Title: Equilibrium
1Equilibrium
2Reactions are reversible
- A B C D ( forward)
- C D A B (reverse)
- Initially there is only A and B so only the
forward reaction is possible - As C and D build up, the reverse reaction speeds
up while the forward reaction slows down. - Eventually the rates are equal
3Forward Reaction
Reaction Rate
Equilibrium
Reverse reaction
Time
4What is equal at Equilibrium?
- Rates are equal
- Concentrations are not.
- Rates are determined by concentrations and
activation energy. - The concentrations do not change at equilibrium.
- Or if the reaction is verrrry slooooow.
5Law of Mass Action
- For any reaction
- jA kB lC mD
- K ClDm PRODUCTSpower
AjBk REACTANTSpower - K is called the equilibrium constant.
- is how we indicate a reversible
reaction - Only gases and aqueous solutions are included in
the law of mass action
6Playing with K
- If we write the reaction in reverse.
- lC mD jA kB
- Then the new equilibrium constant is
- K AjBk 1/K ClDm
7Playing with K
- If we multiply the equation by a constant
- njA nkB nlC nmD
- Then the equilibrium constant is
- K AnjBnk (A jBk)n Kn
CnlDnm (ClDm)n
8Manipulating K
From a practical point of view, here is how K
gets manipulated If a reaction gets doubled,
the value of K is squared. If it is tripled, K
is raised to the third power. If the reaction
gets cut in ½ then K is found by taking the
square root of K.
9The units for K
- This one is simple.
- K has no units.
10K is CONSTANT
- Temperature affects the equilibrium constant.
- The equilibrium concentrations dont have to
be the same only K. - Equilibrium position is a set of
concentrations at equilibrium. - There are an unlimited number of K values so
the temperature needs to be stated.
11Equilibrium Constant
12Calculate K
- N2 3H2 3NH3
-
- Initial At Equilibrium
- N20 1.000 M N2 0.921M
- H20 1.000 M H2 0.763M
- NH30 0 M NH3 0.157M
13Calculate K
- N2 3 H2 2 NH3 (all gases)
- Initial At Equilibrium
- N20 0 M N2 0.399 M
- H20 0 M H2 1.197 M
- NH30 1.000 M NH3 0.157M
- K is the same no matter what the amount of
starting materials
14Equilibrium and Pressure
- Dont forget your gas laws, they are often
needed to get some information for the problem.
Especially PV nRT - Some reactions are gaseous
- P (n/V)RT
- P CRT
- C is a concentration in moles/Liter
- C P/RT
15Equilibrium and Pressure
- 2 SO2(g) O2(g) 2 SO3(g)
- Kp (PSO3)2
- (PSO2)2 (PO2)
- K SO32
SO22 O2
16Equilibrium and Pressure For those that are a
glutton for punishment and want to see the full
treatment.
- K (PSO3/RT)2 (PSO2/RT)2(PO2/RT)
- K (PSO3)2 (1/RT)2
(PSO2)2(PO2) (1/RT)3 - K Kp (1/RT)2 Kp RT (1/RT)3
17General Equation
- jA kB lC mD
- Kp (PC)l (PD)m (CC x RT)l (CD x RT)m (PA)j
(PB)k (CA x RT)j(CB x RT)k - Kp (CC)l (CD)m x (RT)lm (CA)j(CB)k x
(RT)jk - Kp K (RT)(lm)-(jk) K (RT)Dn
- Dn(lm)-(jk) Change in moles of gas
18Homogeneous Equilibria
- So far every example dealt with reactants and
products where all were in the same phase. - We can use K in terms of either concentration
or pressure. - Units depend on reaction.
19Heterogeneous Equilibria
- If the reaction involves pure solids or pure
liquids the concentration of the solid or the
liquid doesnt change. - As long as they are not used up we can leave
them out of the equilibrium expression. - For an example, check out the next slide.
20For Example
- H2(g) I2(s) 2 HI(g)
- K HI2 H2I2
- But the concentration of I2 does not change, so
it factors out of the equilibrium expression and
looks like this. - K HI2 H2
21Solving Equilibrium Problems
22The Reaction Quotient
- Tells you the direction the reaction will go to
reach equilibrium - Calculated the same as the equilibrium
constant, but for a system not at equilibrium - Q Productscoefficient Reactants
coefficient - Compare value to equilibrium constant
23What Q tells us
- If Q lt K
- Not enough products
- Shift to right
- If Q gt K
- Too many products
- Shift to left
- If Q K system is at equilibrium. We like
these ones there is nothing to do !!
