4.8 Review

Concepts Relevant for the Kinetic Analysis of Reversible Reaction Systems

Journal

CHEMICAL REVIEWS
Volume 123, Issue 6, Pages 2950-3006

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.2c00510

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The net rate of a reversible chemical reaction is determined by the difference in rates between the forward and reverse reaction paths. In a multi-step reaction, the forward and reverse trajectories are not simply the reverse of each other, but consist of distinct rate-controlling steps, intermediates, and transition states. Traditional rate descriptors do not provide intrinsic kinetic information, but instead combine unidirectional contributions based on the occurrence of forward and reverse reactions and thermodynamics. This review aims to provide analytical and conceptual tools to separate and identify the contributions of reaction kinetics and thermodynamics in reversible reaction systems.
The net rate of a reversible chemical reaction is the difference between unidirectional rates of traversal along forward and reverse reaction paths. In a multistep reaction sequence, the forward and reverse trajectories, in general, are not the microscopic reverse of one another; rather, each unidirectional route is comprised of distinct rate-controlling steps, intermediates, and transition states. Consequently, traditional descriptors of rate (e.g., reaction orders) do not reflect intrinsic kinetic information but instead conflate unidirectional contributions determined by (i) the microscopic occurrence of forward/reverse reactions thermodynamics). This review aims to provide a comprehensive resource of analytical and conceptual tools which deconvolute the contributions of reaction kinetics and thermodynamics to disambiguate unidirectional reaction trajectories and precisely identify rate- and reversibilitycontrolling molecular species and steps in reversible reaction systems. The extrication of mechanistic and kinetic information from bidirectional reactions is accomplished through equation-based formalisms (e.g., De Donder relations) grounded in principles of thermodynamics and interpreted in the context of theories of chemical kinetics developed in the past 25 years. The aggregate of mathematical formalisms detailed herein is general to thermochemical and electrochemical reactions and encapsulates a diverse body of scientific literature encompassing chemical physics, thermodynamics, chemical kinetics, catalysis, and kinetic modeling.

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