isomeriat
Isomeriat, sometimes used as a translation of isomerization in some languages, refers to a chemical process in which a substance is converted into an isomer—an entity with the same molecular formula but a different arrangement of atoms. The term is used to denote rearrangements of connectivity or stereochemistry, and to distinguish these changes from reactions that alter the formula.
There are two broad classes: structural (constitutional) isomerization, where the connectivity of atoms changes; and stereoisomerization,
Mechanisms vary: they may be catalyzed by acids or bases, or initiated thermally or by light. They
Industrial and practical relevance: isomerization plays a key role in refining and petrochemistry, where straight-chain alkanes
See also: isomer, structural isomer, stereochemistry, catalysis, sigmatropic rearrangement.