CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM Chapter 16 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 63
About This Presentation
Title:

CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM Chapter 16

Description:

Title: CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM Chapter 16 Author: J. Kotz Last modified by: icnydegg Created Date: 6/20/1996 10:40:16 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:174
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 64
Provided by: J628
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM Chapter 16


1
CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUMChapter 16
PLAY MOVIE
Pb2(aq) 2 Cl(aq) ? PbCl2(s)
2
Properties of an Equilibrium
  • Equilibrium systems are
  • DYNAMIC (in constant motion)
  • REVERSIBLE
  • can be approached from either direction

PLAY MOVIE
Pink to blue Co(H2O)6Cl2 ? Co(H2O)4Cl2 2 H2O
Blue to pink Co(H2O)4Cl2 2 H2O ? Co(H2O)6Cl2
3
Chemical EquilibriumFe3 SCN- e FeSCN2
4
Chemical EquilibriumFe3 SCN- e FeSCN2
PLAY MOVIE
PLAY MOVIE
  • After a period of time, the concentrations of
    reactants and products are constant.
  • The forward and reverse reactions continue after
    equilibrium is attained.

5
Examples of Chemical Equilibria
  • Phase changes such as H2O(s) ? H2O(liq)

PLAY MOVIE
6
Examples of Chemical Equilibria
  • Formation of stalactites and stalagmites
  • CaCO3(s) H2O(liq) CO2(g) ? Ca2(aq) 2
    HCO3-(aq)

7
Chemical Equilibria
  • CaCO3(s) H2O(liq) CO2(g) ? Ca2(aq) 2
    HCO3-(aq)
  • At a given T and P of CO2, Ca2 and HCO3- can
    be found from the EQUILIBRIUM CONSTANT.

8
Reaction Quotient Equilibrium Constant
See Active Figure 16.2
Product conc. increases and then becomes constant
at equilibrium
Reactant conc. declines and then becomes constant
at equilibrium
9
Reaction Quotient Equilibrium Constant
At any point in the reaction H2 I2 ? 2 HI
10
Reaction Quotient Equilibrium Constant
In the equilibrium region
11
The Reaction Quotient, Q
  • In general, ALL reacting chemical systems are
    characterized by their REACTION QUOTIENT, Q.
  • a A b B ? c C d D

If Q K, then system is at equilibrium.
12
THE EQUILIBRIUM CONSTANT
  • For any type of chemical equilibrium of the type
  • a A b B ? c C d D
  • the following is a CONSTANT (at a given T)

If K is known, then we can predict concs. of
products or reactants.
13
Determining K
  • 2 NOCl(g) ? 2 NO(g) Cl2(g)
  • Place 2.00 mol of NOCl is a 1.00 L flask. At
    equilibrium you find 0.66 mol/L of NO. Calculate
    K.
  • Solution
  • Set of an ICE table of concentrations
  • NOCl NO Cl2
  • Initial 2.00 0 0
  • Change
  • Equilibrium 0.66

14
Determining K
  • 2 NOCl(g) ? 2 NO(g) Cl2(g)
  • Place 2.00 mol of NOCl is a 1.00 L flask. At
    equilibrium you find 0.66 mol/L of NO. Calculate
    K.
  • Solution
  • Set of an ICE table of concentrations
  • NOCl NO Cl2
  • Initial 2.00 0 0
  • Change -0.66 0.66 0.33
  • Equilibrium 1.34 0.66 0.33

15
Determining K
  • 2 NOCl(g) ? 2 NO(g) Cl2(g)
  • NOCl NO Cl2
  • Initial 2.00 0 0
  • Change -0.66 0.66 0.33
  • Equilibrium 1.34 0.66 0.33

16
Writing and Manipulating K Expressions
  • Solids and liquids NEVER appear in equilibrium
    expressions.
  • S(s) O2(g) ? SO2(g)

17
Writing and Manipulating K Expressions
  • Solids and liquids NEVER appear in equilibrium
    expressions.
  • NH3(aq) H2O(liq) ? NH4(aq) OH-(aq)

18
The Meaning of K
  • 1. Can tell if a reaction is product-favored or
    reactant-favored.
  • For N2(g) 3 H2(g) ? 2 NH3(g)

Conc. of products is much greater than that of
reactants at equilibrium. The reaction is
strongly product-favored.
19
The Meaning of K
  • For AgCl(s) ? Ag(aq) Cl-(aq)
  • Kc Ag Cl- 1.8 x 10-5
  • Conc. of products is much less than that of
    reactants at equilibrium.
  • The reaction with small K is strongly
    reactant-favored.

Ag(aq) Cl-(aq) e AgCl(s) is
product-favored.
20
Product- or Reactant Favored
Product-favored K gt 1
Reactant-favored K lt 1
21
The Meaning of K
  • K comes from thermodynamics. (See Chapter 19)
  • ?G lt 0 reaction is product favored
  • ?G gt 0 reaction is reactant-favored

If K gt 1, then ?G is negative If K lt 1, then ?G
is positive
22
The Meaning of K
  • 2. Can tell if a reaction is at equilibrium. If
    not, which way it moves to approach equilibrium.

