting in a subsequent step. It is then consumed as the reaction proceeds, and thus it is also a reactant. Illustrative is the base-catalyzed
hydrolysis of
esters, where the produced
carboxylic acid immediately reacts with the base catalyst and thus the reaction equilibrium is shifted towards hydrolysis.) The catalyst stabilizes the transition state more than it stabilizes the starting material. It decreases the kinetic barrier by decreasing the
difference in energy between starting material and the transition state. It
does not change the energy difference between starting materials and products (thermodynamic barrier), or the available energy (this is provided by the environment as heat or light).
Related concepts Some so-called catalysts are really
precatalysts, which convert to catalysts in the reaction. For example,
Wilkinson's catalyst RhCl(PPh) loses one triphenylphosphine ligand before entering the true catalytic cycle. Precatalysts are easier to store but are easily activated
in situ. Because of this preactivation step, many catalytic reactions involve an
induction period. In
cooperative catalysis, chemical species that improve catalytic activity are called
cocatalysts or
promoters. In
tandem catalysis two or more different catalysts are coupled in a one-pot reaction. In
autocatalysis, the catalyst
is a product of the overall reaction, in contrast to all other types of catalysis considered in this article. The simplest example of autocatalysis is a reaction of type A + B → 2 B, in one or in several steps. The overall reaction is just A → B, so that B is a product. But since B is also a reactant, it may be present in the rate equation and affect the reaction rate. As the reaction proceeds, the concentration of B increases and can accelerate the reaction as a catalyst. In effect, the reaction accelerates itself or is autocatalyzed. An example is the
hydrolysis of an
ester such as
aspirin to a
carboxylic acid and an
alcohol. In the absence of added acid catalysts, the carboxylic acid product catalyzes the hydrolysis.
Switchable catalysis refers to a type of catalysis where the catalyst can be toggled between different ground states possessing distinct reactivity, typically by applying an external stimulus. This ability to reversibly switch the catalyst allows for spatiotemporal control over catalytic activity and selectivity. The external stimuli used to switch the catalyst can include changes in temperature, pH, light, electric fields, or the addition of chemical agents. A true catalyst can work in tandem with a
sacrificial catalyst. The true catalyst is consumed in the elementary reaction and turned into a deactivated form. The sacrificial catalyst regenerates the true catalyst for another cycle. The sacrificial catalyst is consumed in the reaction, and as such, it is not really a catalyst, but a reagent. For example,
osmium tetroxide (OsO4) is a good reagent for dihydroxylation, but it is highly toxic and expensive. In
Upjohn dihydroxylation, the sacrificial catalyst
N-methylmorpholine N-oxide (NMMO) regenerates OsO4, and only catalytic quantities of OsO4 are needed.
Classification Catalysis may be classified as either
homogeneous or heterogeneous. A
homogeneous catalysis is one whose components are dispersed in the same phase (usually gaseous or liquid) as the
reactant's molecules. A
heterogeneous catalysis is one where the reaction components are not in the same phase.
Enzymes and other biocatalysts are often considered as a third category. Similar mechanistic principles apply to heterogeneous, homogeneous, and biocatalysis. ==Heterogeneous catalysis==