Chemistry, asked by anjali08042003, 6 months ago

explain baker nathen effect in chemistry​

Answers

Answered by ItzVittesh95
0

Answer:

In organic chemistry, the Baker–Nathan effect is observed with reaction rates for certain chemical reactions with certain substrates where the order in reactivity cannot be explained solely by an inductive effect of substituents. This effect was described in 1935 by John W. Baker and W. S. Nathan.

Answered by Anonymous
0

In organic chemistry, the Baker–Nathan effect is observed with reaction rates for certain chemical reactions with certain substrates where the order in reactivity cannot be explained solely by an inductive effect of substituents. This effect was described in 1935 by John W. Baker and W. S. Nathan.

pls follow me to follow back ☺

Similar questions