is it always necessarily the slowest step? and by slowest i mean the largest activation energy.
take for instance a rxn involving the formation of an intermediate. the formation of the intermediate has an Ea of lets say 20J. The intermediate then reacts to form the product w/ an Ea of 10J, however, the activated complex is of higher energy going from intermediate-prod than react-inter.
so basically the first step has a higher activation energy than the 2nd step, but the second step has a higher energy TS than the first. all the sources ive checked out say the RDS is the step w/ the highest energy TS, but in this case, forming that TS is technically not the slowest step, which would make the RDS not the slowest step.
is this correct?
take for instance a rxn involving the formation of an intermediate. the formation of the intermediate has an Ea of lets say 20J. The intermediate then reacts to form the product w/ an Ea of 10J, however, the activated complex is of higher energy going from intermediate-prod than react-inter.
so basically the first step has a higher activation energy than the 2nd step, but the second step has a higher energy TS than the first. all the sources ive checked out say the RDS is the step w/ the highest energy TS, but in this case, forming that TS is technically not the slowest step, which would make the RDS not the slowest step.
is this correct?