Chemical Equilibrium
Introduction to Equilibrium
Dynamic Equilibrium
definition: equilibrium state where forward and reverse reactions are happening simultaneously at equal rates
ZERO change to the concentrations of substances
reactants are consumed at the same rate they are produced
forward reaction rate = reverse reaction rate
Chemical Equilibrium
definition: state where the [reactant] and [product] are constant
ONLY applies to closed chemical systems
Different types of Equilibrium: Phase Equilibrium
H2O(l) ⇌ H2O(g)
system will eventually reach equilibrium
rate of forming water vapor = rate of forming liquid water
overall concentration of liquid water and water vapor is constant
Equilibrium Position
definition: the relative ratio between the amount of [reactant] and the amount of [product] at equilibrium
equilibrium position is unique for every system
for any closed chemical equilibrium system in constant environmental conditions, the same equilibrium concentration are reached regardless of reaction direction
Equilibrium Calculations
ICE table
Initial
Change
Equilibrium
purpose: helps organizes calculations involving equilibrium
concentration will always be measured in molarity (mol/L)
Example: H2(g) + F2(g) ⇌ 2HF(g)
The initial concentration of H2 and F2 are both 2.00 mol/L. There is no HF initially. What is the concentration of H2 and HF at equilibrium if the equilibrium concentration of F2 is 0.48 mol/L?
Answer:
H2(g) F2(g) ⇌ 2HF(g)
I 2.00 2.00 0
C -x -x 2x
E 2.00-x 0.48 2x
[F2]eq = 2.00 - x
0.48 = 2.00 - x
2.00 - 0.48 = x
x = 1.52 mol/L
[H2]eq = 2.00 - 1.52
= 0.48 mol/L
[HF]eq = 2(1.52)
= 3.04 mol/L
Equilibrium Law and Constant K
Equilibrium Law
definition: mathematical description of a chemical system at description
can be written for any balanced chemical equation
exponents in the equilibrium laws comes from the balanced equation
pure solids and pure liquids are ignored and only concentrations of gases or aqueous solutions are involved
Equilibrium Constant K
definition: a number that defines the equilibrium law for any system
units of K are not important, just the number value
equilibrium constant K is the NUMERICAL VERSIOn of the equilibrium position
the constant K is always the same value, regardless of the initial concentration used
K is specified for a specific temperature
Magnitude
K < 1
equilibrium position is far left (favours the reactants)
more reactant than product
the reaction occurs very little (99% stay as reactant)
K > 1
equilibrium position is far right (favours the products)
more product than reactant
the reaction goes to completion
K = 1
[reactant] = [product]
Homogenous/Heterogeneous Equilibria
Homogenous Equilibrium: equilibrium system where chemical substances are in the SAME state
Heterogenous Equilibrium: equilibrium system where chemical substances are in DIFFERENT states
Writing Equilibrium Laws and Calculating K
In a closed vessel at 500 C, nitrogen and hydrogen combine in a equilibrium system to form ammonia gas. [N2(g)]eq = 1.50 x 10^-5 mol/L [H2(g)]eq =3.45 x 10^-1 mol/L [NH3(g)]eq = 2.00 x 10^-4 mol/L
Write the Equilibrium Law and determine the value of K:
K = [NH3(g)]^2/[N2(g)][H2(g)]^3
= (2.00 x 10^-4)^2/(1.50 x 10^-5)(3.45 x 10^-1)^3
= 0.064939
K = 0.0649
Solubility Equilibrium
Solubility Equilibrium
definition: dynamic equilibrium between the dissolution (dissolving) and precipitation of an ionic compound in closed system
Solubility Equilibrium Laws are the same as writing an equilibrium law (use the solubility product constant Ksp)
Ksp = [A(aq)]^a[B(aq)]^b
Solubility Product Constant Ksp
constant only used for solubility
product of the [dissolved ions] raised to their stoichiometric coefficients
