Search for "Catalysis" in article titles:

  1. Catalysis: In chemistry and biology, catalysis is the acceleration (increase in rate) of a chemical reaction by means of a substance called a catalyst, which is itself not consumed by the overall reaction. More generally, one may at times call anything ... [100%] 2024-01-11 [Catalysts]
  2. Catalysis: In chemistry and chemical engineering, catalysis is a process that uses an outside substance (the catalyst) to accelerate the rate of a chemical reaction through an uninterrupted and repeated cycle of elementary steps until the last step regenerates the catalyst ... [100%] 2024-01-11
  3. Catalysis: Catalysis, in chemistry, the name given to chemical actions brought about by a substance, termed the “catalyst,” which is recovered unchanged after the action. The term was introduced by Berzelius, who first studied such reactions. It is convenient to divide ... [100%] 2022-09-02
  4. ACS Catalysis: ACS Catalysis is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal established in 2011 by the American Chemical Society. The journal covers research on all aspects of heterogeneous, homogeneous, and biocatalysis. (Chemistry) [70%] 2023-07-23 [Catalysis]
  5. Catalysis Letters: Catalysis Letters is a peer-reviewed scientific journal covering research on catalysis in a wide range of sub-disciplines such as homogeneous, heterogeneous and enzymatic catalysis. It was previously published by Baltzer Science Publishers, which was then sold to Wolters ... [70%] 2023-07-05 [Chemistry journals] [Academic journals established in 1988]...
  6. Catalysis Letters: Catalysis Letters is a peer-reviewed scientific journal covering research on catalysis in a wide range of sub-disciplines such as homogeneous, heterogeneous and enzymatic catalysis. It was previously published by Baltzer Science Publishers, which was then sold to Wolters ... (Chemistry) [70%] 2023-09-29 [Chemistry journals]
  7. Nature Catalysis: Nature Catalysis is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by Nature Portfolio. It was established in 2018. (Chemistry) [70%] 2024-08-24 [Chemistry journals]
  8. Journal of Catalysis: The Journal of Catalysis is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal covering research on all aspects of heterogeneous and homogeneous catalysis. It is published by Elsevier and it was established in 1962 by Jan Hendrik de Boer and P. (Chemistry) [57%] 2022-09-19 [Chemistry journals]
  9. Boreskov Institute of Catalysis: Boreskov Institute of Catalysis of the Siberian Branch of the RAS, BIC (Russian: Институт катализа имени Г. К. (Organization) [50%] 2024-01-02 [Catalysis]
  10. Catalysis software design method: Catalysis is a software design method for the specification and design of component-based computer systems originally developed by Desmond D’Souza and Alan Cameron Wills in their 1999 book. Catalysis focuses on how to make precise abstractions, and emphasizes ... [50%] 2023-11-10 [Software design]
  11. Photoredox catalysis: Photoredox catalysis is a branch of photochemistry that uses single-electron transfer. Photoredox catalysts are generally drawn from three classes of materials: transition-metal complexes, organic dyes, and semiconductors. (Physics) [70%] 2022-07-30 [Catalysis] [Photochemistry]...
  12. Homogeneous catalysis: In chemistry, homogeneous catalysis is catalysis by a soluble catalyst in a solution. Homogeneous catalysis refers to reactions where the catalyst is in the same phase as the reactants, principally in solution. (Chemistry) [70%] 2023-10-26 [Homogeneous catalysis] [Catalysis]...
  13. Synergistic catalysis: Synergistic catalysis is a specialized approach to catalysis whereby at least two different catalysts act on two different substrates simultaneously to allow reaction between the two activated materials. While a catalyst works to lower the energy of reaction overall, a ... (Chemistry) [70%] 2023-08-17 [Catalysis]
  14. Shuttle catalysis: Shuttle catalysis is used to describe catalytic reactions where a chemical entity of a donor molecule is transferred to an acceptor molecule. In these reactions, while the number of chemical bonds of each reactant changes, the types and total number ... [70%] 2023-12-24 [Catalysis]
  15. Magnetic catalysis: Magnetic catalysis is a physics phenomenon, which is defined as an enhancement of dynamical symmetry breaking by an external magnetic field in quantum field theory, used for the description of quantum (quasi-)particles in particle physics, nuclear physics and condensed ... (Physics) [70%] 2023-06-23 [Quantum field theory]
  16. Heterobimetallic catalysis: Heterobimetallic catalysis is an approach to catalysis that employs two different metals to promote a chemical reaction. Included in this definition are cases (Scheme 1) where: 1) each metal activates a different substrate (synergistic catalysis, used interchangeably with the terms ... (Chemistry) [70%] 2023-10-21 [Catalysis]
  17. Acid catalysis: In acid catalysis and base catalysis, a chemical reaction is catalyzed by an acid or a base. By Brønsted–Lowry acid–base theory, the acid is the proton (hydrogen ion, H) donor and the base is the proton acceptor. (Chemical reaction) [70%] 2023-10-02 [Chemical kinetics] [Catalysis]...
