I need some explaining for uni molecular reactions
lets use
[A] --> Product
but in order for A to become product, it has to go through a transition state A*
to get a A*
we need a binary collision between A and A
and even when they do collide, A* will most likely become deactivated
only rarely does A* become product.
Am i correct so far??
my question is
why is it that at high pressures (>1atm) A* is more likely to become deactivated than at low pressures? Is it because A* is more likely to collide with another A? Or would that give it more energy (A**)? If A* did become deactivated by A, wouldn't the A have to be same A it had collided before to become A*? Because a different A would the same energy as the initial two A and therefore, the energy would just be transferred (A* + A --> A + A*).
Because I feel like the reasoning is backwards.
At low pressures, you're less likely to get A* because collisions less frequent but yet the probably of getting product is higher?
Im really confused.
or am i thinking too hard?
thanks
-Andrew