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It is unchanged by the reaction.
I think it frees itself from the product and is ready to be reused.
None: The catalyst remains unchanged, but the catalyst also speeds up the reaction.
A catalyst speeds up a reaction by lowering the activation energy of the reaction. It is not consumed by the reaction, but rather it leaves the reaction unchanged.
A catalyst speeds up a reaction by lowering the activation energy of the reaction. It is not consumed by the reaction, but rather it leaves the reaction unchanged.
A catalyst must change the rate of a chemical reaction. It must be unchanged at the end of the reaction.
It is unchanged by the reaction.
I think it frees itself from the product and is ready to be reused.
Reactants: the initial substances in a chemical reaction Products: the final substances in a chemical reaction Catalyst: a stimulator of a chemical reaction, not directly involved in the reaction, remain unchanged
None: The catalyst remains unchanged, but the catalyst also speeds up the reaction.
No a catalyst is unchanged by a chemical reaction, it does however serve to speed up the rate of the reaction.
A catalyst speeds up a reaction by lowering the activation energy of the reaction. It is not consumed by the reaction, but rather it leaves the reaction unchanged.
A catalyst speeds up a reaction by lowering the activation energy of the reaction. It is not consumed by the reaction, but rather it leaves the reaction unchanged.
A catalyst is a substance which speeds up the rate of reaction. After the reaction it remain chemically unchanged. It does NOT affect the position of equilibrium. There can also be negative or "poisoned" catalysts as in Rosenmunds reaction.
In a closed system the mass remain constant.
Catalyst- lowers the activation energy of a reaction but is not consumed.
The enzyme is unchanged by the reaction.