This is the activation energy.
The amount of energy necessary to cause a chemical reaction to occur is called activation energy.
An enzyme is not required in a chemical reaction. While reactants, energy, and a chemical reaction pathway are essential components of a chemical reaction, enzymes can speed up the reaction but are not always necessary for it to occur.
The question does not have the enough required information that is required to accurately answer it.
Catalysts lower the activation energy required for a chemical reaction. Activation energy refers to the mininum amount of energy that the reactant particles must possess so that effective collisions between them (hence a chemical reaction) can occur.
they reduce the activation energy required for the reaction to occur
No, atomic nuclei is not required for a chemical reaction.
Activation energy
The amount of energy necessary to cause a chemical reaction to occur is called activation energy.
An enzyme is not required in a chemical reaction. While reactants, energy, and a chemical reaction pathway are essential components of a chemical reaction, enzymes can speed up the reaction but are not always necessary for it to occur.
A catalyst can speed up the rate of a given chemical reaction by lowering the activation energy required for the reaction to occur. However, the catalyst does not change the total free energy from reactants to products.
The question does not have the enough required information that is required to accurately answer it.
The question does not have the enough required information that is required to accurately answer it.
For most chemical reactions, energy is required to supply an "activation energy" required before reaction.
Enzymes speed up chemical reactions by lowering the activation energy required for the reaction to occur. They do this by bringing the reacting molecules closer together and providing an alternative pathway for the reaction to follow. This allows the reaction to proceed more quickly and efficiently than it would without the enzyme.
The variable that is not required to calculate the Gibbs free-energy change for a chemical reaction is the temperature.
Catalysts lower the activation energy required for a chemical reaction. Activation energy refers to the mininum amount of energy that the reactant particles must possess so that effective collisions between them (hence a chemical reaction) can occur.
A chemical catalyst is a substance that lowers the required activation energy of a reaction. The activation energy is the amount of energy required to "activate" or start a process, this can be in the form of many things, such as heat. A chemical catalyst can be seen as a kind of shortcut in a chemical process to speed things up. A catalyst can also be used to increase the activation energy, so that the reaction will slow down. This is useful for slowing down reactions that are normally too fast to witness.