Chemical Equilibria
Chemical Equilibria
Chemical Equilibria
Compiled by
Dr. L. Coo
When a chemical reaction takes place in a container which prevents the entry or escape of any of the substances involved in the reaction, the quantities of these components change as some are consumed and others are formed. Eventually this change will come to an end, after which the composition will remain unchanged as long as the system remains undisturbed. The system is then said to be in its equilibrium state, or more simply, "at equilibrium".
In a chemical process, chemical equilibrium is the state in which the chemical activities or concentrations of the reactants and products have no net change over time. Usually, this would be the state that results when the forward chemical process proceeds at the same rate as their reverse reaction. The reaction rates of the forward and reverse reactions are generally not zero but, being equal, there are no net changes in any of the reactant or product concentrations. This process is called dynamic equilibrium.
Guldberg and Waage showed that the rate of the reaction in either direction is proportional to what they called the "active masses" of the various components: in which the proportionality constants k are called rate constants and the quantities in square brackets represent concentrations. If we combine the two reactants A and B, the forward reaction starts immediately; then, as the products C and D begin to build up, the reverse process gets underway. As the reaction proceeds, the rate of the forward reaction diminishes while that of the reverse reaction increases. Eventually the two processes are proceeding at the same rate, and the reaction is at equilibrium: If we now change the composition of the system by adding some C or withdrawing some A (thus changing their "active masses"), the reverse rate will exceed the forward rate and a change in composition will occur until a new equilibrium composition is achieved. The Law of Mass Action is thus essentially the statement that the equilibrium composition of a reaction mixture can vary according to the quantities of components that are present. This of course is just what Berthollet observed in his Egyptian salt ponds, but we now understand it to be a consequence of the dynamic nature of chemical equilibrium.
According to the Law of Mass Action, for a reversible reaction at equilibrium and at constant temperature, a certain ratio of reactant and product concentrations (when each term raised to the power of its coefficient in the equilibrium reaction) has a constant value, K.
Kc = equilibrium constant, unitless [A], [B], [C], [P], [Q], [R] = equilibrium molar conc
K, equilibrium constant
The value of which at any temp does not depend on the initial concentration of the reactant and products The value varies with temperature
Homogeneous equilibrium
Homogeneous equilibrium
Reversible rxns wherein all reacting species are in the same phase.
Kp
2SO3 2SO2 O2
1. PCl5(g)
Kc =
Kc =
3H+(aq) + PO3-4(aq)
Kc = [H+]3[PO43-] [H3PO4]
Kp = Kc(RT)
n = moles of gaseous products moles of gaseous reactants R = gas constant, 0.0821 L-atm/mol-K T= absolute temp, Kelvin
Express the equilib constant in terms of Kp, in terms of Kc of the following equilibria.
1. 2. 3. 4. N2(g) + 3H2(g) CO(g) + Cl2(g) PCl5(g) 2NH3(g) COCl2(g)
H2(g) + I2(g)
Heterogeneous equilibria
Heterogeneous equilibria
Reversible rxns involving reactants and products that are in different phases. Ex: CaO(s) + CO(2)(g) 1. CaCO3(s) 2. P4(s) + 6Cl2(g) 4PCl3(l)
Neither solids nor liquids are significantly affected by changes in pressure. For any pure solid or pure liquid, the activity (concentration) is taken as 1 so that terms for these species do not appear in the K expressions for heterogeneous equilibria.
