Understanding Exothermic Reaction with a Catalyst - Tim's Questions

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A catalyst lowers the activation energy required for a reaction to occur, allowing reactants to react more easily. In the context of exothermic reactions, a catalyst may not necessarily lower the temperature of the reaction; it facilitates the reaction without changing the overall energy released. Catalytic heaters, for example, can operate at lower temperatures compared to open flames, but the energy released is still significant. If the temperature is lower, the energy difference is often accounted for in the efficiency of the reaction rather than "missing" energy. Understanding the role of catalysts is crucial for grasping their function in chemical processes.
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I don't really understand about catalysts...
I am thinking about an exothermic reaction in the presance of a catalyst.
My understanding was that the catalyst lowers the energy threshold for the reactants to
commence reacting. ( I think that was gotten from shell theory and bonding energys )

My question is... does the catalyst effect the tempature durring the reaction ?
Does the reaction happen at a lower tempature in the presance of a catalyst ?

I am thinking of examples like the catalytic heaters which use propane ... Is that
reaction cooler than an open and maximum tempature burning flame ?

If it IS lower temp... then the question becomes - where did the missing energy go ?

If it is not a lower temp- but the same- then what function is the catalyst serveing ?

Any ideas ?
Tim
 
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luthier said:
I don't really understand about catalysts...
I am thinking about an exothermic reaction in the presance of a catalyst.
My understanding was that the catalyst lowers the energy threshold for the reactants to
commence reacting. ( I think that was gotten from shell theory and bonding energys )

My question is... does the catalyst effect the tempature durring the reaction ?
Does the reaction happen at a lower tempature in the presance of a catalyst ?

I am thinking of examples like the catalytic heaters which use propane ... Is that
reaction cooler than an open and maximum tempature burning flame ?

If it IS lower temp... then the question becomes - where did the missing energy go ?

If it is not a lower temp- but the same- then what function is the catalyst serveing ?

Any ideas ?
Tim

It's possible that the temperature is reduced, look into strained lock and key ideas, such as http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzyme#.22Lock_and_key.22_model ?
 
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