释义 |
ca·tal·y·sis \kəˈtaləsə̇s\ noun (plural cataly·ses \-əˌsēz\) Etymology: Greek katalysis, from katalyein to dissolve, from kata- cata- + lyein to loosen, release — more at lose 1. : the change in the rate of a chemical reaction brought about by often small amounts of a substance that is unchanged chemically at the end of the reaction; specifically : acceleration of a reaction (as the oxidation of sulfur dioxide to sulfur trioxide in the presence of platinized asbestos) — compare autocatalysis, contact catalysis, negative catalysis 2. : an action or reaction between two or more persons or forces provoked or precipitated by a separate agent or force, especially by one that is essentially unaltered by the reaction < a representative list of questions … valuable for the catalysis of class discussions — B.S.Meyer & D.B.Anderson > < George Washington wrote friends of the powerful catalysis that “Common Sense” was working — Eric Goldman > |