reversible rxn
rxn in which products can react with one another under suitable conditions to produce rxns
dynamic equilibrium
physical equilibrium
equilibrium set up in physical processes
e.g. melting of solids, evaporation of bromine
chemical equilibrium
equilibrium set up in chemical processes
e.g. decomposition of CaCO3
what happens when bromine is placed in a sealed container at room temp?
equilibrium law
at a given temp, the ratio of conc of products (raised to the power of molar coefficients) to conc of reactants (raised to the power of molar coefficients) is a constant
this constant is called Kc
NOTE: in aqueous rxns, the conc of the solvent won’t appear in the equilibrium constant expression as its conc won’t change
Meaning of Kc’s value
situation where Kc won’t apply
non-reversible rxns
Reaction quotient
difference between Kc and Q
Kc: describes rxn at equilibrium
Q: describes rxn not at equilibrium
Meaning of Q’s value
effect of inverting the rxn on Kc
inverts the value of Kc
1/Kc
effect of doubling rxn coefficients on Kc
square the expression Kc
Kc^2
effect of halving reaction coefficients
square root of Kc
Kc^(1/2)
effect of adding together 2 rxns on Kc
multiply the 2 Kc values
Kc1 x Kc2
Le Chatelier’s principle
a system of equilibrium, when subjected to change, will respond to minimise the effect of the change
Factors affecting equilibrium
Factors affecting equilibrium: concentration
factors affecting equilibrium: pressure
factors affecting equilibrium: change in temp
factors affecting equilibrium: catalyst
- it only speeds up the attainment of equilibrium
Haber’s Process
N2 (g) + 3H2 (g) 2NH3 (g) [ΔH = -93 kJ/mol]
conditions for Haber’s process, Contact process, methanol production
Favourable:
Actual:
- moderate conditions
450 degrees and 200 atm
Why are moderate conditions taken instead of favourable conditions?
low temp = slow rate of rxn = more time taken to produce yield = inefficient
high pressure = risk of explosion = costly to rebuild infrastructure