  18. Enzyme catalysis: This lesson will explain the transition state theory of enzyme catalysis, the Michaelis-Menten model for enzyme kinetics, and the kinetic parameters Km, kcat, and kcat/Km. Scenarios for simple enzyme inhibition will be illustrated. [70%] 2023-03-28 [Chemistry]
  19. Enzyme catalysis: Enzyme catalysis is the increase in the rate of a process by a biological molecule, an "enzyme". Most enzymes are proteins, and most such processes are chemical reactions. (Catalysis of chemical reactions by specialized proteins known as enzymes) [70%] 2023-12-22 [Enzymes] [Catalysis]...
  20. Plasmonic catalysis: In chemistry, plasmonic catalysis is a type of catalysis that uses plasmons to increase the rate of a chemical reaction. A plasmonic catalyst is made up of a metal nanoparticle surface (usually gold, silver, or a combination of the two ... (Physics) [70%] 2022-12-12 [Nanotechnology] [Catalysis]...
  21. Acid catalysis: In acid catalysis and base catalysis, a chemical reaction is catalyzed by an acid or a base. By Brønsted–Lowry acid–base theory, the acid is the proton (hydrogen ion, H) donor and the base is the proton acceptor. (Chemistry) [70%] 2023-11-07 [Chemical kinetics] [Catalysis]...
  22. Supramolecular catalysis: Supramolecular catalysis is not a well-defined field but it generally refers to an application of supramolecular chemistry, especially molecular recognition and guest binding, toward catalysis. This field was originally inspired by enzymatic system which, unlike classical organic chemistry reactions ... (Chemistry) [70%] 2023-11-23 [Supramolecular chemistry] [Catalysis]...
  23. Heterogeneous catalysis: Heterogeneous catalysis is catalysis where the phase of catalysts differs from that of the reactants or products. The process contrasts with homogeneous catalysis where the reactants, products and catalyst exist in the same phase. (Chemistry) [70%] 2024-04-10 [Catalysis]
  24. Heterobimetallic catalysis: Heterobimetallic catalysis is an approach to catalysis that employs two different metals to promote a chemical reaction. Included in this definition are cases (Scheme 1) where: 1) each metal activates a different substrate (synergistic catalysis, used interchangeably with the terms ... (Chemistry) [70%] 2024-04-15 [Catalysis]
  25. Homogeneous catalysis: In chemistry, homogeneous catalysis is catalysis where the catalyst is in same phase as reactants, principally by a soluble catalyst a in solution. In contrast, heterogeneous catalysis describes processes where the catalysts and substrate are in distinct phases, typically solid ... (Chemical reaction where catalyst and reactants are in the same phase of matter) [70%] 2024-05-14 [Homogeneous catalysis] [Catalysis]...
  26. Squaramide catalysis: Within the area of organocatalysis, squaramide catalysis describes the use of squaramides to accelerate and stereochemically alter organic transformations. The effects arise through hydrogen-bonding interactions between the substrate and the squaramide, unlike classic catalysts, and is thus a type ... (Use of squaramides as hydrogen-bond catalyst to accelerate reactions) [70%] 2024-10-05 [Catalysis] [Organic chemistry]...
  27. Hydrogen-bond catalysis: Hydrogen-bond catalysis is a type of organocatalysis that relies on use of hydrogen bonding interactions to accelerate and control organic reactions. In biological systems, hydrogen bonding plays a key role in many enzymatic reactions, both in orienting the substrate ... [57%] 2023-05-30 [Catalysis] [Organic chemistry]...
  28. Hydrogen-bond catalysis: Hydrogen-bond catalysis is a type of organocatalysis that relies on use of hydrogen bonding interactions to accelerate and control organic reactions. In biological systems, hydrogen bonding plays a key role in many enzymatic reactions, both in orienting the substrate ... (Chemistry) [57%] 2023-04-29 [Catalysis] [Organic chemistry]...
  29. Water oxidation catalysis: Water oxidation catalysis (WOC) is the acceleration (catalysis) of the conversion of water into oxygen and protons: Many catalysts are effective, both homogeneous catalysts and heterogeneous catalysts. The oxygen evolving complex in photosynthesis is the premier example. (Chemistry) [57%] 2023-08-11 [Hydrogen production] [Industrial gases]...
  30. Heterogeneous gold catalysis: Heterogeneous gold catalysis refers to the catalysis of chemical reactions by gold, typically supported on metal oxide substrates. Despite the well known inertness of bulk gold, decreasing the diameter of supported gold clusters to c. (Physics) [57%] 2023-02-14 [Gold] [Chemical reactions]...
  31. Concurrent tandem catalysis: Concurrent tandem catalysis (CTC) is a technique in chemistry where multiple catalysts (usually two) produce a product otherwise not accessible by a single catalyst. It is usually practiced as homogeneous catalysis. (Chemistry) [57%] 2022-06-03 [Catalysis]
  32. Lewis acid catalysis: In Lewis acid catalysis of organic reactions, a metal-based Lewis acid acts as an electron pair acceptor to increase the reactivity of a substrate. Common Lewis acid catalysts are based on main group metals such as aluminum, boron, silicon ... (Chemistry) [57%] 2022-12-09 [Chemical reactions] [Acid catalysts]...

external From search of external encyclopedias:

0