specific for a single temperature just like the normal K (usually listed at SATP)
units are ignored
In an ice table: solubility is the equilibrium concentration for a dissolved ion in a saturated solution
Ksp is a larger number
the product of the dissolved ion concentrations is very high
large amount of dissolved ions
high solubility
Ksp is a small number
the product of the dissolved ion concentrations is very low
small amount of dissolved ions
low solubility
Solubility Equilibrium Calculations
Example: Calculate the solubility product constant for a saturated solution of solid zinc hydroxide Zn(OH)2(s) at 25 C. The [Zn2+] is 2.7 x 10^-6 mol/L and [OH-] is 5.4 x 10^-6 mol/L
Answer: Ksp = [Zn2+][OH-]^2
= (2.7 x 10^-6)(5.4 x 10^-6)^2
= 7.9 x 10^-17
Predicting Precipitation
to calculate if a precipitate will form, use Q and compare it to Ksp
Q > Ksp
shift to the left
precipitate will form
Q = Ksp
solution is saturated
no precipitate will form
Q < Ksp
shift to the right
precipitate will not form
Predicting Precipitation Calculations
Example: Will a silver bromide precipitate form when 1.0 x 10^-3 mol/L silver nitrate is mixed with 5.0 x 10^-3 mol/L potassium bromide at 25 C? (Ksp AgBr = 5.1 x 10^-13)
Answer: AgBr(s) ⇌ Ag+(aq) + Br-(aq)
Q = [Ag+]{Br-]
= (1.0 x 10^-3)(5.0 x 10^-3)
= 5.0 x 10^-6 > Ksp
rxn move <- and PPT will form
Le Chatelier's Principle
Le Chatelier's Principle
definition: when a chemical system at equilibrium is disturbed by a change or stress, the system will behave in a way to oppose that change
this principle is used my chemical engineers to increase yield
reactants are continually added while products are continually removed
equilibrium will never be reached and the system will always favour the products
Types of Changes
1. Concentration
A(aq) ⇌ B(aq)
Increasing concentration of A
- adding A will shift equilibrium to produce more B (right)
Decreasing concentration of A
- removing A will shift equilibrium to produce more A (left)
2. Temperature
endothermic reactions absorb energy (energy is a reactant)
A(g) + B(g) + heat ⇌ C(g) + D(g)
Increase temp
- shift to right
Decrease temp
- shift to the left
exothermic reactions release energy (energy is a product)
A(g) + B(g) ⇌ C(g) + D(g) + heat
Increase temp
- shift to left
Decrease temp
- shift to right
3. Volume/Pressure
2A(g) + 3B(g) ⇌ 2C(g) + D(g)
Increasing Volume (decreasing pressure)
- shift to left (side w/ most gases)
Decreasing Volume (increasing pressure)
- shift to left (side w/ fewest gases)
Changes that DON'T affect Equilibrium
1. Adding Catalysts
reduce activation energy by introducing an alternative reaction pathway
only help a system reach equilibrium FASTER
2. Adding Inert gases
adding inert gases will increase the total pressure, but not individual partial pressures
even after colliding with other gases, they don't react
3. Adding Pure Solids/Liquids
The Haber-Bosch Process
N2(g) + 3H2(g) ⇌ 2NH3(g)
ammonia can be produced from N2 but the equilibrium heavily favors the reactants at SATP
equillibrium can shift if temp is raised 700 C
Fritz Haber discovered Iron (III) Oxide was an effective catalyst to speed up this reaction
Carl Bosch used this information to synthesize ammonia on an industrial scale
by adding reactant, removing product and using a catalyst (equilibrium is pushed towards the product)
Bosch was able to synthesize ammonia at more manageable conditions (500 C)
Equilibrium Calculations
Reaction Quotient (Q)
measures the relative amounts of products and reactants present during a reaction at a particular point in time
tells you if a chemical system is at equilibrium or not
calculating Q is the same as calculating K
How to use Q?