PLAY MOVIE
PLAY MOVIE
23
The Meaning of K
  • If iso 0.35 M and n 0.15 M, are you at
    equilibrium?
  • If not, which way does the reaction shift to
    approach equilibrium?
  • See Chemistry Now

24
The Meaning of K
  • All reacting chemical systems are characterized
    by their REACTION QUOTIENT, Q.

If Q K, then system is at equilibrium.
Q (2.33) lt K (2.5) Reaction is NOT at
equilibrium, so iso must become ________ and
n must ____________.
25
Typical Calculations
  • PROBLEM Place 1.00 mol each of H2 and I2 in a
    1.00 L flask. Calc. equilibrium concentrations.

H2(g) I2(g) ? 2 HI(g)
26
H2(g) I2(g) ? 2 HI(g)Kc 55.3
  • Step 1. Set up ICE table to define EQUILIBRIUM
    concentrations.
  • H2 I2 HI
  • Initial 1.00 1.00 0
  • Change
  • Equilib

27
H2(g) I2(g) ? 2 HI(g)Kc 55.3
  • Step 1. Set up ICE table to define EQUILIBRIUM
    concentrations.
  • H2 I2 HI
  • Initial 1.00 1.00 0
  • Change -x -x 2x
  • Equilib 1.00-x 1.00-x 2x
  • where x is defined as amt of H2 and I2 consumed
    on approaching equilibrium.

28
H2(g) I2(g) ? 2 HI(g)Kc 55.3
  • Step 2. Put equilibrium concentrations into Kc
    expression.

29
H2(g) I2(g) ? 2 HI(g)Kc 55.3
  • Step 3. Solve Kc expression - take square root
    of both sides.

x 0.79 Therefore, at equilibrium
H2 I2 1.00 - x 0.21 M HI 2x
1.58 M
30
Nitrogen Dioxide EquilibriumN2O4(g) e 2 NO2(g)

e
31
Nitrogen Dioxide EquilibriumN2O4(g) ? 2 NO2(g)
  • If initial concentration of N2O4 is 0.50 M, what
    are the equilibrium concentrations?
  • Step 1. Set up an ICE table
  • N2O4 NO2
  • Initial 0.50 0
  • Change
  • Equilib

32
Nitrogen Dioxide EquilibriumN2O4(g) ? 2 NO2(g)
  • If initial concentration of N2O4 is 0.50 M, what
    are the equilibrium concentrations?
  • Step 1. Set up an ICE table
  • N2O4 NO2
  • Initial 0.50 0
  • Change -x 2x
  • Equilib 0.50 - x 2x

33
Nitrogen Dioxide EquilibriumN2O4(g) ? 2 NO2(g)
  • Step 2. Substitute into Kc expression and
    solve.

Rearrange 0.0059 (0.50 - x) 4x2
0.0029 - 0.0059x 4x2 4x2 0.0059x -
0.0029 0 This is a QUADRATIC EQUATION ax2
bx c 0 a 4 b 0.0059 c
-0.0029
34
Nitrogen Dioxide EquilibriumN2O4(g) ? 2 NO2(g)
  • Solve the quadratic equation for x.
  • ax2 bx c 0
  • a 4 b 0.0059 c -0.0029

x -0.00074 1/8(0.046)1/2 -0.00074
0.027
35
Nitrogen Dioxide EquilibriumN2O4(g) ? 2 NO2(g)
x -0.00074 1/8(0.046)1/2 -0.00074 0.027
  • x 0.026 or -0.028
  • But a negative value is not reasonable.
  • Conclusion x 0.026 M
  • N2O4 0.050 - x 0.47 M
  • NO2 2x 0.052 M

36
Solving Quadratic Equations
  • Recommend you solve the equation exactly on a
    calculator or use the method of successive
    approximations
  • See Appendix A.

37
Writing and Manipulating K Expressions
  • Adding equations for reactions
  • S(s) O2(g) ? SO2(g)
  • SO2(g) 1/2 O2(g) ? SO3(g)

Net equation S(s) 3/2 O2(g) ? SO3(g)
38
Writing and Manipulating K Expressions
  • Changing coefficients
  • S(s) 3/2 O2(g) ? SO3(g)
  • 2 S(s) 3 O2(g) ? 2 SO3(g)

39
Writing and Manipulating K Expressions
  • Changing direction
  • S(s) O2(g) ? SO2(g)
  • SO2(g) ? S(s) O2(g)

40
Writing and Manipulating K Expressions
  • Concentration Units
  • We have been writing K in terms of mol/L.
  • These are designated by Kc
  • But with gases, P (n/V)RT conc RT
  • P is proportional to concentration, so we can
    write K in terms of P. These are designated by
    Kp.
  • Kc and Kp may or may not be the same.