24Example
- For the reaction
- 2 NOCl(g) 2 NO(g) Cl2(g)
- K 1.55 x 10-5 M at 35ºC
- In an experiment 0.10 mol NOCl, 0.0010 mol
NO(g) and 0.00010 mol Cl2 are mixed in 2.0 L
flask. - Which direction will the reaction proceed to
reach equilibrium?
25Solving Equilibrium Problems
- Given the starting concentrations and one
equilibrium concentration. - Use stoichiometry to figure out other
concentrations and K. - Learn to create a table of initial and final
conditions. - Check out the next slide for an actual problem.
26- Consider the following reaction at 600ºC
- 2 SO2(g) O2(g) 2 SO3(g)
- In a certain experiment 2.00 mol of SO2, 1.50 mol
of O2 and 3.00 mol of SO3 were placed in a 1.00 L
flask. At equilibrium 3.50 mol of SO3 were found
to be present. Calculate the equilibrium
concentrations of O2 and SO2, K and KP
27The ICE BOX
- The table we create is called the ICE Box.
- 2 SO2(g) O2(g) 2 SO3(g)
- Here is the information given in the problem.
The blank spaces are what we have to determine.
Some are determined and others are calculated. - Initial 2 1.5 3
- Change
- Equilibrium 3.5
28The ICE BOX
- The table we create is called the ICE Box.
- 2 SO2(g) O2(g) 2 SO3(g)
- Here is the information given in the problem.
The blank spaces are what we have to determine.
Some are determined and others are calculated. - Initial 2 1.5 3
- Change - 2x - x 2x
- Equilibrium 3.5
29Where are we at ?
- The values in the CHANGE row are a combination of
stoichiometry and equilibrium. - Notice that the numbers are the same as the
coefficients. We cant forget stoichiometry. - The SO3 increases so it has to be a 2x.
- This tells us it shifts to the right and that the
value of the reactants has to decrease. - We combine the or sign along with the
stoichiometry to set up the equation.
30The ICE BOX
- The table we create is called the ICE Box.
- 2 SO2(g) O2(g) 2 SO3(g)
- Here is the information given in the problem.
The blank spaces are what we have to determine.
Some are determined and others are calculated. - Initial 2 1.5 3
- Change - 2x - x 2x
- Equilibrium 2 2x 1.5 x 3.5
31Where are we at ? Part 2
- The values of the equilibrium are known
algebraically. Here is our Law of Mass Action.
We can solve that x .25 - K SO3 2 (3.5) 2 O2
SO22 (1.25) (1.5)2 - K 4.36
32A New Problem
- Consider the same reaction at 600ºC
- 2 SO2(g) O2(g) 2 SO3(g)
- In a different experiment .500 mol SO2 and .350
mol SO3 were placed in a 1.000 L container. When
the system reaches equilibrium 0.045 mol of O2
are present. - Calculate the final concentrations of SO2 and SO3
and K.
33Lets set up the ICE Box
- 2 SO2(g) O2(g) 2 SO3(g)
- Initial .5 0 .35
- Change 2x x - 2x
- Notice the signs. Since there is no oxygen
present at the start, the reaction must shift to
the left and that means products consumed and
reactants created. - Equilibrium .5 2x .045 .35 2x
- This tells us that x .045 and therefore the
concentrations must be as follows. - SO2 .5 2x or .5 .09 .59
- SO3 .35 2x or .35 - .09 .26
- K (.26)2 / (.59)2 (.045) 4.32
34What if youre not given equilibrium
concentration?
- The size of K will determine what approach to
take. - First lets look at the case of a LARGE value of
K ( gt100). - We can make simplifying assumptions.
355 rule
- Now is as good a time as any to introduce the 5
rule. - Equilibrium concentrations are often a bit of an
approximation. Therefore its allowable to
simplify the math to make it more workable. - The 5 rule states that if x is small in
relation to the stated amount, and the K, then
it can be ignored in the calculation. - Generally works if the Keq is less than 10-3 or
greater than 103
36Example
- H2 (g) I2 (g) ? 2 HI (g) K 7.1 x 102 at 25ºC
- Calculate the equilibrium concentrations if a
5.00 L container initially contains 15.9 g of H2
and 294 g I2 . - H2 0 (15.7g/2.02)/5.00 L 1.56 M
- I2 0 (294g/253.8)/5.00L 0.232 M
- HI 0 0
37Lets set up the Ice Box !!
- Q gt K so more product will be formed.
- Since K is large, rxn. will go to completion.
