Title: Chapter 15: Chemical Equilibrium
1Chapter 15 Chemical Equilibrium
2Chapter 15 Outline
- Concept of Equilibrium
- The Equilibrium Constant (Kc Kp)
- Heterogeneous Equilibrium
- Calculating and Applying Equilibrium Constants
- Le Châteliers Principle
3The Concept of Chemical Equilibrium
Animation
4What is Equilibrium A case study
- Using the collision model
- as the amount of NO2 builds up, there is a chance
that two NO2 molecules will collide to form N2O4.
- At the beginning of the reaction, there is no NO2
so the reverse reaction (2NO2(g) ? N2O4(g)) does
not occur.
5Equilibrium Case Study
- The point at which the rate of decomposition
- N2O4(g) ? 2NO2(g)
- equals the rate of dimerization
- 2NO2(g) ? N2O4(g).
- The system is dynamic equilibrium.
- The equilibrium is dynamic because the reaction
has not stopped the opposing rates are equal. - Consider frozen N2O4 only white solid is
present. On the microscopic level, only N2O4
molecules are present.
6The Concept of Equilibrium
Equilibrium is a state in which there are no
observable changes as time goes by.
- Chemical equilibrium is achieved when
- the rates of the forward and reverse reactions
are equal and - the concentrations of the reactants and products
remain constant - Chemistry is still happening!!
Physical equilibrium
A
Chemical equilibrium
7The Concept of Equilibrium
Start with NO2
Start with N2O4
Start with NO2 N2O4
8The Concept of Equilibrium
kf N2O4 kr NO22
Kc
constant
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10Equilibrium Constant
N2O4 (g) 2NO2 (g)
4.63 x 10-3
Law of Mass Action
11Lets Practice!
- Write the equilibrium constant for following
reactions - a. H2 I2 2HI
- b. Cd2 4Br- CdBr42-
12Equilibrium Constant
Equilibrium will lie to the right Favor the
Products
Equilibrium will lie to the left Favor the
Reactants
13Conceptual Question
- The equilibrium constant for the reaction H2
I2 2HI varies with temperature as
follows - K 794 at 298 K K 54 at 700K
- Is the formation of HI favored at higher or
lower temperatures?
14Conceptual Question
- 2SO2 (g) O2 (g) 2SO3 (g)
- The equilibrium cannot be established
when_________is/are placed in a 1.0 L container. - A. 0.25 mol SO2 (g) and 0.25 mol O2 (g)
- B. 0.75 mol SO2 (g)
- C. 0.25 mol SO2 (g) and 0.25 mol SO3 (g)
- D. 0.50 mol O2 (g) and 0.50 mol SO3 (g)
- E. 1.0 mol SO3 (g)
15Student Practice Calculation
The equilibrium concentrations for the reaction
between carbon monoxide and molecular chlorine to
form COCl2 (g) at 740C are CO 0.012 M, Cl2
0.054 M, and COCl2 0.14 M. Calculate the
equilibrium constant.
16Equilibrium Case Study 2
17Equilibrium Expressions Involving Pressures
18Equilibrium Expressions Involving Pressures
or C P/RT
In terms of concentration
19Relationship between Kc and Kp
K NH32 C NH3 2 Kc
N2H23 (CN2) (CH23) C P/RT so
substitute into above expression (P NH3/RT) 2
(PN2/RT) (PH2/RT)3
20Student Practice Calculation
21Student Practice Calculation
Kp K(RT) Dn, K Kp / (RT) Dn, Dn 2 - 3
- 1 K 0.25 x (0.08206 L/atm mol K)(1100K) 23
22Equilibrium Constant
Kc
If a reaction can be expressed as the sum of two
or more reactions, the equilibrium constant for
the overall reaction is given by the product of
the equilibrium constants of the individual
reactions.
23Equilibrium Constant
216
When the equation for a reversible reaction is
written in the opposite direction, the
equilibrium constant becomes the reciprocal of
the original equilibrium constant.
24Writing Equilibrium Constant Expressions
- The concentrations of the reacting species in the
liquid phase are expressed in M. In the gaseous
phase, the concentrations can be expressed in M
or in atm. - The concentrations of pure solids, pure liquids
and solvents do not appear in the equilibrium
constant expressions. - The equilibrium constant is a dimensionless
quantity. - When discussing equilibrium you must indicate the
balanced equation and the temperature. - If a reaction can be expressed as a sum of two or
more reactions, the equilibrium constant for the
overall reaction is given by the product of the
equilibrium constants of the individual reactions.
25Equilibrium Constant
Heterogeneous equilibrium applies to reactions in
which reactants and products are in different
phases.
CaCO3 constant CaO constant
Kc CO2
The concentration of solids and pure liquids are
not included in the expression for the
equilibrium constant.
