auxiliary postulate - significado y definición. Qué es auxiliary postulate
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Qué (quién) es auxiliary postulate - definición

HYPOTHESIS IN PHYSICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Hammond-Leffler postulate; Hammond-Leffler Postulate; Hammond postulate; Hammond principle; Hammond-Principle; Hammond's rule; Hammond's Postulate; Hammond–Leffler Postulate; Hammond–Leffler postulate; Hammond effect
  • Unimolecular Elimination Reaction Mechanism
  • Unimolecular Elimination Reaction Coordinate
  • George Hammond]] developed the postulate during his professorship at [[Iowa State University]]
  • Energy diagrams showing how to interpret Hammond's Postulate
  • Energy diagrams of S<sub>N</sub>1 reactions
  • Energy diagrams of S<sub>N</sub>1 reactions

Hammond's postulate         
Hammond's postulate (or alternatively the Hammond–Leffler postulate), is a hypothesis in physical organic chemistry which describes the geometric structure of the transition state in an organic chemical reaction. First proposed by George Hammond in 1955, the postulate states that:
Archaeography         
SCHOLARLY DISCIPLINES WHICH HELP EVALUATE AND USE HISTORICAL SOURCES AND ARE SEEN AS AUXILIARY FOR HISTORICAL RESEARCH
Auxiliary science of history; Auxiliary science to history; Auxiliary sciences to history; Auxiliary Sciences of History; Auxiliary branches of history; Auxiliary sciences; Ancillary sciences of history; Archaeography
·noun A description of, or a treatise on, antiquity or antiquities.
Auxiliary sciences of history         
SCHOLARLY DISCIPLINES WHICH HELP EVALUATE AND USE HISTORICAL SOURCES AND ARE SEEN AS AUXILIARY FOR HISTORICAL RESEARCH
Auxiliary science of history; Auxiliary science to history; Auxiliary sciences to history; Auxiliary Sciences of History; Auxiliary branches of history; Auxiliary sciences; Ancillary sciences of history; Archaeography
Auxiliary (or ancillary) sciences of history are scholarly disciplines which help evaluate and use historical sources and are seen as auxiliary for historical research. Many of these areas of study, classification and analysis were originally developed between the 16th and 19th centuries by antiquaries, and would then have been regarded as falling under the broad heading of antiquarianism.

Wikipedia

Hammond's postulate

Hammond's postulate (or alternatively the Hammond–Leffler postulate), is a hypothesis in physical organic chemistry which describes the geometric structure of the transition state in an organic chemical reaction. First proposed by George Hammond in 1955, the postulate states that:

If two states, as, for example, a transition state and an unstable intermediate, occur consecutively during a reaction process and have nearly the same energy content, their interconversion will involve only a small reorganization of the molecular structures.

Therefore, the geometric structure of a state can be predicted by comparing its energy to the species neighboring it along the reaction coordinate. For example, in an exothermic reaction the transition state is closer in energy to the reactants than to the products. Therefore, the transition state will be more geometrically similar to the reactants than to the products. In contrast, however, in an endothermic reaction the transition state is closer in energy to the products than to the reactants. So, according to Hammond’s postulate the structure of the transition state would resemble the products more than the reactants. This type of comparison is especially useful because most transition states cannot be characterized experimentally.

Hammond's postulate also helps to explain and rationalize the Bell–Evans–Polanyi principle. Namely, this principle describes the experimental observation that the rate of a reaction, and therefore its activation energy, is affected by the enthalpy of that reaction. Hammond's postulate explains this observation by describing how varying the enthalpy of a reaction would also change the structure of the transition state. In turn, this change in geometric structure would alter the energy of the transition state, and therefore the activation energy and reaction rate as well.

The postulate has also been used to predict the shape of reaction coordinate diagrams. For example, electrophilic aromatic substitution involves a distinct intermediate and two less well defined states. By measuring the effects of aromatic substituents and applying Hammond's postulate it was concluded that the rate-determining step involves formation of a transition state that should resemble the intermediate complex.