Reactivity (chemistry)

In chemistry, reactivity is the impulse for which a chemical substance undergoes a chemical reaction, either by itself or with other materials, with an overall release of energy.

Reactivity refers to:

  • the chemical reactions of a single substance,
  • the chemical reactions of two or more substances that interact with each other,
  • the systematic study of sets of reactions of these two kinds,
  • methodology that applies to the study of reactivity of chemicals of all kinds,
  • experimental methods that are used to observe these processes, and
  • theories to predict and to account for these processes.

The chemical reactivity of a single substance (reactant) covers its behavior in which it:

  • decomposes,
  • forms new substances by addition of atoms from another reactant or reactants, and
  • interacts with two or more other reactants to form two or more products.

The chemical reactivity of a substance can refer to the variety of circumstances (conditions that include temperature, pressure, presence of catalysts) in which it reacts, in combination with the:

  • variety of substances with which it reacts,
  • equilibrium point of the reaction (i.e., the extent to which all of it reacts), and
  • rate of the reaction.

The term reactivity is related to the concepts of chemical stability and chemical compatibility.


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