intermediates vs. catalysts
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intermediates vs. catalysts
does anyone know how to differentiate an intermediate from a catalyst in a series of reaction mechanisms? would it just be that the intermediate cancels out, while the catalyst will still appear in the products, or...?
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Both intermediates and catalysts, end up canceling out and aren't in the overall reaction. The way I differentiate between them is that an intermediate goes from being a product in one step to being a reactant in another (P---->R), whereas a catalyst is a reactant in one step, but becomes the product in another (R----->P).
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Intermediates go from being a product of a previous step to a reactant in future steps. Catalysts start in the reactants and do not change and end up on the product side as well. Both cancel out but remember to check whether it is being used as a reactant or whether it's simply staying unchanged.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Intermediates and catalysts both cancel out in the reaction mechanism. Intermediates are present first as a product then used up as a reactant in future steps. Catalysts are present first as a reactant then are produced as a product in future steps.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
I agree! Catalysts are present at the beginning of the reaction while intermediates are formed and then consumed within the reaction. This makes sense because a catalyst is introduced to the reaction to speed up the rate of the reaction and lower the activation energy.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
While both intermediates and catalyst cancel out, intermediates are made in a reaction by first appearing as a product while catalysts are added into a reaction.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
A catalyst is there from the first set of reactants and is regenerated at the end of the reaction. An intermediate is something that is formed throughout the reaction, and it does no longer exists at the end.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
A helpful way to differentiate them is by looking at when they are consumed/produced in the reaction. A catalyst is consumed at first and produced in another step. An intermediate is produced from a step and then consumed in another step.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Similar to everyone else I noticed that intermediates are always produced so they would enter an equation as a product, while catalysts are always added so they would enter an equation as a reactant.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
The catalyst is the component that does not change in the overall reaction. Intermediates are determined to be consumed by a later step. A catalyst is added to the reaction to increase the reaction rate.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Intermediates are produced then consumed, while catalysts are present as "reactants" and then produced.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
intermediates are produced and consumed while catalysts are consumed and then produced. a catalyst increases the rate and decreases the activation energy
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
both cancel out at the end; intermediates are made in a reaction by first appearing as a product & catalysts are added into a reaction
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
The best way I can explain it is that an intermediate is produced in a reaction and then consumed in a future step. This is different to a catalyst (basically opposites) where it is first consumed and then produced in a future step.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Intermediates are created and used up throughout a reaction. Catalysts are added, used up, and reproduced throughout a reaction OR like with biological enzymes, they are not used up.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Both intermediates and catalyst cancel out. The main difference is that catalyst start out on the reactant side and intermediates start out on the product side.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Hi! Both the catalysts and intermediates cancel out, but the catalysts starts on the reactant side and the intermediate starts on the product side.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Neither intermediates or catalysts are present in the overall reactions (or rate laws) for a reaction. Intermediates are produced then consumed in the steps of a reaction. Catalysts are initially present and are consumed, then produced.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
A catalyst is present before the reaction occurs, and involved in the intermediate steps of the reaction but ends up unchanged after the reaction has taken place. The Intermediates are the result of one intermediate step, but end up as a reactant in another intermediate step.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
A catalyst is used at the beginning of the reaction and regenerated at the end. An intermediate is produced during the reaction but no longer exists by the end.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Hi,
An intermediate is a product of one reaction that gets used in a subsequent reaction whereas a catalyst is something that is used in the beginning of the reaction and remade by the end of it; neither show up in the overall reaction equation.
An intermediate is a product of one reaction that gets used in a subsequent reaction whereas a catalyst is something that is used in the beginning of the reaction and remade by the end of it; neither show up in the overall reaction equation.
Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Hi! Intermediates are produced and consumed during the reaction whilst catalysts are consumed then produced during the reaction. Hope this helps!
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Intermediates are cancelled out eventually as they are created in elementary step 1, and then used as a reactant in elementary step 2, but are not a part of the overall reaction. Catalysts aren't necessarily products or reactants (differing from intermediates) as they rather help in speeding up the reaction process by lower the activation energy.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Hello!
They both cancel out in the end equation, but intermediates are created and then used up (so they shouldn't be in the initial equation, P ---> R), and catalyst are in the initial equation and become product in another and then is used up (R --> P)
Hope this helps :)
They both cancel out in the end equation, but intermediates are created and then used up (so they shouldn't be in the initial equation, P ---> R), and catalyst are in the initial equation and become product in another and then is used up (R --> P)
Hope this helps :)
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
RaniyaFeroz_1E wrote:Both intermediates and catalysts, end up canceling out and aren't in the overall reaction. The way I differentiate between them is that an intermediate goes from being a product in one step to being a reactant in another (P---->R), whereas a catalyst is a reactant in one step, but becomes the product in another (R----->P).
This was really helpful because I was also really confused about this topic.
Thank you
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Both intermediates and catalysts cancel out in a series of reaction mechanisms, but intermediates are species that are formed in one step and then used up in another, while catalysts are are never used up. So intermediates will first appear in the products of one step and then in the reactants of another, and catalysts will appear as a reactant and then a product.
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
they are opposites, a catalyst is first consumed and then used in a later step where as an intermediate is produced within a reaciton and then consumed in a later step
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Intermediates are in the reaction by first appearing as a product while catalysts are added into a reaction, however, they both cancel each other out
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Hi there! This is a really good question. Catalysts are always present in the reactants but never cancel out throughout the reaction. Intermediates start as a product and get cancelled out in the reaction. Hope this helps!
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Yeah that's essentially the basic idea of it! Intermediates are consumed during the elementary steps of the reaction whereas catalysts are usually consumed and then reformed
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
an intermediate usually will go from the products side to the reactant side in the following reaction. This is different than catalysts because those will go from the reactants to the products. Remember that they will cancel out or wont be actually shown in the overall reaction!
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Re: intermediates vs. catalysts
Both catalysts and intermediates cancel themselves out, but catalysts are used in the initial reaction and then regenerated at the end. Intermediates are produced by the reaction but no longer exist at the end.
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