Title: Chemical Equilibria
1Chemical Equilibria
2The Law of Mass Action
- A B ? C D
- The velocity at which A and B react is
proportional to their concentrations - ?1 k1 x A x B
- ?2 k2 x C x D
- At equilibrium the velocities of the forward and
reverse reaction will be equal and ?1 ?2 - k1 x A x B k2 x C x D
3The Law of Mass Action
- Or
- K The equilibrium constant for the reaction at
a given temperature - For a reversible reaction the equation may be
generalised
4The Law of Mass Action
- (X) indicates the concentration of the reactants
and products, but to be strictly correct it is
the activity of reactants and products that
should be used.
5Activity and Activity Coefficient
- For a binary electrolyte
- AB ? A B-
- activity (concentration) x (activity
coefficient) - Thus at any molar concentration
6Activity and Activity Coefficient
- This is the rigorously correct expression for the
law of mass action as applied to weak
electrolytes. - The activity coefficient varies with
concentration and ionic strength (IS). For ions
it varies with the valency and is the same for
all dilute solutions having the same ionic
strength. - An increase in IS causes the activity coefficient
and activity to decrease.
7Calculation of Ionic Strength
- The ionic strength for 0.1 M HNO3 and 0.2M
Ba(NO3)2 - 0.5(0.1 x 12 0.1 x 12)HNO3 (0.2 x 22
0.2 x 2 x 12) - 0.50.2 (0.8 0.4) 0.50.2 1.2 0.7
- The activity coefficient of unionised molecules
do not differ considerably from unity. - For weak electrolytes, the ionic concentration
and ionic strength is small and the error
introduced by neglecting activity for
concentration is small, i.e., assuming no other
salts in solution.
8Acid Base Equilibria in Water
- CH3COOH H2O ? H3O CH3COOH-
- Applying the law of mass action we have
- K is the equilibrium constant at a particular
concentration also known as the dissociation
constant and ionisation constant.
9Acid Base Equilibria in Water
- If one mole of electrolyte is dissolved in V
litres of solution. V 1/c, where c
concentration in moles/litre. - If the degree of dissociation at equilibrium a
- The amount of unionized electrolyte 1- a/V
moles/litre. - This is also know as Ostwalds dilution law
10Acid Base Equilibria in Water
As the solution becomes more dilute, the degree
of dissociation increases. At infinite dilution
the weak acid or base would be totally
dissociated.
c x 104 a K x 105
1.873 0.264 1.78
38.86 0.066 1.83
68.71 0.050 1.84
112.2 0.040 1.84
11Strengths of Acids and Bases
- A1-B1 and A2-B2 are conjugate acid base pairs
- K depends on temperature and the nature of the
solvent - It is usual to refer to acid base strength of the
solvent - In water the acid-base pair is H3O-H2O
- The conc. of water equals 55.5 moles/litre
12Strengths of Acids and Bases
If A is an anion acid such as H2PO4- i.e. the
second dissociation constant for phosphoric acid
- H2PO4- H2O ? HPO42- H3O
- NH4 H2O ? NH3 H3O
If A is a cation acid, e.g. ammonium ion. NH3
total conc. of ammonia i.e. free NH3 plus
NH4OH The H2O is a base since it is accepting a H
13Strengths of Acids and Bases
For a Bronsted base, again leaving out H2O In
this case the H2O is an acid since it is donating
a proton (H)
Since Kw HOH- A large pKa corresponds to a
weak acid and a strong base
14Strengths of Acids and Bases
For very weak or slightly ionized electrolytes,
the relationship can be reduced since a may be
neglected in comparison to unity
For any two weak acids or bases at a given
dilution V (in litres) we have
15Strengths of Acids and Bases
Acid pKa Acid pKa
Formic 3.75 Benzoic 4.21
Acetic 4.76 Carbonic K1 6.37
Propionic 4.87 Carbonic K1 10.33
Hydrogen Sulphide K1 7.24 Sulphuric K2 1.92
Hydrogen Sulphide K2 14.92 Lactic 3.86
16Strengths of Acids and Bases
Base pKa Base pKa
Ammonia 9.24 Methylamine 10.64
Ethylamine 10.63 Dimethylamine 10.77
Triethanolamine 7.7 Trimethylamine 9.80
Ethylenediamine K1 7.00 Aniline 4.58
Ethylenediamine K2 10.09 Pyridine 5.17
Data expressed as acidic dissociation
constants The basic dissociation constant may be
obtained from the relationship pKa (acidic) pKb
(base) Kw (water) 10-14 _at_ 25oC
17Strengths of Acids and Bases
- Consider the reactions
- H2S ? HS- H
- HS- ? S2- H
18Strengths of Acids and Bases
- E.g. A saturated aqueous solution of H2S is
approximately 0.1 M.
