Catalysis: Principles, Classification and Industrial Significance
A catalyst is a substance that modifies the rate of a chemical reaction without itself being consumed or undergoing permanent chemical alteration at the end of the process. The phenomenon is termed catalysis. Catalysts are indispensable in modern industry, enabling reactions to proceed under milder conditions (lower temperature and pressure) with higher selectivity and faster rates. They do not alter the thermodynamic equilibrium but only the kinetic pathway.
Classification of Catalysis
🧪 Homogeneous Catalysis
Catalyst and reactants are in the same physical phase (all gases or all in solution). The catalyst is uniformly distributed. Examples: acid‑catalysed hydrolysis, NO catalysed oxidation of SO₂.
⚙️ Heterogeneous Catalysis
Catalyst and reactants are in different phases; typically a solid catalyst with gaseous or liquid reactants. Reaction occurs on the catalyst surface. Also called contact catalysis. Examples: Haber process (iron), Contact process (V₂O₅).
🧬 Enzyme Catalysis
Biological catalysts (proteins) that exhibit extraordinary specificity and efficiency under mild physiological conditions. They follow Michaelis‑Menten kinetics.
1. Homogeneous Catalysis – Detailed Examples
In homogeneous catalysis, the catalyst is evenly distributed in the same phase as the reactants. This allows intimate molecular contact and often leads to high selectivity.
Gas‑phase homogeneous catalysis
2SO₂(g) + O₂(g) + [NO(g)] → 2SO₃(g) + [NO(g)]
CH₃CHO(g) + [I₂(g)] → CH₄(g) + CO(g) + [I₂(g)]
Solution‑phase homogeneous catalysis (liquid)
C₁₂H₂₂O₁₁(aq) + H₂O(l) + [H⁺] → C₆H₁₂O₆(glucose) + C₆H₁₂O₆(fructose) + [H⁺]
CH₃COOC₂H₅ + H₂O + [H⁺/OH⁻] → CH₃COOH + C₂H₅OH + [H⁺/OH⁻]
2H₂O₂(aq) + [I⁻] → 2H₂O(l) + O₂(g) + [I⁻]
2. Heterogeneous Catalysis – Detailed Examples
Heterogeneous catalysis is of enormous industrial importance because solid catalysts can be easily separated, regenerated, and used in continuous flow reactors. The reaction occurs on the active sites of the catalyst surface.
Gas‑solid reactions (contact catalysis)
2SO₂(g) + O₂(g) + [V₂O₅(s)] → 2SO₃(g) + [V₂O₅(s)]
N₂(g) + 3H₂(g) + [Fe(s)] → 2NH₃(g) + [Fe(s)]
4NH₃(g) + 5O₂(g) + [Pt(s)] → 4NO(g) + 6H₂O(g) + [Pt(s)]
H₂C=CH₂(g) + H₂(g) + [Ni(s)] → CH₃–CH₃(g) + [Ni(s)]
Similarly, vegetable oils (unsaturated triglycerides) are hydrogenated to solid fats (vanaspati ghee) using nickel catalyst.
Liquid‑solid heterogeneous catalysis
2H₂O₂(l) + [MnO₂(s)] → 2H₂O(l) + O₂(g) + [MnO₂(s)]
C₆H₆(l) + CH₃COCl(l) + [AlCl₃(s)] → C₆H₅COCH₃(l) + HCl(g) + [AlCl₃(s)]
Solid‑solid heterogeneous catalysis
2KClO₃(s) + [MnO₂(s)] → 2KCl(s) + 3O₂(g) + [MnO₂(s)]
3. Enzyme Catalysis (Biological Catalysts)
Enzymes are protein molecules that act as highly specific catalysts in living organisms. They operate under mild conditions (ambient temperature, aqueous medium, pH ~7) and exhibit remarkable substrate specificity. Examples include:
- Amylase – catalyses hydrolysis of starch to sugars.
- Catalase – decomposes hydrogen peroxide to water and oxygen.
- Urease – catalyses hydrolysis of urea to ammonia and carbon dioxide.
- Pepsin / Trypsin – proteases that break down proteins.
Enzyme catalysis follows the lock‑and‑key model (or induced‑fit model) where the substrate binds specifically to the active site. The rate of an enzyme‑catalysed reaction is described by the Michaelis‑Menten equation:
Enzymes can be inhibited by competitive or non‑competitive inhibitors, which is important in drug design and metabolic regulation.
General Characteristics of Catalytic Reactions
The following features are common to most catalytic processes, whether homogeneous, heterogeneous, or enzymatic:
- 1. Catalyst remains unchanged in mass and chemical composition after the reaction. It may undergo physical changes (e.g., particle size reduction, surface restructuring) but its chemical identity is restored.
- 2. Small quantity often sufficient: A tiny amount of catalyst can accelerate a large amount of reactants. For example, traces of platinum catalyse the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide; however, some catalysts (e.g., AlCl₃ in Friedel‑Crafts) need up to 30% by mass of the reactants to be effective.
