Stochastic approach to chemical kinetics
- 1 August 1967
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Applied Probability
- Vol. 4 (03) , 413-478
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s002190020002547x
Abstract
In this article we shall present a summary of the various stochastic approaches and applications to chemical reaction kinetics, but before discussing these we first briefly introduce the basic ideas and definitions of classical or deterministic chemical kinetics. One of the basic questions to which chemists address themselves is the rate of chemical reactions, or in other words, how long it takes for a chemical reaction to attain completion, or equilibrium. Apparently the first significant quantitative investigation was made in 1850 by L. Wilhelmy [93]. He studied the inversion of sucrose (cane sugar) in aqueous solutions of acids, whose reaction is He found empirically that the rate of decrease of concentration of sucrose was simply proportional to the concentration remaining unconverted, i.e., if S(t) is the concentration of sucrose, then The constant of proportionality is called the rate constant of the reaction. If S o is the initial concentration of sucrose, then Since then an enormous number of reactions has been studied and the field of chemical kinetics is now one of the largest areas of chemical research. The importance of the field lies in the fact that it yields concise expressions for the time dependence of reactions, predicts yields, optimum economic conditions, and gives one much insight into the actual molecular processes involved. The detailed molecular picture of a reaction process is called the mechanism of the reaction.Keywords
This publication has 97 references indexed in Scilit:
- Approximation Method for Equilibrium Distributions in Second-Order Chemical Reaction KineticsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1967
- Kinetics of Photochemical Reactions in RNA MoleculesJournal of the Physics Society Japan, 1967
- Theory of Bimolecular Reaction Processes in LiquidsProgress of Theoretical Physics, 1967
- Stochastic triangular reactionsChemical Engineering Science, 1966
- Stochastic models for sterilizationBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1966
- Stochastic models for bacteriophageJournal of Applied Probability, 1965
- Copolymerization as a Markov ChainThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1963
- Open First-Order Stochastic ProcessesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1960
- Nonequilibrium Kinetics and ChromatographyThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1959
- Statistical Mechanics of Helix-Coil Transitions in Biological MacromoleculesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1959