1 / 29

The Equilibrium Constant, K, and The Reaction Quotient, Q

The Equilibrium Constant, K, and The Reaction Quotient, Q. SCH 4U. Chemical Systems at Equilibrium. For reversible reactions in closed systems , the reaction mixture always contains both reactants and products. At equilibrium, the forward and reverse reaction rates are ____________

adelio
Télécharger la présentation

The Equilibrium Constant, K, and The Reaction Quotient, Q

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Equilibrium Constant, K,and The Reaction Quotient, Q SCH 4U

  2. Chemical Systems at Equilibrium For reversible reactions in closed systems, the reaction mixture always contains both reactants and products. At equilibrium, the forward and reverse reaction rates are ____________ and the reactant and product concentrations are ____________. EQUAL CONSTANT

  3. Just like we learned yesterday that the percentage reaction is always constant (under what conditions?)... ...These two smart Norwegian dudes noticed, for a system at equilibrium, the following relationship exists...

  4. Equilibrium Law For the general rxn: aA + bBcC + dD (a-d are coefficients; A-D are chemical species) The following Equilibrium Law expression can be written: K = [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b

  5. K is a constant called... The Equilibrium Constant Note: This is for a system AT EQUILIBRIUM, therefore conc’s are equilibrium conc’s! Also, species are in aqueous or gas phase... ...if liquids or solids, they do NOT appear in the expression (b/c conc. unchanging)

  6. No matter what reactant/product concentrations we start at, once equilibrium is established, the value of K is always the same!* Ahem.... Equilibrium Constant... (see p.439 if you don’t believe me) *It is still temperature-dependent though!

  7. Writing an Expression for K Ex. 1 N2(g) + 3 H2(g) 2 NH3(g) K = __________ [NH3] 2 [N2 ] [H2 ] 3

  8. Type 1: Calculating K For the same system, given the following equilibrium concentrations, find K: [N2(g)] = 1.50 x 10-5 mol/L [H2(g)] = 3.45 x 10-1 mol/L [NH3(g)] = 2.00 x 10-4 mol/L K = (2.00 x 10-4)2. (1.5 x 10-5) (3.45 x 10-1)3 K = 6.49 x 10-2at 500°C

  9. Type 2: Calculating Equil. Conc. H2(g) + I2(g) 2 HI(g) K= 49.70 at 458°C Given: [H2]equil = 1.07 mol/L [I2]equil = 1.07 mol/L Calculate [HI] at equilibrium K = [HI]2 [H2] [I2] Rearranging: [HI] = √K[H2][I2] = 7.54 mol/L

  10. The Magnitude of K K = [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b reaction proceeds toward completion (much more products) concentrations of reactants and products are approx. equal at equilibrium very small amounts of products formed (much more reactants) products reactants If K >> 1 If K ≈ 1 If K ≈ 1

  11. Comparing K’s H2(g) + I2(g) 2HI(g) K = 50 (at 450°C) CO2(g) + H2(g) CO(g) K = 1.1 (at 900°C) How do these systems at equilibrium compare?

  12. Type 3: Using K and ICE Table (knowing initial conc’s and K) H2(g) + I2(g) 2 HI(g) K= 64 (at partic. temp) Given: [H2]initial = [I2]initial = 3.0 M Find all equilibrium concentrations. -x -x +2x 3.0 M - x 3.0 M - x 2x K = [HI]2 [H2] [I2] = [2x]2 [3.0M – x][3.0M – x] = [2x]2 [3.0M – x]2

  13. K = [2x]2 [3.0M – x]2 64 = [2x]2 [3.0M – x]2 8 = 2x 3.0 M – x x = 2.4 Therefore at equilibrium: [H2] = 3.0M – 2.4 = 0.6 M [I2] = 3.0M – 2.4 = 0.6M [HI] = 2(2.4M) = 4.8 M

  14. Type 4: Using K and ICE Table (knowing initial and equil concs) Given above concentrations, find K -x -x +2x 2.0M -x 1.0M -x = 1.1M = 0.1M K = [HI]2 [H2] [I2] First need to find equilibrium concentrations! 1.80M = 2x 0.9M = x Need to solve for x!

