Chem Ical Equilibrium Notes With Problems...
Chem Ical Equilibrium Notes With Problems...
Chem Ical Equilibrium Notes With Problems...
THE NATURE OF THE EQUILIBRIUM STATE: Equilibrium is the state where the
concentrations of all reactants and products remain constant with time. (in stoichiometry,
we dealt with equations that went to completion; often equilibrium equations are going to fall
short of this goal)
! dynamic--↔indicates that the reaction is proceeding in the forward and in the reverse
direction and once equilibrium is established, the rate of each direction is equal. This
keeps the concentration of reactants and products equal.
! the nature and properties of the equilibrium state are the same, no matter what the
direction of approach.
! Examples: Look at the following plot of the reaction between steam and carbon
monoxide in a closed vessel at a high temperature where the reaction takes place rapidly.
THE EQUILIBRIUM POSITION: Whether the reaction lies far to the right or to the left
depends on three main factors.
Initial concentrations (more collisions- faster reaction)
Relative energies of reactants and products (nature goes to minimum energy)
Degree of organization of reactants and products (nature goes to maximum disorder)
The significance of K: K> 1 means that the reaction favors the products at equilibrium
K < 1 means that the reaction favors the reactants at equilibrium
Equilibrium constant: K = [C]c[D]d * Note* K, Kc, Keq may all be used here!
[A] a[B]b
The product concentrations appear in the numerator and the reactant concentrations in
the denominator. Each concentration is raised to the power of its stoichiometric coefficient in
the balanced equation.
" [ ] indicates concentration in Molarity
" Kc--is for concentration (aqueous)
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" Kp--is for partial pressure (gases)
" “K” values are often written without units
o Solubility of salts also fits into this category. The initial solid component has a
constant concentration and is therefore left out of the equilibrium expression.
K= [NO2]^4[H2]]^6 / [NH3]^4[O2]^7
K = [NO2]4[H2O]6
[NH3]4[O2]7
a. The decomposition of solid phosphorus pentachloride to liquid phosphorus trichloride and chlorine gas.
b. Deep blue solid copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate is heated to drive off water vapor to form white solid
copper(II) sulfate.
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!
! CHANGING STOICHIOMETRIC COEFFICIENTS
" when the stoichiometric coefficients of a balanced equation are multiplied by
some factor, the K is raised to the power of the multiplication factor (Kn). 2x is
K squared; 3x is K cubed; etc.
! REVERSING EQUATIONS
" take the reciprocal of K ( 1/K)
! ADDING EQUATIONS
" multiply respective K=s (K1 x K2 x K3 …)
The following equilibrium concentrations were observed for the Haber process at 127°C:
b. Calculate the value of the equilibrium constant at 127°C for the reaction:
2NH3(g) N (g) + 3H (g)
2 2
1/3.8x10^4 = 2.6x10^5
c. Calculate the value of the equilibrium constant at 127°C for the reaction given by the equation:
1/2N2(g) + 3/2H2(g) NH (g)
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A: K = 3.8 X 104
B: K’ = 2.6 X 10-5
C: K” = 1.9 x 102
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Exercise 4 Equilibrium Positions
The following results were collected for two experiments involving the reaction at 600°C between gaseous sulfur
dioxide and oxygen to form gaseous sulfur trioxide:
Kc=[SO3]^2/[SO2]^2[O2]
K1 = 4.36
K2 = 4.32
!
! Kc & Kp--NOT INTERCHANGEABLE! Kp = Kc(RT)Δn
where Δn is the change in the number of moles of gas going from reactants to products:
= 1.9 X 103
Using the value of Kp obtained in Sample Exercise 13.4, calculate the value of K at 25° C for the reaction:
Kp = Kc(RT)^n
1900 = Kc[(0.08206)(298)]^2-3
Kc = 4.6 x 10^4
= 4.6 X 104
!
! MAGNITUDE OF K--what does it mean anyway? When greater than one, formation of
products is favored. When less than one, formation of reactants is favored.
Can you...???
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1. write an eq. constant expression?
2. tell how K is changed if the stoichiometric coefficients are changed on an equation?
3. tell how to find K for a summary equation?
4. tell how K depends on the way equilibrium concentrations are expressed and how to
convert K in terms of Kc vs. Kp?
5. tell what K is telling you about a reaction?
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Exercise 7 Using the Reaction Quotient
For the synthesis of ammonia at 500°C, the equilibrium constant is 6.0 X 10 -2. Predict the direction in which the system
will shift to reach equilibrium in each of the following cases:
Q = (1.0x10^-3)^2/(1.0x10^-5)(2.0x10^-3)^3= 1.3x10^7
Q = (2.00x10^-4)^2/(1.50x10^-5)(3.54x10^-1)^3 = 0.060
Q=K no shift
Q = (1.0x10^-4)^2/(5.0)(1.0x10^-2)^3 = 0.0020
Dinitrogen tetroxide in its liquid state was used as one of the fuels on the lunar lander for the NASA Apollo missions.
In the gas phase it decomposes to gaseous nitrogen dioxide:
Consider an experiment in which gaseous N2O4 was placed in a flask and allowed to reach equilibrium at a temperature
where Kp = 0.133. At equilibrium, the pressure of N2O4 was found to be 2.71 atm. Calculate the equilibrium pressure
of NO2(g).
= 0.600
At a certain temperature a 1.00-L flask initially contained 0.298 mol PCl 3(g) and 8.70 X 10-3 mol PCl5(g). After the
system had reached equilibrium, 2.00 X 10 -3 mol Cl2(g) was found in the flask. Gaseous PCl 5 decomposes according to
the reaction
[PCl5] = 0.00670 M
[PCl3] = 0.300 M
[Cl2] = 0.00200 M
Kc = (.300)(2.00x10^-3)/0.00670 = 0.0896
1.00+x/1.00-x = 2.26
[CO]=[H2O] = 0.613M
[CO2]=[H2] = 1.387 M
Assume that the reaction for the formation of gaseous hydrogen fluoride from hydrogen and fluorine has an equilibrium
constant of 1.15 X 102 at a certain temperature. In a particular experiment, 3.000 mol of each component was added to
a 1.500-L flask. Calculate the equilibrium concentrations of all species.
[H2]=[F2]= 0.47 M
[HF]=5.06 M
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Assume that gaseous hydrogen iodide is synthesized from hydrogen gas and iodine vapor at a temperature where the
equilibrium constant is 1.00 X 102. Suppose HI at 5.000 X 10-1 atm, H2 at 1.000 X 10-2 atm, and I2 at 5.000 X 10-3 atm
are mixed in a 5.000-L flask. Calculate the equilibrium pressures of all species.
100=(0.5-2x)^2/(0.01+x)(0.005+x)
96x^2+3.5x-0.245=0
x=0.0355
PHI=0.429 atm
PH2=0.0455 atm
PI2=0.0405 atm
Arsenic can be extracted from its ores by first reacting the ore with oxygen (called roasting) to form solid As4O6, which
is then reduced using carbon:
Predict the direction of the shift of the equilibrium position in response to each of the following changes in conditions.
A: shift left
a) shift left b) no effect (solids) c)shift right B: no shift
C: shift right
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Exercise 14 Using Le Chatelier’s Principle II
Predict the shift in equilibrium position that will occur for each of the following processes when the volume is reduced.
Exercise 15
For each of the following reactions, predict how the value of K changes as the temperature is increased.
A: increases
B: decreases
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