Skip to main content
Graph
Search
fr
|
en
Login
Search
All
Categories
Concepts
Courses
Lectures
MOOCs
People
Practice
Publications
Startups
Units
Show all results for
Home
Lecture
Langmuir Isotherm: Equilibrium Derivation
Graph Chatbot
Related lectures (31)
Previous
Page 1 of 4
Next
Bifunctional Catalysis: Surface Reaction Mechanisms
Explores bifunctional catalysis, emphasizing surface reaction mechanisms and kinetic parameters evaluation.
Basic Introduction into Catalysis II
Introduces the basics of catalysis, covering chemical bond breaking, molecular orbital theory, metal bonding, adsorption, and reaction kinetics.
Water Vapor Sorption in Cementitious Materials: Introduction
Covers water vapor sorption in cementitious materials, including important terms, pore width effects, hysteresis, and sorption classifications.
Adsorption Kinetics: Understanding Surface Reactions
Explores adsorption kinetics, desorption effects, NH₃ synthesis, and surface reactions, emphasizing surface equilibrium and competitive adsorption.
Chemical Reaction Engineering: Rate Laws
Explores rate laws in chemical reactions, including reaction orders, equilibrium constants, stoichiometry, and energy barriers.
Reversible Reactions: Kinetics and Equilibrium
Explores reversible reactions, equilibrium, energy barriers, and reaction rates based on concentration and temperature effects.
Heterogeneous Catalysis: Kinetics and Mechanisms
Explores heterogeneous catalysis, focusing on reaction mechanisms, kinetics, and ammonia synthesis.
Arrhenius Equation: Kinetics and Equilibrium
Covers the Arrhenius equation and its application to chemical equilibrium, as well as the transition state theory and chemical kinetics principles.
Heterogeneous Catalysis: Basics and Kinetics
Covers the basics of heterogeneous catalysis and the importance of transition state theory in predicting reaction rates.
Chemical Equilibrium: Principles and Applications
Explores chemical equilibrium principles, including Le Châtelier's Principle and equilibrium constants, and discusses the influence of temperature, pressure, and concentration on equilibrium shifts.