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Chemical Equilibrium Chapter 18

Chemical Equilibrium

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Chemical Equilibrium. Chapter 18. Consider a glass of water…. Evaporation. Consider a glass of water…. Now, put a lid on it…. Consider a glass of water…. Evaporation continues, but condensation also occurs. Consider a glass of water…. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chemical Equilibrium

Chemical Equilibrium

Chapter 18

Page 2: Chemical Equilibrium

Consider a glass of water…

Evaporation

Page 3: Chemical Equilibrium

Consider a glass of water…

Now, put a lid on it….

Page 4: Chemical Equilibrium

Consider a glass of water…

Evaporation continues, but condensation also occurs...

Page 5: Chemical Equilibrium

Consider a glass of water…

The rates equalize, and the system reaches equilibrium.

Page 6: Chemical Equilibrium

Chemical Equilibrium

Consider the following reaction(s):H2O (liquid) H20 (gas)H2O (gas) H2O (liquid)

H2O (liquid) H2O (gas)

Equilibrium Symbol

Page 7: Chemical Equilibrium

Chemical equilibrium occurs when opposing reactions are proceeding at equal rates. The rate at which the products are formed from the reactants equals the rate at which the reactants are formed from the products.

For equilibrium to occur, neither reactant nor products can escape from the system.

Page 8: Chemical Equilibrium

N2 + 3H2 2NH3 + 22 KCal

Forward Reaction

Page 9: Chemical Equilibrium

N2 + 3H2 2NH3 + 22 KCal

Reverse Reaction

Page 10: Chemical Equilibrium

Reversible Reactions

REVERSIBLE REACTIONS do not go to completion and can occur in either direction:

aA + bB cC + dD

Page 11: Chemical Equilibrium

CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM exists when the forward & reverse reactions occur at exactly the same rate

Reactant

Product

Time (reaction progress )

EQUILIBRIUM

conc

entra

tion

Page 12: Chemical Equilibrium

At equilibrium:

If there are more products than reactants, the products are said to be favored.

If there are more reactants than products, the reactants are said to be favored.

Page 13: Chemical Equilibrium

The Equilibrium Constant, Kc

For the reaction: aA + bB cC + dD at equilibrium, the constant, kc or keq:

Kc is a measure of the extent to which a reaction occurs; it varies with temperature.

ba

dc

c [B][A][D][C]

][reactants[products]

K

Page 14: Chemical Equilibrium

A few notes about Kc…Kc is completely unrelated to rate constant, k“k” is generically used for “constant” in scienceIn Kc, the “c” is for “concentration” Note that we plug in molarities, or concentrations to

solve for Kc

There are other equilibrium constants that are studied in IB Chemistry (Ka, Kb, Kw, Kp,Ksp)

Page 15: Chemical Equilibrium

Example (a): Write the equilibrium expression for…

PCl5 PCl3 + Cl2

][PCl]][Cl[PCl

K5

23c

Page 16: Chemical Equilibrium

Example (b): Write the equilibrium expression for…

4NH3 + 5O2 4NO + 6H2O

52

43

62

4

c ][O][NHO][H[NO]

K

Page 17: Chemical Equilibrium

Ex: One liter of the equilibrium mixture from example (a) was found to contain 0.172 mol PCl3, 0.086 mol Cl2 and 0.028 mol PCl5. Calculate Kc.

M) (0.028M)(0.086M) (0.172

Kc

PCl5 PCl3 + Cl2 ][PCl]][Cl[PCl

K5

23c

53.0

Page 18: Chemical Equilibrium

What does Kc=0.53 mean to me???

When Kc >> 1, most reactants will be converted to products.

When Kc << 1, most reactants will remain unreacted.

Page 19: Chemical Equilibrium

The equilibrium constant allows us to ….

Predict the direction in which a reaction mixture will proceed to achieve equilibrium.

Calculate the concentrations of reactants and products once

equilibrium has been reached.

Page 20: Chemical Equilibrium

Reaction Quotient (Q)Reaction Quotient (Q) is calculated the same as Kc, but the concentrations are not necessarily equilibrium concentrations.Comparing Q with Kc enables us to predict the direction in which a rxn will occur to a greater extent when a rxn is NOT at equilibrium.

Page 21: Chemical Equilibrium

Comparing Q to Kc

When Q < Kc:

When Q = Kc:

When Q > Kc:

Forward rxn predominates – “reaction proceeds to the right”(until equil. is reached)

System is at equilibrium

Reverse reaction predominates – “reaction proceeds to the left” (until equilibrium is reached)

Page 22: Chemical Equilibrium

Ex: H2(g) + I2(g) 2HI(g) Kc for this reaction at 450 C is 49. If 0.22 mol I2, 0.22 mol H2, and 0.66 mol HI are put into a 1.00-L container, would the system be at equilibrium? If not, what must occur to establish equilibrium.

]][I[H[HI]Q

22

2 M) M)(0.22 (0.22

M) (0.66 2 0.9

Q < Kc; therefore forward reaction predominates until equilibrium is reached.

Page 23: Chemical Equilibrium

Ex: PCl3(g) + Cl2(g) PCl5(g) Kc=1.9 In a system at equilibrium in a 1.00 L container, we find 0.25 mol PCl5, and 0.16 mol PCl3. What equilibrium concentration of Cl2 must be present?

]][Cl[PCl][PCl

K23

5c

]M)[Cl (0.16M) (0.25

9.12

M 0.82 ][Cl2