Title: CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM Chapter 16
1CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUMChapter 16
- equilibrium vs. completed reactions
- equilibrium constant expressions
- Reaction quotient
- computing positions of equilibria examples
- Le Chateliers principle - effect on equilibria
of - addition of reactant or product
- pressure
- temperature
YOU ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE for section 16.7
(relation to kinetics)
2THE EQUILIBRIUM CONSTANT
- For any type of chemical equilibrium of the type
the following is a CONSTANT (at a given T)
If K is known, then we can predict
concentrations of products or reactants.
3Q - the reaction quotient
- All reacting chemical systems can be
characterized by their REACTION QUOTIENT, Q.
Q has the same form as K, . . . but uses
existing concentrations
If Q K, then system is at equilibrium.
Since K 2.5, system NOT AT EQUIL.
To reach EQUILIBRIUM Iso must INCREASE and n
must DECREASE.
4Typical EQUILIBRIUM Calculations
2 general types a. Given set of
concentrations, is system at
equilibrium ?
Calculate Q compare to K
IF Q gt K or Q/K gt 1 ?
REACTANTS Q lt K or Q/K lt 1 ?
PRODUCTS
QK at EQUILIBRIUM
5H2(g) I2(g) 2 HI(g) Kc 55.3
Step 1 Define equilibrium condition in terms of
initial condition and a change variable H2
I2 HI At equilibrium 1.00-x 1.00-x 2x
- Step 2
- Put equilibrium
- into Kc .
Step 3. Solve for x. 55.3
(2x)2/(1-x)2 Square root of both sides solve
gives x 0.79
H2 I2 1.00 - x 0.21 M HI 2x
1.58 M
At equilibrium
6EQUILIBRIUM AND EXTERNAL EFFECTS
- The position of equilibrium is changed when there
is a change in - pressure
- changes in concentration
- temperature
- The outcome is governed by
- LE CHATELIERS PRINCIPLE
Henri Le Chatelier 1850-1936 - Studied mining
engineering - specialized in glass and ceramics.
...if a system at equilibrium is disturbed, the
system tends to shift its equilibrium position to
counter the effect of the disturbance.
7Shifts in EQUILIBRIUM Concentration
- If concentration of one species changes,
- concentrations of other species CHANGES
- to keep the value of K the same (at constant T)
- no change in K - only position of equilibrium
changes.
ADDING PRODUCTS - equilibrium shifts to REACTANTS
ADDING REACTANTS - equilibrium shifts to PRODUCTS
- GAS-FORMING PRECIPITATION
REMOVING PRODUCTS - often used to DRIVE
REACTION TO COMPLETION
8Effect of changed on an equilibrium
INITIALLY n 0.50 M iso 1.25
M CHANGE ADD 1.50 M n-butane What happens ?
- Solution
- A. Calculate Q with extra 1.50 M n-butane.
16_butane.mov (16m13an1.mov)
Q iso / n 1.25 / (0.50 1.50) 0.63
Q lt K . Therefore, reaction shifts to PRODUCT
9Butane/Isobutane
B. Solve for NEW EQUILIBRIUM - set up
concentration table n-butane isobutane Ini
tial 0.50 1.50 1.25 Change - x
x Equilibrium 2.00 - x 1.25 x
x 1.07 M. At new equilibrium position,
n-butane 0.93 M isobutane 2.32 M.
Equilibrium has shifted toward isobutane.
10Effect of Pressure (gas equilibrium)
- Increase P in the system by reducing the volume.
Increasing P shifts equilibrium to side with
fewer molecules (to try to reduce P). Here,
reaction shifts LEFT PN2O4 increases
16_NO2.mov (16m14an1.mov)
PNO2 decreases
See Ass2 - question 6
11EQUILIBRIUM AND EXTERNAL EFFECTS
- Temperature change ? change in K
- Consider the fizz in a soft drink
Kc CO2(aq)/CO2(g)
- Change T New equilib. position? New value of
K?
- Increase T
- Equilibrium shifts left CO2(g) ? CO2
(aq) ? - K decreases as T goes up.
- Decrease T
- CO2 (aq) increases and CO2(g) decreases.
- K increases as T goes down
12Temperature Effects on Chemical Equilibrium
- Kc 0.00077 at 273 K
- Kc 0.00590 at 298 K
?Horxn 57.2 kJ
Increasing T changes K so as to shift equilibrium
in ENDOTHERMIC direction
16_NO2RX.mov (16m14an1.mov)
13EQUILIBRIUM AND EXTERNAL EFFECTS
Catalytic exhaust system
- Add catalyst ---gt no change in K
- A catalyst only affects the RATE of approach to
equilibrium.
14CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUMChapter 16
- equilibrium vs. completed reactions
- equilibrium constant expressions
- Reaction quotient
- computing positions of equilibria examples
- Le Chateliers principle - effect on equilibria
of - addition of reactant or product
- pressure
- temperature
YOU ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE for section 16.7
(relation to kinetics)
15Entropy and Free Energy (Kotz Ch 20)
- Spontaneous vs. non-spontaneous
- thermodynamics vs. kinetics
- entropy randomness (So)
- Gibbs free energy (?Go)
- ?Go for reactions - predicting spontaneous
direction - ?Grxn versus ?Gorxn
- predicting equilibrium constants from ?Gorxn
16Entropy and Free Energy ( Kotz Ch 20 )
- some processes are spontaneous others never
occur. WHY ?
- How can we predict if a reaction can occur, given
enough time?
THERMODYNAMICS
9-paper.mov 20m02vd1.mov
- Note Thermodynamics DOES NOT say how quickly (or
slowly) a reaction will occur. - To predict if a reaction can occur at a
reasonable rate, one needs to consider
KINETICS
17Thermodynamics
- state of a chemical system (P, T, composition)
- From a given state, would a chemical reaction
decrease the energy of the system? - If yes, system is favored to react a
product-favored system which will have a
spontaneous reaction. - Most product-favored reactions are exothermic.
- Spontaneous does not imply anything about time
for reaction to occur. (kinetics)
18Thermodynamics versus Kinetics
- Diamond to Graphite
- spontaneous from thermodynamics
- but not kinetically favored.
- Paper burns.
- - product - favored reaction.
- - Also kinetically favored once reaction is
begun.
19Product-Favored Reactions
In general, product-favored reactions are
exothermic.
- E.g. thermite reaction
- Fe2O3(s) 2 Al(s) ? 2 Fe(s) Al2O3(s)
- DH - 848 kJ
20Non-exothermic spontaneous reactions
- But many spontaneous reactions or processes are
endothermic . . .
NH4NO3(s) heat ? NH4 (aq) NO3-
(aq) ?Hsol 25.7 kJ/mol
or have ?H 0 . . .
21Entropy, S
- One property common to product-favored processes
is that the final state is more DISORDERED or
RANDOM than the original. - Spontaneity is related to an increase in
randomness. - The thermodynamic property related to randomness
is ENTROPY, S.
Reaction of K with water
22PROBABILITY - predictor of most stable state
WHY DO PROCESSES with ? H 0 occur ? Consider
expansion of gases to equal pressure
This is spontaneous because the final state, with
equal molecules in each flask, is much more
probable than the initial state, with all
molecules in flask 1, none in flask 2
SYSTEM CHANGES to state of HIGHER
PROBABILITY THIS IS USUALLY the more RANDOM state.
23Gas expansion - spontaneity from greater
probability
Consider distribution of 4 molecules in 2 flasks
P1 lt P2
P1 gt P2
P1 P2
With more molecules (gt1020) P1P2 is most
probable by far
24WHAT about EXOTHERMIC REACTIONS ?
Consider 2 H2 (g) O2 (g) ? 2 H2O (l)
- HIGHLY EXOTHERMIC
- final state (liquid) is MUCH MORE ORDERED
- (less random arrangement) than initial state (2
gases)
- BUT PROBABILITY of final state is higher when
one - considers change in the surroundings. WHY ?
- Heat evolved increases motion of molecules in
the surroundings
Increased disorder of surroundings
decreased disorder of system
gt
MUST consider change in disorder in BOTH SYSTEM
and SURROUNDINGS to predict DIRECTION of
SPONTANEITY
25Directionality of Reactions
- How probable is it that reactant molecules will
react? - PROBABILITY suggests that a product-favored
reaction will result in the dispersal of energy
or dispersal of matter or both.
26Directionality of Reactions
- Probability suggests that a product-favored
reaction will result in the dispersal of energy
or of matter or both.
Energy Dispersal
Matter Dispersal
9_gasmix.mov 20m03an1.mov
9_exorxn.mov 20m03an2.mov
27Directionality of ReactionsEnergy Dispersal
- Exothermic reactions involve a release of stored
chemical potential energy to the surroundings. - The stored potential energy starts out in a few
molecules but is finally dispersed over a great
many molecules. - The final statewith energy dispersedis more
probable and makes a reaction product-favored.
28Standard Entropies, So
- Every substance at a given temperature and in a
specific phase has a well-defined Entropy - At 298o the entropy of a substance is called
- So - with UNITS of J.K-1.mol-1
- The larger the value of So, the greater the
degree of disorder or randomness - e.g. So (in J.K-1mol-1) Br2 (liq)
152.2 - Br2 (gas) 245.5
- For any process
?So ? So(final) - ? So(initial)
?So(vap., Br2) (245.5-152.2) 93.3 J.K-1mol-1
29Entropy, S
So (J/Kmol) H2O(gas) 188.8 H2O(liq) 69.9 H2O
(s) 47.9
- S (gases) gt S (liquids) gt S (solids)