My chemistry textbook explains that catalysts provide an alternate route to the reaction with a lower activation energy barrier, but my biochemistry text says that catalysts lower the activation energy by stabilizing the transition state. I'm confused by these two definitions- do they contradict each other?
What your teacher means by alternative route may also be the exact same intermediates, but coordinating to the catalyst.
For example, ammonia oxidation: in order to get nitrogen, you first need to break a N-H bond in the ammonia, this can be done by high temperature (very difficult as ignition temperature is usually higher than a flame's temperature), or this can be done quite efficiently by a Pt- catalyst at a lot lower temperature. In other words, the catalyst lowers the
activation barrier.
In both cases the intermediates will be compounds such as NH
2, NH etc, but in case of the Pt-catalyst, these compounds are more stable as they can coordinate to the Pt-surface and share in the electron density of the metal, offsetting the loss of paired electrons. This lowers the energy required to break a N-H bond.
So the catalyst lowers the activation energy, because the intermediates are more stabilized.
(think of the energy you require as a mountain; the higher the energy you need, the higher the mountain, with the most unstable intermediates at the peak. The more unstable they are, the harder they are to make out of a stable compound, so you need a long uphill climb to get there. If those intermediates are stabilized, they require less energy to make, and the mountain will be smaller, requiring less effort to get over it.)