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Catalysts

A is a substance that:

  • increases the rate of a reaction, but
  • does not alter the of the reaction, and
  • is unchanged chemically and in at the end of the reaction

Only a very small mass of catalyst is needed to increase the rate of a reaction. However, not all reactions have suitable catalysts.

Different substances catalyse different reactions. The table describes three common catalysts.

CatalystReaction catalysed
IronThe Haber process (making ammonia)
Vanadium(V) oxideThe contact process (a stage in making sulfuric acid)
Manganese dioxideDecomposition of hydrogen peroxide (produces water and oxygen)
CatalystIron
Reaction catalysedThe Haber process (making ammonia)
CatalystVanadium(V) oxide
Reaction catalysedThe contact process (a stage in making sulfuric acid)
CatalystManganese dioxide
Reaction catalysedDecomposition of hydrogen peroxide (produces water and oxygen)

Notice that these catalysts are transition metals or compounds of transition metals.

How catalysts work

A catalyst allows an alternative that has a lower than the uncatalysed reaction. This does not change the frequency of collisions.

However, it does increase the frequency of successful collisions because a greater proportion of collisions has the activation energy or more.

The effect of a catalyst on the activation energy is shown on a chart called a reaction profile. This shows how the of the and products change during a reaction.

A reaction profile for a reaction with and without a catalyst
Figure caption,
A reaction profile for a reaction with and without a catalyst

Enzymes

An is a biological catalyst. Enzymes are important for controlling reactions in cells. They are also important in industry. The use of enzymes allows some industrial reactions to happen at lower temperatures and pressures than traditionally needed.

is a single-celled . The enzymes in yeast are used to produce wine, beer and other alcoholic drinks by of sugars.