| Reactant | Reagent | Catalyst |
|---|---|---|---|
Definition | A substance that participates and undergoes a structural change in a chemical reaction is a reactant. | A reagent is a substance added to reactions intending to bring chemical changes. Sometimes it tests a reaction's progress and product formation(s). Therefore, it may or may not be consumed in a reaction. | A catalyst is a reagent that alters a chemical reaction's rate (or speed) by making it more efficient. It does not get consumed in the reaction. |
Examples | Acid (RCOOH) is a reactant that undergoes a chemical change to form an ester (RCOOR’) in the presence of reagents (R’OH) and H+. ![]() | Alcohol (R’OH) is a reagent consumed in a chemical reaction with acid (RCOOH).
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Post esterification reaction, the addition of another reagent, ferric hydroxamate, can probe the formation of the ester. A positive result is a deep burgundy, amber or magenta color, and a negative test is any other color. | The catalyst (H+) is a reagent that speeds up the esterification reaction but does not get consumed in the reaction. That is, no structural changes or change in its concentration occurs. ![]() |
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