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Autocatalysis

1920
  • Alfred J. Lotka
Chemist studying autocatalysis in a laboratory setting with glassware and chemical reactions.

(generated image for illustration only)

Autocatalysis is a chemical reaction where one of the reaction products is also a catalyst for the same or a coupled reaction. This creates a positive feedback loop, leading to an accelerating reaction rate. The rate of reaction is initially slow but increases as the concentration of the product (catalyst) builds up, often resulting in sigmoidal (S-shaped) kinetic curves.

In a simple autocatalytic reaction of the form A + B → 2B, the product B catalyzes its own formation. The rate law for such a reaction is often second order overall, for example, \(\frac{d[B]}{dt} = k[A][B]\). Unlike a standard first or second-order reaction where the rate is highest at the beginning and decreases as reactants are consumed, an autocatalytic reaction’s rate is initially limited by the low concentration of the product/catalyst [B]. As [B] increases, the rate accelerates, reaching a maximum before slowing down again as the reactant [A] is depleted. This behavior is characteristic of many complex systems, including biological replication and population dynamics.

Autocatalysis is a key concept in understanding systems far from thermodynamic equilibrium. It is a prerequisite for creating temporal or spatial patterns, such as those seen in oscillating reactions (e.g., Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction) where concentrations of intermediates fluctuate periodically, or in reaction-diffusion systems that can generate stationary spatial patterns (Turing patterns). These phenomena challenge the simple notion of reactions proceeding smoothly to equilibrium and are fundamental to theories about self-organization and the emergence of complex structures, including theories on the origin of life where self-replicating molecules like RNA could have emerged through autocatalytic cycles.

UNESCO Nomenclature: 2202
– Physical chemistry

Type

Abstract System

Disruption

Substancial

Usage

Niche/Specialized

Precursors

  • basic principles of chemical kinetics
  • observation of periodic phenomena in chemistry (Liesegang rings)
  • Alfred J. Lotka’s theoretical work on chemical oscillations
  • Boris Belousov’s discovery of the BZ reaction

Applications

  • models for the origin of life (RNA world hypothesis)
  • oscillating chemical reactions like the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction
  • depolymerization of some plastics
  • the ‘tin pest’ phase transition from white to gray tin
  • some biological processes like blood clotting

Patents:

NA

Potential Innovations Ideas

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Related to: autocatalysis, positive feedback, sigmoidal curve, reaction kinetics, oscillating reaction, Belousov-Zhabotinsky, self-replication, origin of life, non-equilibrium thermodynamics, Turing patterns.

Historical Context

Autocatalysis

1918
1919-05-29
1920
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1924
1924
1917
1918
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1920
1921
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1924
1925

(if date is unknown or not relevant, e.g. "fluid mechanics", a rounded estimation of its notable emergence is provided)

Related Invention, Innovation & Technical Principles

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