Continuous addition kinetic elucidation: catalyst and reactant order, rate constant, and poisoning from a single experiment.
Peter J H WilliamsCharles KilleenIan C ChagundaBrett HendersonSofia DonneckeWil MunroJaspreet SidhuDenaisha KraftDavid A HarringtonJ Scott McIndoePublished in: Chemical science (2023)
Kinetic analysis of catalytic reactions is a powerful tool for mechanistic elucidation but is often challenging to perform, limiting understanding and therefore development of these reactions. Establishing order in a catalyst is usually achieved by running several reactions at different loadings, which is both time-consuming and complicated by the challenge of maintaining consistent run-to-run experimental conditions. Continuous addition kinetic elucidation (CAKE) was developed to circumvent these issues by continuously injecting a catalyst into a reaction, while monitoring reaction progress over time. For reactions that are m th order in a single yield-limiting reactant and n th order in catalyst, a plot of reactant concentration against time has a shape dependent only on the orders m and n . Therefore, fitting experimental CAKE data (using open access code or a convenient web tool) allows the reactant and catalyst orders, rate constant, and the amount of complete catalyst inhibition to be determined from a single experiment. Kinetic information obtained from CAKE experiments showed good agreement with the literature.