Endothermic reaction
if the reaction is exothermic (creates heat) then adding heat will cause the reaction to run in the reverse direction if the reaction is endothermic (requires heat) then heat will speed it up
Because it requires heat input.
if any reaction requires heat to proceed itself than the reaction is called endothermic reaction..
It is a chemical reaction which requires heat - possibly from the environment - to proceed.
This is the necessary heat for this reaction.
An endergonic reaction requires energy input to occur, while an endothermic reaction absorbs heat from its surroundings.
An endothermic reaction is a chemical reaction that absorbs heat from its surroundings, causing a decrease in temperature. This type of reaction requires an input of energy to proceed.
In an endothermic reaction, heat is included as a reactant in the chemical equation. This indicates that the reaction requires heat to proceed, and it is absorbed from the surroundings during the process. The heat is typically written as a reactant on the left side of the equation.
An endothermic reaction in an equation is typically indicated by the presence of heat as a reactant. For example, in a chemical equation, if heat is shown as a reactant (usually on the left side of the arrow), it suggests that the reaction requires energy input to proceed, making it an endothermic reaction.
An endothermic reaction is a reaction where heat flows from the surroundings in to the system. Holding an cold pack to your skin is an endothermic reaction; heat flows from your skin (surroundings) into to the cold pack (system).
exothermic reactions release energy, like a fire, which releases heat ( also endothermic reactions requires and takes/absorbs energy for its reaction like photosynthesis which requires sunlight)
No, the combustion of gasoline is not spontaneous. It requires a spark or heat source to initiate the reaction.