Equilibrium Notes
Equilibrium Notes
Equilibrium Notes
1. Equilibrium represents the state of a process in which the properties like temperature,
pressure etc do not show any change with the passage of time
2. Chemical equilibrium: When the rates of the forward and reverse reactions become
equal, the concentrations of the reactants and the products remain constant. This is the
stage of chemical equilibrium. This equilibrium is dynamic in nature as it consists of a
forward reaction in which the reactants give product(s) and reverse reaction in which
product(s) gives the original reactants. Equilibrium is possible only in a closed system
at a given temperature. A mixture of reactants and products in the equilibrium state is
called an equilibrium mixture.
3. In a Homogeneous system, all the reactants and products are in the same phase. For
example, in the gaseous reaction, N2 (g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g), reactants and products
are in the homogeneous phase.
5. Henry Law:-It states that the mass of a gas dissolved in a given mass of a solvent at
any temperature is proportional to the pressure of the gas above the solvent
6. Law of Chemical Equilibrium: It may be stated as, at a given temperature the ratio
of product of equilibrium concentration of the products to that of the reactants with
each concentration terms raised to power equal to the respective stoichiometric
coefficient in the balanced chemical reaction has a constant value. This constant value
is known as Equilibrium constant.
For a general reaction of the type aA + bB → cC + dD
Kc = [C]c[D]d /[A]a [B]b
This expression is known as Law of Chemical Equilibrium.
• Effect of change of pressure: When the pressure is increased the equilibrium shifts in
the direction in which the number of moles of the gas decreases.
Consider the reaction, CO (g) + 3H2 (g) CH4 (g) + H2O (g) Here, 4 mol of gaseous
reactants (CO + 3H2) become 2 mol of gaseous products (CH4 (g) + H2O). so by Le
Chatelier‘s principle. The increase in pressure will shift the equilibrium in the forward
direction, a direction in which the number of moles of the gas or pressure decreases.
• Effect of Inert Gas Addition: If the volume is kept constant and an inert gas such as
argon is added which does not take part in the reaction, the equilibrium remains
undisturbed. It is because the addition of an inert gas at constant volume does not
change the partial pressures or the molar concentrations of the substance involved in
the reaction. The reaction quotient changes only if the added gas is a reactant or
product involved in the reaction.
• Effect of a Catalyst: A catalyst increases the rate of the chemical reaction by making
available a new low energy pathway for the conversion of reactants to products. It
increases the rate of forward and reverse reactions that pass through the same
transition state and does not affect equilibrium. Catalyst lowers the activation energy
for the forward and reverse reactions by exactly the same amount. Catalyst does not
affect the equilibrium composition of a reaction mixture. It does not appear in the
balanced chemical equation or in the equilibrium constant expression.
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