calculate Q and then compare the value to K
There are 3 possible cases:
Q < K Not at equilibrium, there is too much reactant, reaction will shift RIGHT
Q = K The system is at equilibrium, nothing will happen
Q > K Not at equilibrium, there is too much product, reaction will shift LEFT
Strategy for Equilibrium Calculations
1. BE - Balanced Equation
2. GR - Givens + Required
3. Identify if system is at equilibrium or not / which direction reaction will it move
- If one substance is not present, system is NOT at equilibrium and will move in that direction
- If both are present, calculate Q and compare with K
4. ICE - Fill out Ice table using information from Q
5. K - Create Equilibrium Law
6. Solve for X
7. [EQ] Input X back into your equilibrium expressions to determine final concentration at equilibrium
4 Types of EQ Problems
1. Equilibrium law does not contain any x^2
2. Equilibrium law is a perfect square
Example: In a 250 mL sealed container at 150 C, 0.50 mol of iodine gas and bromine gas are mixed and allowed to react until they form equilibrium with IBr. K = 120. What are the equilibrium concentrations of iodine gas and bromine gas?
Answer:
I2(g) + Br2(g) ⇌ 2IBr(g)
I 2.0 2.0 0
C -x -x 2x
E 2.0-x 2.0-x 2x
[I2]ini = 0.50 mol/0.250 L
= 2.0 mol/L
[Br2]ini = 0.50 mol/0.250 L
= 2.0 mol/L
Not @ EQ, shift ->
K = [IBr]^2/[I2][Br]
120 = (2x)^2/(2.0-x)^2
10.95445 = 2x/2.0-x
21.90890 = 2x + 10.95445x
x = 1.691
[IBr]eq = 2x
= 2(1.691)
= 3.4 mol/L
[I2]eq = 2.0-x
= 2.0 - 1.691
= 0.31 mol/L
[Br2]eq = 2.0-x
= 0.31 mol/L
3. Equilibrium law is not a perfect square
100 Rule
NOT a perfect square:
Ex: 8.40 x 10^-6 = x^2/0.200-x
- since K is very small, we make a simplifying approximation
- if the equilibrium concentration is very small, the value of X is small as well
- K with a magnitude of 10^-6 means that the [reactant] is 1 000 000x greater than the [product]
-> so the approximation we can make is 0.200-x = 0.200 (x = 0.000001)
It makes it easier:
8.40 x 10^-6 = x^2/0.200
1.68 x 10^-6 = x^2
x = 1.2961 x 10^-3
BEFORE using the 100 rule:
smallest initial concentration/K
- > 100
AFTER using the 100 rule:
x/initial concentration x 100%
- < 5%
Example: Carbon monoxide gas is a primary starting material in the synthesis of many organic compounds, including methanol. At 2000 C, the K is 6.40 x 10^-7 for the decomposition of carbon dioxide gas, into carbon monoxide and oxygen gas. Calculate all [equilibrium] if 0.250 mol of CO2(g) is placed in a 1.000 L container.
Answer:
2CO2(g) ⇌ 2CO(g) + O2(g)
I 0.250 0 0
C -2x +2x +x
E 0.250-2x 2x x
[CO2]ini = 0.250 mol/1.000 L
= 0.250 mol/L
rxn will move ->
K = [CO]^2[O2]/[CO2]^2
6.40 x 10^-7 = (2x)^2(x)/(0.250-2x)^2
6.40 x 10^-7 = 4x^3/(0.250-2x)^2
6.40 x 10^-7 = 4x^3/(0.250)^2
x = 2.154 x 10^-3
Test:
[smallest]/K = 0.250/6.40 x 10^-7 = 390 000
390 000>100
Check:
x/[initial] x 100% = 2.154 x 10^-3/0.250 x 100% = 0.86%
0.86%<5%
[CO2]eq = 0.250-2(2.154 x 10^-3)
= 0.246 mol/L
[CO]eq = 2(2.154 x 10^-3)
= 4.31 x 10^-3 mol/L
[O2]eq = 2.15 x 10^-3 mol/L
4. Quadratic formula