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Turnover number

 
Sci-Tech Dictionary: turnover number
(′tərn·ō·vər ′nəm·bər)

(biochemistry) The number of molecules of a substrate acted upon in a period of 1 minute by a single enzyme molecule, with the enzyme working at a maximum rate.
(chemical engineering) In an industrial catalytic process, a value that indicates the amount of feed or substrate converted per a measured amount of catalyst.


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Wikipedia: Turnover number
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Turnover number has two related meanings:

In enzymology, turnover number (also termed kcat) is defined as the maximum number of molecules of substrate that an enzyme can convert to product per catalytic site per unit of time and can be calculated as follows: kcat = Vmax/[E]T (see Michaelis-Menten kinetics). For example, carbonic anhydrase has a turnover number of 400,000 to 600,000 s-1, which means that each carbonic anhydrase molecule can produce up to 600,000 molecules of product (CO2) per second.

In other chemical fields, such as organometallic catalysis, turnover number (abbreviated TON) is used with a slightly different meaning: the number of moles of substrate that a mole of catalyst can convert before becoming inactivated. An ideal catalyst would have an infinite turnover number in this sense, because it wouldn't ever be consumed, but in actual practice one often sees turnover numbers which go from 100 to a million or more. The term turnover frequency (abbreviated TOF) is used to refer to the turnover per unit time, as in enzymology. For most relevant industrial applications, the turnover frequency is in the range of 10-2 - 102 s-1 (enzymes 103 - 107 s-1).[1]

References

[1] Jens Hagen, Industrial Catalysis: A Practical Approach, Wiley-VCH, 2006, Weinheim, Germany.


 
 

 

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