- Another great clue is that when there is a
component with a concentration of zero, the
reaction must shift in that direction. - Stoichiometry tells us I2 is LR, it will be
smallest at equilibrium let it be x - Set up table of initial, final and change in
concentrations.
38This equation needs manipulating
H2(g) I2(g) ? 2 HI(g)
initial 1.56 M 0.232 M 0 M
change - x - x 2xequilibrium
1.56 - x .232 - x 2x
- Choose x so it is small.
- Since we know the I2 is going to lose most of its
concentration, x is actually going to be a very
high percentage of the amount of I2 - There is a way around this dilemma.
39Here we go.
In the work below, we are going to assume that
the reaction goes to completion.
- H2(g) I2(g) ? 2 HI(g) initial
1.56 M .232 M 0 M change -
.232 - .232 .464 equilibrium 1.328
0 .464
Lets combine the following facts and ideas and
solve the problem.
40Piecing it together
- 1. We didnt change the conditions of the rxn.
(ie. Temp. ) so the Keq remains unchanged. - 2. The Keq is large so we know there will be more
product than reactant at equilibrium. - 3. Since we assumed the reaction went to
completion we now have no Iodine and the reaction
must move to the left. - 4. X must be small because there needs to be
more product to satisfy Keq. X will be
negligible compared to the amounts given. - 5. However, x cant be ignored for the I2
because it is at zero and x is 100 of the total
amount of I2
41 H2(g) I2(g) ? 2 HI(g) initial
1.328 0 .464 change x
x -2x equilibrium 1.328 x x .464
2x
- Here is our new Law of Mass Action after we
remove the x according to the 5 rule. - Remember we cant remove the x in the I2 because
that is all that there is of it. - 710 (.464)2 / (1.328) ( x ) 2.28 x 10-4
42Checking the assumption
- The rule of thumb is that if the value of X is
less than 5 of all the other concentrations, our
assumption was valid. - If not we would have had to use the quadratic
equation - More on this later.
- Our assumption was valid.
43Practice
- For the reaction Cl2 O2 ? 2 ClO(g) K
156 - In an experiment 0.100 mol ClO, 1.00 mol O2 and
0.0100 mol Cl2 are mixed in a 4.00 L flask. - If the reaction is not at equilibrium, which
way will it shift? Q ? - Calculate the equilibrium concentrations of all
components.
44Problems with small K
45Process is the same
- Set up table of initial, change, and final
concentrations. Your ICE Box - Choose X to be small.
- Sounds familiar so far, I hope !!
- For this case it will be a product.
- For a small K the product concentration is
small.
46 Lets start the set up.
- For the reaction 2 NOCl ? 2 NO Cl2
- K 1.6 x 10-5 Make note the small K favors
more reactant - If 1.20 mol NOCl, 0.45 mol of NO and 0.87 mol
Cl2 are mixed in a 1 L container - What are the equilibrium concentrations ?
- Q NO2Cl2 (0.45)2(0.87) 0.15
NOCl2 (1.20)2 - Q gt K so it shifts to the left.
47Here is the ICE Box set up
Once again we can manipulate the components to
make the math easier and we do this by assuming
the reaction goes to completion according to
stoichiometry.
2 NOCl ? 2 NO Cl2 Initial 1.20
0.45 0.87 Change .45 -.45
-.225 Equilibrium 1.65 0 .645
- We can now use the Equilibrium concentrations to
rework the problem. Remember that the K does not
change. K favors the reactants. Having NO
0 means that the reaction will shift to the
right. Combining the two means that the change
will be small so x will be small and we can use
the 5 simplification rule. This is a Happy Day
!
48Where are we at ?
- We can now use the Equilibrium concentrations to
rework the problem. - Remember that the K does not change.
- K favors the reactants.
- Having NO 0 means that the reaction will
shift to the right. Combining the two means that
the change will be small so x will be small and
we can use the 5 simplification rule. - This is truly a Happy Day !
49Here is the new ICE Box
2 NOCl ? 2 NO Cl2 Initial 1.65 0
.645 Change - 2x 2x x Equilibrium 1.65
2x 2x .645 x Equilibrium (5) 1.65
2x .645
- Solving 1.6 x 10-5 (.645) (2x)2
- (1.65)2
- The algebra is trickier but doable x .0042
50Always verify the 5 rule
- If x .0042, we compare that to the
concentration. .0042 / .87 .48 - We are good !!
51Practice Problem
- For the reaction 2 ClO(g) ? Cl2 (g) O2
(g) - K 6.4 x 10-3
- In an experiment 0.100 mol ClO(g), 1.00 mol O2
and 1.00 x 10-2 mol Cl2 are mixed in a 4.00 L
container. - What are the equilibrium concentrations.
