(physical chemistry) In a chemical reaction, the number of molecules which come together and form the activated complex.
| Sci-Tech Dictionary: molecularity |
(physical chemistry) In a chemical reaction, the number of molecules which come together and form the activated complex.
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| Wikipedia: Molecularity |
Molecularity in chemistry is the number of colliding molecular entities that are involved in a single reaction step.[1] While the order of a reaction is derived experimentally, the molecularity is a theoretical concept and can only be applied to elementary reactions. In elementary reactions, the reaction order, the molecularity and the stoichiometric coefficient are the same, although only numerically, because they are different concepts.

Where the M over the arrow denotes that to conserve energy and momentum a second reaction with a third body is required. After the initial bimolecular collision of A and B an energetically excited reaction intermediate is formed, then, it collides with a M body, in a second bimolecular reaction, transferring the excess energy to it. [3]
The reaction can be explained as two consecutive reactions:


These reactions frequently have a pressure and temperature dependence region of transition between second and third order kinetics.[4]
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