Multiple Equilibria
A chemical system in which the product molecules in one equilibrium system are involved in a second equilibrium process. A+B C+D C+D E+F
If a rxn can be expressed as the sum of two or more rxns, the equilib constant for the overall rxn is given by the product of the equilib constants of the individual rxns. A+B C+D A+B C+D E+F E+F Kc Kc Kc
overall rxn :
Kc = Kc x Kc
2. The value of K depends on how the equilib equation is balanced. 3H2 + N2 6H2 + 2N2 3/2H2 + 1/2N2 2NH3 K
Kc = 1.8 x 10-5 Kc = 2.0 x 1038 Kp = 5.6 x 10-7 Kc = 1.0 x 10-18 Kc = 1.0 x 107 Kc 1.0 x 10-25
Possible method of fixing atmospheric N2 (converting it to a cpd) N2(g) + O2(g) 2 NO(g) K = 2NO = 1.1 x 10-30, 25oC N2O2 N2(g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g) K = 2NH3 = 6.0 x 105, 25oC N23H2
Other characteristics of K
Temperature dependent __________________
2NO2(g)
[N2O4]i [NO2]i 1 2 3 4 0 0 0.1178 0.2009 0.1200 0.1300 0.1351 0
N2O4(g)
[N2O4]eq [NO2]eq 0.00140 0.00280 0.00312 0.00452 0.0814 0.1152 0.1216 0.1463 Kc 0.211 0.211 0.211 0.212
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3H2(g) + N2(g)
2NH3(g)
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Reducing the volume of a gaseous equilibrium mixture causes the system to shift in the direction that reduces the number of moles of gas. Conversely, increasing the volume causes a shift in the direction that produces more gas molecules.
A system can reduce its pressure by reducing the total number of gas molecules
3H2(g) + N2(g)
Increase pressure Increase volume
2NH3(g)
3. Change in Temperature
Treat heat as if it were a chemical reagent
products Endothermic: Reactants + heat Exothermic: Reactants products + heat When heat is added to the system, the equilibrium shifts in the direction that absorbs (or use up) heat.
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4. Addition of catalyst
A catalyst increases the rate at which equilibrium is achieved, but it does not change the composition of the equilibrium mixture.
The reaction between hydrogen and iodine at 700K is described by the equilibrium: H2(g) + I2(g) 2HI(g)
In a certain experiment at 700 K, the various concentrations at equilibrium were found to be [H2] = 1.84 x 10-3 mol/L [I2] = 3.13 x 10-3 mol/L [HI] = 17.7 x 10-3 mol/L Calculate Kc for this equilibrium at 700K.
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CO2(g) + H2(g)
The system starts with 6.0 mol of CO and 7.0 mol of H2O in a 1.00L vessel. When equilib is attained, 4.5 mol of CO2 is formed. Calculate the value of Kc.
A sealed 2.00 L tube initially contains 9.84 x 10-4 mol H2 and 1.38 x 10-3 mol I2. It is kept at 350oC until the rxn; 2HI(g) H2(g) + I2(g) comes to equilibrium. At equilib, 4.73 x 10-4 mol I2 is present. Calculate Kc.
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Given A(g) + B(g) C(g) + 2D(g) 1.00 mol of A and 0.500 mol of B are placed in a 400.0 mL container. After equilibrium has been established, 0.200 mol of C is present in the container. Calculate Kc for the rxn.
Answer
I2 (3.0 x 10-2 moles) and H2 (2.0 x 10-2 moles) were mixed in a closed 1.00 L container and heated to 700K. The equilibrium constant Kc for the reaction is 55. How many moles of HI, I2 and H2 will be present at equilibrium?
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Solving quadratic equations: For a general quadratic equation y = x2 + bx + c, x2 + bx + c = 0 the roots of the equation (i.e., the values of x when the equation is zero, y = 0), are given by
Predict the direction in which the reaction will proceed to reach equilibrium. 2CO(g) + O2(g) 2CO2(g) K = [CO2]2 = 5.0 x 103 [CO]2[O2] [CO2]i = 0.25 M [CO]i = 0.50 M [O2]i = 0.50 M at 950K
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2CO + O2
2CO2
Kc = 5.0x103
Using initial conc: Q = rxn quotient = (0.25)2 = 0.50 Q = [CO2]2i 2 [O ] 2(0.50) [CO] i 2 I (0.50) Q < Kc
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