26Consider the following equilibrium at 295
K The partial pressure of each gas is 0.265
atm. Calculate K for this reaction?
0.265 x 0.265 0.0702
27More Calculations
- How do we calculate K if we dont know the
concentrations of all of the chemical species in
an equilibrium? - Use an equilibrium Table
- Tabulate the known initial concentrations
- Calculate the change for known species
- Use stoichiometry to calculate change in other
unknown species - Calculate K
- Lets do an example
28Enough ammonia is dissolved in 5.00 L of water at
25C to produce a solution that is 0.0124 M in
ammonia. The solution is then allowed to come to
equilibrium. Analysis of the equilibrium mixture
shows that the concentration of OH- is 4.64 x
10-4 M. Calculate Keq at 25C for the reaction.
- NH3 (aq) H2O (l) NH4
(aq) OH- (aq)
29You Try!
- A flask is charged with 1.500 atm N2O4(g) and
1.00 atm NO2 (g). After equilibrium is reached,
the partial pressure of NO2 is 0.512 atm. - A. what is the equilibrium partial pressure of
N2O4? - B. Calculate the value of Keq for the reaction
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31Conceptual Question
- A mixture of 0.682 mol H2 and 0.440 mol of Br2 is
combined in a reaction vessel with volume of 2.0
L. At equilibrium at 700 K, there are 0.566 mol
of H2 present. At equilibrium, there are
__________ mol of Br2 present in the reaction
vessel. - H2 (g) Br2 (g) 2HBr (g)
- A. 0.000
- B. 0.440
- C. 0.566
- D. 0.232
- E. 0.324
32Application of Equilibrium Constants
- Predicting the direction of reactions
33Application of Equilibrium Constants
The reaction quotient (Qc) is calculated by
substituting the initial concentrations of the
reactants and products into the equilibrium
constant (Kc) expression.
- IF
- Qc gt Kc system proceeds from right to left to
reach equilibrium - Qc Kc the system is at equilibrium
- Qc lt Kc system proceeds from left to right to
reach equilibrium
34Example
- Keq 4.51 x 10-5 at 450C for
- N2(g) 3H2(g) 2NH3 (g)
- Indicate which direction the mixture must shift
to reach equilibrium when 105 atm NH3, 35 atm N2
and 495 atm H2 are present.
35Application of Equilibrium Constants
Calculating Equilibrium Concentrations Chemists
often need to know the amounts of reactants and
products at equilibrium. How do we do this?
- Express the equilibrium concentrations of all
species in terms of the initial concentrations
and a single unknown x, which represents the
change in concentration. - Write the equilibrium constant expression in
terms of the equilibrium concentrations. Knowing
the value of the equilibrium constant, solve for
x. - Having solved for x, calculate the equilibrium
concentrations of all species.
Example problems on board N2O4 Ex Quadratic
Formula Ex
36Le Châteliers Principle
- What happens to a system at equilibrium when a
stress is applied?
What Happens?
37Le Châteliers Principle
- If an external stress is applied to a system at
equilibrium, the system adjusts in such a way
that the stress is partially offset as the system
reaches a new equilibrium position.
Change in Concentration
Change
Shifts the Equilibrium
Increase concentration of product(s)
left
Decrease concentration of product(s)
right
Increase concentration of reactant(s)
right
Decrease concentration of reactant(s)
left
38LeChateliers Principle
- Addition of a reaction component
Increase Concentrations of products
Add acetic acid
39LeChateliers Principle
- Removal of a reaction component
Remove ethyl acetate
Equilibrium shifts to the right
40Conceptual Question
- Problem when acid rain attacks marble (calcium
carbonate), the following equilibrium can be
written - how does the fact that CO2 is a gas influence
the equilibrium?
41What about Pressure and Temp?
42Le Châteliers Principle
Changes in Volume and Pressure
Change
Shifts the Equilibrium
Increase pressure
Side with fewest moles of gas
Decrease pressure
Side with most moles of gas
Increase volume
Side with most moles of gas
Decrease volume
Side with fewest moles of gas
43Le Châteliers Principle
Changes in Temperature
Change
Exothermic Rx
Endothermic Rx
Increase temperature
K decreases
K increases
Decrease temperature
K increases
K decreases
- Adding a Catalyst
- does not change K
- does not shift the position of an equilibrium
system - Allows system to reach equilibrium sooner though!
44At 12800C the equilibrium constant (Kc) for the
reaction Is 1.1 x 10-3. If the initial
concentrations are Br2 0.063 M and Br
0.012 M, calculate the concentrations of these
species at equilibrium.
Let x be the change in concentration of Br2
Initial (M)
0.063
0.012
ICE
Change (M)
-x
2x
Equilibrium (M)
0.063 - x
0.012 2x