Title: Equilibrium
1Equilibrium
2What Is It?
- The state where concentrations of all
reactants and products remain constant with time.
At the molecular level, the reaction continues.
Macroscopically, the reaction appears static.
3Why Is It?
- Reaction rate depends on concentration.
- Collision Theory says more collisions faster
reactions. - As the reaction progresses, the concentration of
products begins to increase.
4Equilibrium Position is Determined By
- Initial Concentrations
- Energies of reactants and products
- Organization (disorder) of reactants and products
The Haber Process
N2(g) 3H2(g) 2NH3(g)
Nothing appears to change because the rates of
reaction are so naturally slow. A catalyst is
used to begin the process for commercial
production of ammonia. Haber applied Le
Chateliers Principle to maximize the forward
reaction.
5Le Chateliers Principle
- When a stress is applied to a system at
equilibrium, the reaction shifts to relieve the
stress.
6What stresses out a Reaction?
- Heat (heat is measured in kJ or kcal)
- Pressure (related to of moles on each side of
the reaction) - Concentration (how much of each component is
added) - When any of these increase or decrease from
original conditions, that is stress.
7The Equilibrium Constant
- The equilibrium constant is represented by K
Where wA xB yC zD
8Try Me!
- Write the equilibrium expression for the
following reaction - 4 NH3 7O2 4NO2 6H2O
Calculate the value of the equilibrium constant
if the concentrations of the reactants and
products are as follows NH3 3.1 x 10-2
mol/L O2 5.4 x 10-2 mol/L NO2 3.1 x 10-2
mol/L H2O 4.7 x 10-2 mol/L
9Equilibrium Position
- A set of concentrations that indicate whether
products or reactants dominate while the rxn is
at equilibrium.
Number of equilibrium positions available
Number of values for K
1
10Equilibrium and Pressures
- Pressure and concentration are interchangeable
PV nRT P (n/V)RT n/V concentration
K
Kp
vs
In General Kp K(RT)Dn
Do Now!
Figure out the relationship between K and Kp for
the Haber Process.
Dn Sproducts -Sreactants
11Heterogeneous Equilibria
- Pure liquids and pure solids are not included in
the equilibrium expression for a reaction. - Concentrations of PURE liquids and solids cannot
change.
12Applications of the Equilibrium Constant
- The Equilibrium constant gives information that
will allow us to - Decide how likely it is that the reaction will
occur. - Determine if a reaction is at equilibrium given a
set of concentrations. - Determine which direction the reaction must shift
in order to reach an equilibrium position.
If K is greater than 1 The reaction is much More
likely to occur Spontaneously (the equilibrium
lies farthest to the right)
If K is very small The reaction is not likely to
be spontaneous (the equilibrium is near the
reactants)
Spontaneous Does Not Mean Fast!
13The Reaction Quotient
Q
- Obtained by replacing initial concentrations into
the concentrations of the equilibrium expression. - Three possible cases
Q gt K Shift Left
Q K No Shift
Q lt K Shift Right
14Try Me!!
- For the synthesis of ammonia at 500oC, the
equilibrium constant is 6.0 x 10-2. Predict the
direction in which the system will shift to reach
equilibrium - NH3o 1.0 x 10-3 M
- N2o 1.0 x 10-5 M
- H2o 2.0 x 10-3 M
Q 1.3 x 107 Shift to the Left
15Try Me Again and Again!
- Same problem, different conditions
- NH3o 2.0 x 10-4 M
- N2o 1.5 x 10-5 M
- H2o 3.54 x 10-1 M
- NH3o 1.0 x 10-4 M
- N2o 5.0 M
- H2o 1.0 x 10-2 M
Q 6.01 x 10-2 No Shift
Q 2.0 x 10-3 Shift to the Right
16Solving for Concentrations and Pressures
- Several Types of problems and Solving methods.
- Plug and Chug
- ICE
- ICE with Stoichiometry
- ICE with the quadratic equation
17Type 1 Plug and Chug
- Consider an experiment in which gaseous N2O4 was
placed in a flask and allowed to reach
equilibrium at a temperature where Kp 0.133.
At equilibrium, the pressure of N2O4 was found to
be 2.71 atm. Calculate the equilibrium pressure
of NO2.
N2O4(g) 2NO2(g)
18Type 2 Initial, Change,Equilibrium
- At a certain temperature a 1.00L flask initially
contained 0.298 mol PCl3(g) and 8.70 x10-3 mol
PCl5(g). After the system had reached
equilibrium, 2.00 x10-3 mol Cl2(g) was found in
the flask. Gaseous PCl5 decomposes according to
the reaction - PCl5(g)
PCl3(g) Cl2(g) - Calculate the concentrations of all species and
the value of k.
19Type 3 ICE with Stoichiometry
- Carbon Monoxide reacts with steam to produce
carbon dioxide and hydrogen. At 700K the
equilibrium constant is 5.10. Calculate the
equilibrium concentrations of all species if 1.00
mol of each component is mixed in a 1.00L flask.
20Type 4 ICE with Quadratic
- A 1.00L flask is filled with 1.0 mol H2 gas and
2.0 mol I2 gas at 448oC. The value of the
equilibrium constant Kc for the reaction - H2 I2 2HI
- at 448oC is 50.5. What are the equilibrium
concentrations of H2, I2 and HI in mol/L?