- 3. Finely divided form enhances activity: In heterogeneous catalysis, increased surface area provides more active sites. Colloidal platinum is far more active than a lump of platinum. Finely divided nickel is used in hydrogenation because of its high surface area.
- 4. Specificity: A catalyst that works for one reaction may not work for another. Moreover, different catalysts can yield different products from the same starting material. For example:
Ethanol with Al₂O₃ (dehydration) → ethene.
Ethanol with Cu (dehydrogenation) → acetaldehyde. - 5. Catalysts can initiate reactions: Originally it was thought that catalysts only speed up already existing reactions, but many catalysts can initiate reactions that would otherwise not occur at all. Platinum black, for instance, initiates the combination of hydrogen and oxygen at room temperature, which would otherwise remain unchanged indefinitely.
- 6. Catalyst does not alter the equilibrium position: It accelerates forward and reverse reactions equally, so the equilibrium constant (K) remains unchanged. The catalyst only reduces the time required to reach equilibrium. For example, in the Haber process, iron catalyst enables equilibrium to be reached much faster, but the percentage yield of ammonia at equilibrium is the same as without catalyst (just achieved much later).
- 7. Temperature effect: The rate of a catalytic reaction increases with temperature up to an optimum point; beyond that, activity may decrease due to physical changes (e.g., coagulation of colloidal catalysts, deactivation of enzymes). This optimum temperature is specific to each catalyst.
- 8. Catalysts can be poisoned: Certain substances (poisons) can irreversibly bind to active sites and destroy catalytic activity. For example, lead or sulfur compounds poison platinum catalysts; carbon monoxide poisons iron catalysts.
- 9. Promoters and inhibitors: Promoters (activators) enhance catalytic activity (e.g., Al₂O₃ and K₂O added to iron in Haber process). Inhibitors decrease activity.
Industrial Applications of Catalysis
Catalysis is the backbone of the chemical industry. Below is a table of major industrial processes and their catalysts:
| Process | Catalyst | Product / Importance |
|---|---|---|
| Haber process | Fe (with Al₂O₃, K₂O) | Ammonia (fertilizers) |
| Contact process | V₂O₅ or Pt | Sulfuric acid (most produced chemical) |
| Ostwald process | Pt‑Rh gauze | Nitric acid (fertilizers, explosives) |
| Catalytic cracking | Zeolites | Gasoline from crude oil |
| Hydrogenation of oils | Ni, Pd, Pt | Margarine, vanaspati |
| Water‑gas shift reaction | Fe‑Cr, Cu‑Zn | Hydrogen production |
| Polymerisation (Ziegler‑Natta) | TiCl₃ / Al(C₂H₅)₃ | Polyethylene, polypropylene |
| Automotive catalytic converter | Pt, Pd, Rh | Reduction of CO, NOₓ, hydrocarbons |
| Methanol synthesis | CuO/ZnO/Al₂O₃ | Methanol fuel and chemical feedstock |
Mechanism of Heterogeneous Catalysis (Adsorption Theory)
The modern theory of heterogeneous catalysis involves the following steps:
- Diffusion of reactants to the catalyst surface.
- Adsorption of reactants onto active sites (physisorption or chemisorption).
- Surface reaction between adsorbed species.
- Desorption of products from the surface.
- Diffusion of products away from the surface.
The rate‑determining step is usually the surface reaction. The catalyst provides an alternative pathway with lower activation energy, often by weakening bonds in the adsorbed molecules (e.g., H‑H bond cleavage on metal surfaces).
Differences Between Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Catalysis
| Property | Homogeneous Catalysis | Heterogeneous Catalysis |
|---|---|---|
| Phase of catalyst | Same as reactants (gas or liquid) | Different (usually solid) |
| Separation of catalyst | Difficult (distillation, extraction) | Easy (filtration, centrifugation) |
| Reusability | Often limited (catalyst may degrade) | High (can be reused many times) |
| Selectivity | Generally high | Moderate; depends on surface structure |
| Operating conditions | Milder | Often high T and P |
| Industrial example | Acid catalysis, hydroformylation | Haber, Contact, cracking |
📝 Catalysis – Comprehensive Quiz
1. Which of the following is an example of homogeneous catalysis?
2. A catalyst increases the rate of a reaction by:
3. In heterogeneous catalysis, the reaction occurs:
4. Which statement about catalysts is INCORRECT?
5. The catalyst used in the hydrogenation of vegetable oils is:
6. The promoter added to iron catalyst in the Haber process is:
7. Which of the following is an example of an enzyme?
8. In the Contact process for sulfuric acid, the catalyst used is:
Watch Complete Lecture in Urdu/Hindi for comprehensive understanding
Download Complete Notes Below
Proudly Powered By



Leave a Comment