Both the equilibrium equations must be satisfied
simultaneously
19Strengths of Acids and Bases
- By substituting the values for H and HS-
into -
Which is the value of K2
20Le Chatelier's Principle
- In 1884 the French chemist and engineer
Henry-Louis Le Chatelier proposed one of the
central concepts of chemical equilibria. Le
Chatelier's principle can be stated as follows - A change in one of the variables that describe a
system at equilibrium produces a shift in the
position of the equilibrium that counteracts the
effect of this change. - If a chemical system at equilibrium experiences a
change in concentration, temperature, volume, or
total pressure, then the equilibrium shifts to
counter-act the imposed change.
21Common Ion Effect
- Remember H2S ? HS- H
- HS- ? S2- H
22Common Ion Effect
- The concentration of an ion in solution may be
increased by the addition of another compound
that produces the same ion on dissociation. - E.g. The S2- ion conc. by addition of 0.25 M HCl
Thus by addition of 0,25 M H the sulphide
concentration is reduced from 1 x 10-15 to 1.7 x
10-22
23Common Ion Effect
- Consider the equilibrium reaction of acetic acid
- CH3COOH ? CH3COO- H
24Common Ion Effect
- Effect of addition of 0.1 moles NaAc (8.2 g) to
1000 mL of 0.1 M HAc. Consider the acetic acid
first. - 1 a 1
- Hence H 0.00135, CH3COO- 0.00135, and
- CH3COOH 0.0986
25Common Ion Effect
- The concentration of sodium and acetate ions
produced by addition of the completely
dissociated sodium acetate are - Na 0.1, and CH3COO- 0.1 mole/litre
- The CH3COO- will tend to decrease the ionisation
of the acetic acid, since K is constant, and the
acetate ion conc. derived from it. - Hence we may write CH3COO- 0.1
- a is the new degree of ionisation
- H ac 0.1 a, and CH3COOH (1 a)c
0.1 since a is negligibly small.
26Common Ion Effect
- Substituting in the mass-action equation
- The addition of 0.1 M NaAc to 0.1M acetic acid
has decreased the degree of ionisation from 1.35
to 0.018, and the H from 0.00135 to 0.000018
27Solubility Product
- For sparingly soluble salts lt0.01 M
- AgCl (solid) ? Ag Cl-
- The velocity of the reactions depends on
temperature
28Solubility Product
- v1 k1
- v2 k2AgCl-
- At equilibrium k1 k2AgCl-
- AgCl- k1/k2 SAgCl
- Again to be strictly correct activities and not
concentrations should be used. At low
concentration the activities are practically
equal to concentration.
29Solubility Product
KCl Cl- x 103 Ag x 108 SAgCl AgCl- x 1010
0.00670 6.4 1.75 1.12
0.00833 7.9 1.39 1.10
0.01114 10.5 1.07 1.12
0.01669 15.5 0.74 1.14
0.03349 30.3 0.39 1.14
30Solubility Product Inert Electrolyte
- In the presence of moderate concentrations of
salts, the ionic strength will increase. This
will, in general lower the activity coefficient
of both ions, and consequently the ionic
concentrations and (and therefore the solubility)
must increase in order to maintain the solubility
product constant. - E.g. fA decreased from 1 0.8, the activity
will decrease and the concentration will increase
in order to maintain the correct activity conc.
31Solubility Product
- The solubility increases by the addition of
electrolytes with no common ions
32Solubility Product Effect of Acids
- M A- H Cl- ? HA M Cl-
- If the dissociation constant of the acid HA is
small, the anion A- will be removed from the
solution to form the un-dissociated acid HA.
Consequently more of the solid will pass into
solution to replace the anions removed and this
process will continue until equilibrium is
established MA- SMA - Fe2 CO32- ? Fe2CO3?
- kSFe2CO3 Fe2CO32-
- H2CO3 ? H HCO3- K1 4.3 x 10-7
33Solubility Product Effect of Acids
- HCO3- ? H CO3- K2 5.6 x 10-11
- CO32- H ? HCO3-
- Also for sparingly soluble sulphates, Ba, Sr and
Pb - Ba2 SO42- H Cl- ? HSO4- Ba2 Cl-
- Since the K2 is comparatively large
- HSO4- ? H SO42- (pKa 1.92), the effect of
addition of a strong acid is relatively small.
34Complex Ions
- The increase in solubility of a precipitate upon
the addition of excess of the precipitating agent
is frequently due to the formation of a complex
ion. - E.g. the ppt of silver cyanide
- SAgCN AgCN- because the solubility product
is exceeded - K CN- Ag NO3- ? AgCN? K NO3-
- or Ag CN- ? AgCN?
- The ppt dissolves on addition of excess
potassium cyanide due to the formation of the
complex ion Ag(CN)2- - AgCN (solid) CN- (excess) ? Ag(CN)2- a
soluble complex ion. KAg(CN)2 a soluble
complex salt.
35Instability Constants of Complex Ions
The complex ion formation renders the
concentration of the silver ion concentration so
small that the solubility product of silver
cyanide is not exceeded. Also bear in mind that
the CN- ion is also in excess.
36Instability Constants of Complex Ions
- Cu2 NH4OH ? Cu(OH)2? NH4
- Cu(OH)2 4NH4 ? Cu(NH4)42 OH-