Effective molarity

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Revision as of 14:18, 5 April 2024 by 94.168.98.2 (talk) (I deleted the final sentence as the claim that effective molarity has undergone a significant decrease in the use in the last decades is not validated by use of Google Books Ngram. See: https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=effective+molarity&year_start=1800&year_end=2019&corpus=en-2019&smoothing=3)
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Template:Short description In chemistry, the effective molarity (denoted EM)[1] is defined as the ratio between the first-order rate constant of an intramolecular reaction and the second-order rate constant of the corresponding intermolecular reaction (kinetic effective molarity)[1][2] or the ratio between the equilibrium constant of an intramolecular reaction and the equilibrium constant of the corresponding intermolecular reaction (thermodynamic effective molarity).[1][3]

EMkinetic=kintramolecularkintermolecular
EMthermo=KintramolecularKintermolecular

EM has the dimension of concentration. High EM values always indicate greater ease of intramolecular processes over the corresponding intermolecular ones. Effective molarities can be used to get a deeper understanding of the effects of intramolecularity on reaction courses.[4]

See also

References

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