52Mid-range Ks
53No Simplification
- Choose X to be small.
- Cant simplify so we will have to solve the
quadratic formula - H2 (g) I2 (g) ? 2 HI (g) K 38.6
- What is the equilibrium concentrations if 1.800
mol H2, 1.600 mol I2 and 2.600 mol HI are mixed
in a 2.000 L container?
54Here is the set - up
- Q 2.34 so Q lt K it shifts to the right.
- H2 (g) I2 (g) ? 2 HI (g)
- Initial .9 .8 1.3
- Change -x -x 2x
- Equilibrium .9 x .8 x 1.3 2x
- K 38.6 (1.3 2x)2 / (.9 x) (.8 x) ??
- Fortunately, we dont see them this type often.
- You are encouraged to discover the many uses of
your TI 84 or equivalent.
55Problems Involving Pressure
- Solved exactly the same, with same rules for
choosing X but use pressures due to Kp - For the reaction N2O4 (g) ? 2NO2 (g)
- Kp .131 atm. What are the equilibrium
pressures if a flask initially contains 1.000 atm
N2O4? - N2O4 (g) ? 2 NO2 (g)
- Initial 1 0
- Change - x 2x
- Equilibrium 1-x 1 2x
56Le Chateliers Principle
- If a stress is applied to a system at
equilibrium, the position of the equilibrium will
shift to reduce the stress, and establish a new
equilibrium. - 3 Types of stress
- Temperature changes
- Pressure changes
- Concentration changes
57The Basic Steps
- Here is the best way to always get LeChateliers
problems correct. - Sample Problem A B ? C D
- How is the system going to change if more B is
added ? - 1. Identify the stress The addition of B
- 2. What is the opposite The removal of B
- 3. Which way must the reaction shift to achieve
step 2 It must shift to the right
58Change amounts of reactants and/or products
- Adding product makes Q gt K
- Removing reactant makes Q gt K
- Adding reactant makes Q lt K
- Removing product makes Q lt K
- Determine the effect on Q, will tell you the
direction of shift remember that it is important
to know what Q is equal to.
59Change in Pressure 1
- This is usually done by changing volume.
- Decreasing the volume
- increases the pressure
- System shifts in the direction that has the less
moles of gas less gas less pressure - Because partial pressures (and concentrations)
change a new equilibrium must be reached and
established. - System tries to minimize the moles of gas.
60Change in Pressure 2
- This is usually done by changing volume.
- Increasing the volume
- decreases the pressure
- System shifts in the direction that has more
moles of gas more gas more pressure - Because partial pressures (and concentrations)
change a new equilibrium must be reached and
established. - System tries to maximize the moles of gas.
61Change in Pressure 3
- By the addition of an inert gas.
- Partial pressures of reactants and product are
not changed . - No effect on equilibrium position.
- This is a common question on the AP exam so be
aware of it. It should be easy points. - It might phrase it as an inert gas or it might
use one of the Noble Gases - He Ne Ar Kr Xe Rn
62Change in Temperature
- Affects the rates of both the forward and reverse
reactions. - Doesnt just change the equilibrium position,
changes the equilibrium constant. - The direction magnitude of the shift depends on
whether the reaction is exothermic or
endothermic. - On many questions, it states a temperature that K
is measured in. This is more to make the question
technically correct. Look back on our solved
problems. Temperature was not calculated in.
63Change in Temperature Exothermic
- DH lt 0 It is a negative number.
- The reaction releases heat.
- Think of heat as a product since you know an
equation can be written with a heat term - A B ? C D Heat
- Raising temperature (adding heat) effectively
increases the amount of heat (product) - Shifts to left.
- Remember the steps to solving LeChateliers
problems.
64Change in Temperature Endothermic
- DH gt 0 It is a positive number.
- The reaction absorbs heat.
- Think of heat as a reactant since you know an
equation can be written with a heat term. - A B Heat ? C D
- Lowering temperature push toward reactants.
- Shifts to left.
- Remember the steps to solving LeChateliers
problems. -
65Changes in Temperature Summary
- Place the heat term in the reaction.
- Determine if heat is being added or taken away
from the reaction. - If heat is being added to an exothermic reaction,
the reaction shifts to the left. - If heat is being added to an endothermic
reaction, the reaction shifts to the right. - If heat is being taken away from an exothermic
reaction, the reaction shifts to the right - If heat is being taken away from an endothermic
reaction, the reaction shifts to the left.