41
Writing and Manipulating K Expressions
  • K using concentration and pressure units
  • Kp Kc (RT)?n
  • For S(s) O2(g) ? SO2(g)
  • ?n 0 and Kp Kc
  • For SO2(g) 1/2 O2(g) ? SO3(g)
  • ?n 1/2 and Kp Kc(RT)1/2

42
EQUILIBRIUM AND EXTERNAL EFFECTS
  • Temperature, catalysts, and changes in
    concentration affect equilibria.
  • The outcome is governed by LE CHATELIERS
    PRINCIPLE
  • ...if a system at equilibrium is disturbed, the
    system tends to shift its equilibrium position to
    counter the effect of the disturbance.

43
EQUILIBRIUM AND EXTERNAL EFFECTS
  • Henri Le Chatelier
  • 1850-1936
  • Studied mining engineering.
  • Interested in glass and ceramics.

44
EQUILIBRIUM AND EXTERNAL EFFECTS
  • Temperature change ? change in K
  • Consider the fizz in a soft drink CO2(aq)
    HEAT ? CO2(g) H2O(liq)
  • K P (CO2) / CO2
  • Increase T. What happens to equilibrium position?
    To value of K?
  • K increases as T goes up because P(CO2) increases
    and CO2 decreases.
  • Decrease T. Now what?
  • Equilibrium shifts left and K decreases.

45
Temperature Effects on Equilibrium
  • N2O4 (colorless) heat ? 2 NO2 (brown) ?Ho
    57.2 kJ

Kc (273 K) 0.00077 Kc (298 K) 0.0059
PLAY MOVIE
46
Temperature Effects on Equilibrium
See Figure 16.8
47
EQUILIBRIUM AND EXTERNAL EFFECTS
Catalytic exhaust system
  • Add catalyst ? no change in K
  • A catalyst only affects the RATE of approach to
    equilibrium.

48
Haber-Bosch Process for NH3
  • N2(g) 3 H2(g) ? 2 NH3(g) heat
  • K 3.5 x 108 at 298 K

49
Haber-Bosch Ammonia Synthesis
Fritz Haber 1868-1934 Nobel Prize, 1918
Carl Bosch 1874-1940 Nobel Prize, 1931
50
EQUILIBRIUM AND EXTERNAL EFFECTS
  • Concentration changes
  • no change in K
  • only the equilibrium composition changes.

51
Le Chateliers Principle
PLAY MOVIE
  • Adding a reactant to a chemical system.

52
Le Chateliers Principle
PLAY MOVIE
  • Removing a reactant from a chemical system.

53
Le Chateliers Principle
PLAY MOVIE
  • Adding a product to a chemical system.

54
Le Chateliers Principle
PLAY MOVIE
  • Removing a product from a chemical system.

55
EQUILIBRIUM AND EXTERNAL EFFECTS
  • Temperature, catalysts, and changes in
    concentration affect equilibria.
  • The outcome is governed by LE CHATELIERS
    PRINCIPLE
  • ...if a system at equilibrium is disturbed, the
    system tends to shift its equilibrium position to
    counter the effect of the disturbance.

56
Butane-Isobutane Equilibrium
butane
isobutane
57
Butane e Isobutane
  • At equilibrium with iso 1.25 M and butane
    0.50 M. K 2.5.
  • Add 1.50 M butane.
  • When the system comes to equilibrium again, what
    are iso and butane?

58
Butane e Isobutane
  • Assume you are at equilibrium with iso 1.25 M
    and butane 0.50 M. Now add 1.50 M butane.
    When the system comes to equilibrium again, what
    are iso and butane? K 2.5
  • Solution
  • Calculate Q immediately after adding more butane
    and compare with K.

Q is LESS THAN K. Therefore, the reaction will
shift to the ____________.
59
Butane e Isobutane
  • You are at equilibrium with iso 1.25 M and
    butane 0.50 M. Now add 1.50 M butane.
  • Solution
  • Q is less than K, so equilibrium shifts right
    away from butane and toward isobutane.
  • Set up ICE table
  • butane isobutane
  • Initial
  • Change
  • Equilibrium

0.50 1.50
1.25
- x
x
1.25 x
2.00 - x
60
Butane e Isobutane
  • You are at equilibrium with iso 1.25 M and
    butane 0.50 M. Now add 1.50 M butane.
  • Solution

x 1.07 M At the new equilibrium position,
butane 0.93 M and isobutane 2.32 M.
Equilibrium has shifted toward isobutane.
61
Le Chateliers Principle
  • Change T
  • change in K
  • therefore change in P or concentrations at
    equilibrium
  • Use a catalyst reaction comes more quickly to
    equilibrium. K not changed.
  • Add or take away reactant or product
  • K does not change
  • Reaction adjusts to new equilibrium position

62
Nitrogen Dioxide EquilibriumN2O4(g) ? 2 NO2(g)
  • Increase P in the system by reducing the volume
    (at constant T).

PLAY MOVIE
63
Nitrogen Dioxide EquilibriumN2O4(g) ? 2 NO2(g)
  • Increase P in the system by reducing the volume.
  • In gaseous system the equilibrium will shift to
    the side with fewer molecules (in order to reduce
    the P).
  • Therefore, reaction shifts LEFT and P of NO2
    decreases and P of N2O4 increases.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com