Measure catalytic speed from products and sites. Switch units, compare methods, export clean laboratory results. Make reaction benchmarking faster with practical laboratory calculations today.
Use either the direct product method or the flow-and-conversion method. You can also enter total active sites directly or derive them from catalyst mass and site density.
Turnover Frequency:
TOF = Product formation rate / Moles of active catalytic sites
Typical units: s-1, min-1, or h-1
Direct product method:
Product rate = Corrected product amount / Reaction time
Flow and conversion method:
Product rate = Feed flow × Conversion × Selectivity × Stoichiometric factor × Correction factor
Turnover Number over run:
TON = Total product formed during the run / Moles of active catalytic sites
The most important source of uncertainty is often the active-site count. TOF values should only be compared when site-counting assumptions and operating conditions are aligned.
| Parameter | Example Value |
|---|---|
| Calculation method | Flow and conversion |
| Limiting reactant feed flow | 120 mmol/h |
| Conversion | 45% |
| Selectivity | 92% |
| Stoichiometric factor | 1.00 |
| Run duration | 4 h |
| Catalyst mass | 0.25 g |
| Site density | 1.4 mmol/g |
| Calculated active sites | 0.35 mmol |
| Product rate | 49.68 mmol/h |
| TOF | 0.03943 s-1 or 141.94 h-1 |
| TON over run | 567.77 |
Turnover frequency measures how many product molecules each active catalytic site generates per unit time. It is a normalized rate, not a total yield.
TOF is a time-based activity metric. TON is cumulative and shows how many turnovers each active site completed over the whole run.
TOF changes directly with the site count. If you underestimate active sites, TOF looks artificially high. If you overestimate them, TOF looks artificially low.
Only when that assumption is justified. Many systems have inaccessible, inactive, or blocked metal atoms. Site density from chemisorption or titration is usually stronger.
Use it for batch reactions or experiments where you know the collected product amount and elapsed reaction time more reliably than feed conversion.
Use it for continuous experiments, steady-state reactor studies, or any setup where feed flow, conversion, and selectivity are your primary measurements.
Conversion alone measures reactant disappearance. Selectivity adjusts that value to the specific desired product, which is necessary for product-based TOF.
Compare them carefully. Matching temperature, pressure, reactor regime, conversion range, site definition, and normalization method is essential for a fair comparison.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.