Search results for "Rate constant"

showing 10 items of 224 documents

A comparative account of quantum dynamics of the H+ + H2 reaction at low temperature on two different potential energy surfaces

2014

Rotationally resolved reaction probabilities, integral cross sections, and rate constant for the H+ + H2 (v = 0, j = 0 or 1) → H2 (v′ = 0, j′) + H + reaction are calculated using a time-independent quantum mechanical method and the potential energy surface of Kamisaka et al. [J. Chem. Phys.116, 654 (2002)] (say KBNN PES). All partial wave contributions of the total angular momentum, J, are included to obtain converged cross sections at low collision energies and rate constants at low temperatures. In order to test the accuracy of the KBNN PES, the results obtained here are compared with those obtained in our earlier work [P. Honvault et al. , Phys. Rev. Lett.107, 023201 (2011)] using the ac…

Work (thermodynamics)Angular momentumReaction rate constantChemistryTotal angular momentum quantum numberQuantum dynamicsPotential energy surfaceGeneral Physics and AstronomyPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAtomic physicsPotential energyQuantumThe Journal of Chemical Physics
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Molecular Parameters of Hyperbranched Copolymers Obtained by Self-Condensing Vinyl Copolymerization, 2. Non-Equal Rate Constants

2001

The kinetics, molecular weight averages, and the average degree of branching, DB, are calculated for the self-condensing vinyl copolymerization (SCVCP) of a vinyl monomer M with an "inimer" AB* in the case of different reactivities of active species. Emphasis is given to two limiting cases: formation of "macroinimers" occurs if the monomer M is more reactive than the vinyl groups of inimers or polymer, and "hyperstars" are formed in the opposite case. It is shown that the kinetics, the molecular weight averages, and the average degree of branching strongly depend on the relative reactivities of monomer and inimer. Comparison with experimental data shows that consistent fits of the reactivit…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPolymers and PlasticsOrganic ChemistryRadical polymerizationKineticsPolymerBranching (polymer chemistry)Inorganic Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundReaction rate constantMonomerchemistryPolymer chemistryMaterials ChemistryCopolymerMolar mass distributionMacromolecules
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The kinetics of anionic polymerization of styrene in 1,2-dimethoxiethane

2007

Kinetic measurements in a flow apparatus in combination with conductance measurements, permit the determination of the two equilibrium constants Kes and Kdiss* and the three propagation rate constants k(±)c, k(±)s and k(−) as a function of temperature. The great differences in the polymerization rate in various solvents are mainly caused by their influence on the equilibrium constants. The influence of the solvent on the rate constants is not greater than in other chemical reactions.

Solventchemistry.chemical_compoundAnionic addition polymerizationReaction rate constantPolymerizationChemistryKineticsPolymer chemistryGeneral EngineeringPhysical chemistryChemical reactionEquilibrium constantStyreneJournal of Polymer Science: Polymer Symposia
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Study of the effect of the membrane composition on ion transfer across a supported liquid membrane

2003

Abstract The rate of ion transfer across the supported liquid membrane (SLM) is studied in the rotating diffusion cell (RDC), varying the chemical composition of the SLM from net-cloth supported gel membranes to radiation-grafted polymer membranes. Steady-state current–voltage curves are measured as a function of the rotation rate, and values for the standard rate constant, k 0 , are determined for a series of tetraalkylammonium cations from the analysis of the initial slopes and the diffusion limiting currents. The analysis gives values for k 0 of the order of 10 −2 –10 −4 cm s −1 , which is in rather good agreement with the values found in the literature for this type of the system. As co…

ChromatographyChemistryGeneral Chemical EngineeringCapacitive sensingSynthetic membraneAnalytical chemistryIonic bondingAnalytical ChemistryReaction rate constantMembraneElectrochemistryElectric currentDiffusion (business)Drug carrierJournal of Electroanalytical Chemistry
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Modelling phase transition kinetics of chenodeoxycholic acid with the Runge–Kutta method

2009

Abstract The phase transition kinetics of two chenodeoxycholic acid polymorphic modifications— form I (stable at high temperature), form III (stable at low temperature) and the amorphous phase has been examined under various conditions of temperature and relative humidity. Form III conversion to form I was examined at high temperature conditions and was found to be non-spontaneous, requiring seed crystals for initiation. The formation kinetic model of form I was created incorporating the three-dimensional seed crystal growth, the phase transition rate proportion to the surface area of form I crystals, and the influence of the amorphous phase surface area changes with an empirical stage poin…

Phase transitionDifferential Thermal AnalysisSpectrophotometry InfraredDifferential equationClinical BiochemistryPharmaceutical ScienceThermodynamicsChenodeoxycholic AcidKinetic energyPhase TransitionAnalytical ChemistryReaction rate constantDrug StabilityX-Ray DiffractionDrug DiscoverySample preparationSpectroscopySeed crystalModels StatisticalCalorimetry Differential ScanningChemistryTemperatureKineticsRunge–Kutta methodsCrystallographyX-ray crystallographyCrystallizationJournal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis
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Partition Behavior of Anilines in Bulk‐Phase and High‐Performance Liquid Chromatographic Systems: Influence on Correlation with Biological Constants

