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Chem 131C. Lec. 24. Thermodynamics and Chemical Dynamics. Lindemann-Hinshelwood part 2 and enzymes (English)


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UCI Chem 131C Thermodynamics and Chemical Dynamics (Spring 2012)
Lec 24. Thermodynamics and Chemical Dynamics -- Lindemann-Hinshelwood Part II --
View the complete course: ../courses/chem_131c_thermodynamics_and_chemical_dynamics.html
Instructor: Reginald Penner, Ph.D.

License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
Terms of Use: ../info.
More courses at http://ocw.uci.edu

Description: In Chemistry 131C, students will study how to calculate macroscopic chemical properties of systems. This course will build on the microscopic understanding (Chemical Physics) to reinforce and expand your understanding of the basic thermo-chemistry concepts from General Chemistry (Physical Chemistry.) We then go on to study how chemical reaction rates are measured and calculated from molecular properties. Topics covered include: Energy, entropy, and the thermodynamic potentials; Chemical equilibrium; and Chemical kinetics. This video is part of a 27-lecture undergraduate-level course titled "Thermodynamics and Chemical Dynamics" taught at UC Irvine by Professor Reginald M. Penner.

Thermodynamics and Chemical Dynamics (Chem 131C) is part of OpenChem: ../openchem/

Recorded on June 1, 2012


Index of Topics:
00:06 - Enzymes
00:14 - Midterm II Results
01:12 - How Am I Doing?
06:36 - Today: Lindemann-Hinshelwood Mechanism, Enzyme Kinetics
07:58 - Most Elementary Reactions are Either Unimolecular or Biomolecular
09:45 - The Lindmann-Hinshelwood Mechanism Provides an Explanation
11:22 - Can We Apply the Steady-State Approximation to this Mechanism?
12:52 - What Does it Predict?
14:28 - What Does This Mean Mechanistically?
16:20 - Let's Apply the Steady-State Approximation
16:53 - The Kinetics of Pressure-Dependent Reactions
20:08 - If the LH Mechanism is Operating...Plot
20:45 - Plot: Does it Work?
21:16 - LH Mechanism: A Mechanism for Which a Pre-Equilibrium is Established
22:03 - The Reaction Will Have an Apparent Second Order
22:34 - Apply Mathematics to the Enzyme
24:42 - Schematic Illustration of Enzyme Kinetics
26:35 - Kinetic Scheme/Steady State Approximation Applied
28:52 - Solving for [(ES)]
30:05 - Obtaining the Michaelis -Menten Equation


Required attribution: Penner, Reginald Thermodynamics and Chemical Dynamics 131C (UCI OpenCourseWare: University of California, Irvine),  ../courses/chem_131c_thermodynamics_and_chemical_dynamics.html. [Access date]. License: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.


Author:
Reginald Penner
Title:
Chancellor's Professor
Department:
Chemistry
Creative Commons License
Chem 131C (Spring 2012): Lindemann-Hinshelwood Part 2 and Enzymes by Reginald Penner is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike Unported 3.0 License
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