  15. Now can plug in equilibrium conc’s to find value of K: K = (1.80)2 (1.10)(0.1) K = 29

  16. The Reaction Quotient, Q Q = [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b K is calculated using conc’s at equilibrium Q is calculated using conc’s that may or may not be at equilibrium

  17. ... Tells us if system is at equilibrium or, if not, which way system must shift to reach equilibrium! If Q = K If Q < K If Q > K System at equilibrium Have less products than system at equilibrium, must shift to right (toward products) Have more products than system at equilibrium, must shift to left (toward reactants)

  18. Example N2(g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g) K= 0.064 at 450°C Given: [N2] = 4.0 mol/L [H2] = 2.0 x 10-2 mol/L [NH3] = 2.2 x 10-4 mol/L Is system at equilibrium? Q = [NH3]2 [N2] [H2]3 Q < K, not at equilibrium, needs to shift right, toward products = 0.0015

  19. Type 5: Calculating Q First Calculate the equilibrium concs of H2, I2, and HI if initial concs are 0.5M, 0.5M, and 4.0M respectively and K is 50. Set up ICE Table... WATCH OUT!! -x -x +2x None of the reactant conc’s are zero – have to first det. in which direction system is shifting!

  20. How do we do that? → Find Q! Q = [HI]2 = (4.0)2 = 64 [H2][I2] (0.5)(0.5) Now compare Q to K... Q > K therefore system shifts to left (toward reactants) + x + x - 2x 0.5M + x 0.5M + x 4.0M - 2x

  21. How do we proceed? (Don’t know x yet) Use K to find value of x... 50 = (4.0M – 2x)2 (0.5M + x)(0.5M + x) 7.07 = (4.0M – 2x) x = 0.05 (0.5M + x) Then can calculate equil. conc’s... (Do it!)

  22. Note: If an equil. problem cannot be solved by taking the square root of both sides of the equil. equation, the quadratic equation must be used. x = – b + √b2 – 4ac 2a

  23. Using the 100 Rule 2CO2(g) 2CO(g) + O2(g) K = 6.40 x 10-7 Calc. equil. concentrations if 0.250 mol of CO2 is placed in a 1L closed container and heated to 2000°C Since there are initially no products, Q=0 and reaction will proceed to right... at 2000°C

  24. Use K to find x... K = [CO]2[O2] = 6.40 x 10-7 [CO2]2 = (2x)2(x) (0.25 – 2x)2 = 4x3 (0.25 – 2x)2 This is a cubic (x3) function, hard to solve directly... ... Can we simplify it?

  25. Yes! K is very small (10-7) in comparison to initial conc of CO2(g) ...which means very little CO2(g) decomposes at this temp Therefore we can assume x to be very small (2x as well) and negligible...

  26. i.e. 0.250 – 2x ≈ 0.250 So our expression becomes... 4x3 ≈ 6.40 x 10-7 (0.25)2 x ≈ 2.15 x 10-3 (can check validity of assumption)

  27. 100 Rule If concentration to which x is added or subtracted from is 100x or more greater than the value of K, then we can ignore x e.g. [CO2]initial = 0.250 = 3.91 x 105 K 6.40 x 10-7 See Example p. 472 Which is >> 100!

  28. No Class Tomorrow In total 2 lessons behind the other class... It is your responsibility to make sure you are okay with ALL the homework questions that follow... you have 4 nights/ 3 days! Come see me before school or at lunch on Monday if there are any problems. We will be having an assessment on Monday

  29. Practice Problems *See (do!) sample problem on p. 472 (100 rule) p. 444 # 2, 3 p. 445 # 5, 6 p. 447 # 7 p. 449 # 9 p.472 # 5, 6 p. 476 # 8 p. 480 # 9, 10 p. 481 # 2, 3a, 3c, 4-8

More Related