1992

Abstract The partition behavior of a mixed series of ring‐substituted anilines in reversed‐phase high‐performance liquid chromatographic systems is substantially different from that observed in a classical bulk‐phase partition system with n ‐heptane as the aprotic reference solvent. On the basis of the equivalence of each ring substituent in the p ‐straight‐chain methylene groups (ν value) as a function of the fraction of organic solvent (acetonitrile or methanol) in the mobile phase, the biased partition behavior for imperfect homologues and heterologues is verified relative to that of perfect homologues. This behavior was tentatively attributed, mainly, to differences in the hydrogen bond…

HeptaneAcetonitrilesAniline CompoundsChromatographyChemistryMethanolSubstituentAnalytical chemistryPharmaceutical ScienceIntestinal absorptionSolventPartition coefficientchemistry.chemical_compoundReaction rate constantPartition (number theory)AcetonitrileChromatography High Pressure LiquidJournal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
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Improved Efficacy of Synthesizing *MIII-Labeled DOTA Complexes in Binary Mixtures of Water and Organic Solvents. A Combined Radio- and Physicochemica…

2018

Typically, the synthesis of radiometal-based radiopharmaceuticals is performed in buffered aqueous solutions. We found that the presence of organic solvents like ethanol increased the radiolabeling yields of [68Ga]Ga-DOTA (DOTA = 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacatic acid). In the present study, the effect of organic cosolvents [ethanol (EtOH), isopropyl alcohol, and acetonitrile] on the radiolabeling yields of the macrocyclic chelator DOTA with several trivalent radiometals (gallium-68, scandium-44, and lutetium-177) was systematically investigated. Various binary water (H2O)/organic solvent mixtures allowed the radiolabeling of DOTA at a significantly lower temperature than …

Aqueous solution010405 organic chemistryKineticsProtonation010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesMedicinal chemistry0104 chemical sciencesInorganic Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundReaction rate constantDeprotonationchemistryDOTAChelationPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAcetonitrileInorganic Chemistry
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Critical Role of Substrate Conformational Change in the Proton Transfer Process Catalyzed by 4-Oxalocrotonate Tautomerase

2009

4-Oxalocrotonate tautomerase enzyme (4-OT) catalyzes the isomerization of 2-oxo-4-hexenedioate to 2-oxo-3-hexenedioate. The chemical process involves two proton transfers, one from a carbon of the substrate to the nitrogen of Pro1 and another from this nitrogen atom to a different carbon of the substrate. In this paper the isomerization has been studied using the combined quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical (QM/MM) method with a dual-level treatment of the quantum subsystem employing the MPW1BK density functional as the higher level. Exploration of the potential energy surface shows that the process is stepwise, with a stable intermediate state corresponding to the deprotonated subs…

Models MolecularConformational changeProtonMolecular ConformationProtonationCrystallography X-RayBiochemistryArticleCatalysisColloid and Surface ChemistryReaction rate constantIsomerismCatalytic DomainIsomerasesChemistrySubstrate (chemistry)Hydrogen BondingGeneral ChemistryChemical physicsCrotonatesPotential energy surface4-Oxalocrotonate tautomeraseQuantum TheoryThermodynamicsPhysical chemistryProtonsIsomerizationJournal of the American Chemical Society
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Über die Stabilität Von Copolymeren aus 1,3,5-Trioxan mit verschiedenen Lactonen

1976

Der thermische Abbau von Copolymeren aus 1,3,5-Trioxan und den Lactonen β-Propiolacton (3-Propanolid), Pivalolacton (2,2-Dimethyl-3-propanolid) und e-Caprolacton (6-Hexanolid) wurde untersucht. Der langsame und vollstandige Abbau der Copolymeren wird zuruckgefuhrt auf 1 eine statistische acidolytische Kettenspaltung durch Carboxyl-Endgruppen, 2 die Abspaltung von Acrylsaure an den sauren Endgruppen, 3 die statistische Kettenspaltung durch Pyrolyse von Esterbindungen vor allem in Sequenzen aus mehreren β-Propiolactonbausteinen. Die Teilreaktionen (1) und (2) konnen durch Zusatz von Butandiol-Diglycidylather-(1,4-Bis(2,3-epoxypropoxy)butan) oder N-(2-Naphthyl)anilin oder von Epoxiden stark ve…

Ethylene oxideChain scissionPolymers and PlasticsChemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundReaction rate constantAnilineColloid and Surface ChemistryButanediolPolymer chemistryCopolymerMaterials ChemistryOrganic chemistryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAcrylic acidColloid and Polymer Science
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Rate-retarding effects of mixed anionic/non-ionic micelles on the alkaline hydrolysis of the chloropentamminocobalt(III) complex

2006

Abstract Rate data for the alkaline hydrolysis of the chloropentaamminecobalt(III) cation in the presence of mixed micelles composed of (i) anionic sodium decylsulphate (SDeS) and non-ionic dodecylpenta(oxyethylene glycol) monoether (C 12 E 5 ) surfactants and (ii) anionic sodium perfluorooctanoate (SPFO) and non-ionic C 12 E 5 surfactants has been obtained at T 298 K and constant electrolyte concentration 0.08 mol dm −3 ([NaOH] = 0.01 mol dm −3 , [NaClO 4 ] = 0.07 mol dm −3 ) over a wide range of total surfactant concentration ( C t ) and anionic mole fraction ( χ ). The critical micelle concentrations (c.m.c.s) of the mixed micelles have been determined over the entire χ range by means of…

Reaction ratechemistry.chemical_compoundColloid and Surface ChemistryReaction rate constantPulmonary surfactantChemistryCritical micelle concentrationInorganic chemistrySodium dodecyl sulfateMole fractionBinding constantMicelleColloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects
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