primary electron acceptor - meaning and definition. What is primary electron acceptor
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What (who) is primary electron acceptor - definition

CHEMICAL ELEMENT OR COMPOUND THAT ACCEPTS ONE OR SEVERAL ELECTRONS TRANSFERRED TO IT FROM ANOTHER ELEMENT OR COMPOUND
Terminal electron acceptor; Reduced acceptor; Electron receptor

Electron acceptor         
An electron acceptor is a chemical entity that accepts electrons transferred to it from another compound. It is an oxidizing agent that, by virtue of its accepting electrons, is itself reduced in the process.
Electron-transferring flavoprotein         
FLAVOPROTEINS THAT SERVE AS SPECIFIC ELECTRON ACCEPTORS FOR A VARIETY OF DEHYDROGENASES
Electron-transferring flavoproteins; Electron transferring flavoprotein; Electron transferring flavoproteins; Electron transfer protein; Electron transfer flavoprotein; Electron-transfer flavoprotein
An electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF) or electron transfer flavoprotein complex (CETF) is a flavoprotein located on the matrix face of the inner mitochondrial membrane and functions as a specific electron acceptor for primary dehydrogenases, transferring the electrons to terminal respiratory systems such as electron-transferring-flavoprotein dehydrogenase. They can be functionally classified into constitutive, "housekeeping" ETFs, mainly involved in the oxidation of fatty acids (Group I), and ETFs produced by some prokaryotes under specific growth conditions, receiving electrons only from the oxidation of specific substrates (Group II).
Direct primary         
ELECTION THAT NARROWS THE FIELD OF CANDIDATES BEFORE AN ELECTION FOR OFFICE
Primaries; Primary elections; Primary Election; Direct primary; Closed primary; Direct Primary; Party primary; Political primary; Primary polls; Nonpartisan primary; Primary (election); Open Primary; Montana primary; Montana Primary; Open primaries; Open primary; Non-partisan primary; Semi-closed primary; Primary elections in the United States; Closed primaries; Primaries in the united states; Primaries in the United States; United States primary elections
·add. ·- A primary by which direct nominations of candidates for office are made.

Wikipedia

Electron acceptor

An electron acceptor is a chemical entity that accepts electrons transferred to it from another compound. It is an oxidizing agent that, by virtue of its accepting electrons, is itself reduced in the process. Electron acceptors are sometimes mistakenly called electron receptors.

Typical oxidizing agents undergo permanent chemical alteration through covalent or ionic reaction chemistry, resulting in the complete and irreversible transfer of one or more electrons. In many chemical circumstances, however, the transfer of electronic charge from an electron donor may be only fractional, meaning an electron is not completely transferred, but results in an electron resonance between the donor and acceptor. This leads to the formation of charge transfer complexes in which the components largely retain their chemical identities.

The electron accepting power of an acceptor molecule is measured by its electron affinity which is the energy released when filling the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO).

The energy required to remove one electron from the electron donor is its ionization energy (I). The energy liberated by attachment of an electron to the electron acceptor is the negative of its electron affinity (A). The overall system energy change (ΔE) for the charge transfer is then Δ E = I A {\displaystyle {\Delta }E=I-A\,} . For an exothermic reaction, the energy liberated is of interest and is equal to Δ E = A I {\displaystyle -{\Delta }E=A-I\,} .

In chemistry, a class of electron acceptors that acquire not just one, but a set of two paired electrons that form a covalent bond with an electron donor molecule, is known as a Lewis acid. This phenomenon gives rise to the wide field of Lewis acid-base chemistry. The driving forces for electron donor and acceptor behavior in chemistry is based on the concepts of electropositivity (for donors) and electronegativity (for acceptors) of atomic or molecular entities.