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Chemical kinetics is the branch of chemistry that studies the speed or rate at which chemical reactions occur and the factors that influence this rate. Unlike thermodynamics, which tells us whether a reaction is feasible, kinetics reveals how fast a reaction proceeds and the steps it follows to reach completion. Understanding chemical kinetics is essential for both theoretical and practical reasons. It plays a crucial role in the development of industrial processes, environmental modeling, pharmaceutical research, and even in the understanding of biological systems.
The significance of chemical kinetics lies in its broad range of applications. From designing safer and more efficient combustion engines to formulating drugs with precise release times, kinetics provides the framework to manipulate and control chemical reactions. In environmental chemistry, kinetics helps in modeling pollutant degradation and atmospheric reactions. In biology, the timing and regulation of biochemical pathways depend heavily on the principles of kinetics, especially in enzymatic reactions.
Historically, the study of chemical kinetics began in the mid-19th century when scientists like Ludwig Wilhelmy and later Cato Guldberg and Peter Waage laid the foundation with the law of mass action. Over time, the field evolved with significant contributions from chemists such as Arrhenius, who proposed a temperature-dependence model, and later developments in transition state theory, which offered a deeper understanding of the molecular events during reactions. These milestones transformed kinetics from a largely empirical field into one with a solid theoretical backbone.
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Livre audio : 15 avril 2025
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