Introduction To Kinetics and Equilibrium: Concentrations at Equilibrium Are Determined by Thermodynamics ( G°)
Introduction To Kinetics and Equilibrium: Concentrations at Equilibrium Are Determined by Thermodynamics ( G°)
Introduction To Kinetics and Equilibrium: Concentrations at Equilibrium Are Determined by Thermodynamics ( G°)
Kinetics and equilibrium are two of the most
important areas in chemistry Entire books and
important areas in chemistry. Entire books and
courses at the undergraduate and graduate level
are devoted to them.
Chemical kinetics – the study of the rates of chemical processes
Equilibrium ‐ the condition of a system in which competing influences
are balanced
Chemical equilibrium
Ch i l ilib i – the state in which the concentrations of the
th t t i hi h th t ti f th
reactants and products have no net change over time
concentrations at equilibrium are
13 determined by thermodynamics (∆rG°)
Physical Equilibrium
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Chemical Equilibrium
15
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Is Equilibrium Common?
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Demo
We have physical equilibrium:
• Equilibrium 1: H2 pressure balanced
by balloon wall surface tension
H2 and O2
filled
balloon
• Equilibrium
q 2: Balloon buoyancy
y y
balanced by the string tension
?
Limiting reagent: Reagent
g in excess
molecule that is
used up, causing the
reaction to stop
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Reactions That Don't Go to Completion
Reactions either:
go to completion (all limiting reactants are consumed)
g p ( g )
reactants → products
‐ e. g. combustion reactions (like the balloon
e g combustion reactions (like the balloon demo)
or establish a chemical equilibrium (some reactants, some products)
reactants ֎ products
‐ these are the reactions introduced in this part of the course
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Reactions That Don't Go to Completion
When an equilibrium is established, each reactant (and product) has a
nonzero concentration and these concentrations are constant with
i d h i ih
respect to time.
When an equilibrium is established, the limiting reagent has a nonzero
concentration.
The reactions do not stop at equilibrium. The rates of the forward and
reverse reactions are balanced, so there is no net change in concentrations.
concentration is specified as Moles per Liter
and written as [reactant] or [product],
or
as partial pressures for gas phase reactions
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A Gas Phase Equilibrium
Consider a simple gas phase reaction, the conversion of cis‐2‐butene to
trans‐2‐butene,
trans 2 butene, an example of isomerization:
an example of isomerization:
The ֎ is used to indicate an equilibrium.
Here, both species are gases.
The total number of moles of gas remains constant.
This reaction does not go to completion.
g p
‐ An equilibrium is established.
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A Gas Phase Equilibrium
cis ֎ trans
Kinetic region at 400°C
Equilibrium region
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Equilibrium Constant
In the equilibrium region, the concentrations of products and reactants
are related in an equation called the equilibrium constant expression
In the 2‐butene case,
cis ֎ trans
(at 400 °C)
Kc is called the equilibrium constant.
For Kc, species are expressed as M (Moles L‐1)
Products in numerator, reactants in denominator.
Products in numerator, reactants in denominator.
Concentrations raised to their stoichiometric coefficients
in the balanced reaction (1 in this case).
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Sample Question
A quantity of cis-2-butene is added to a 2 Liter flask and heated to 400°C for
2 years. The concentration of trans-2-butene was then determined to be 0.50
M. What is the concentration of cis
cis-2-butene
2 butene in the flask?
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Generic Equilibrium Constant
aA+bB
a A + b B cC+dD
c C + d D
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Equilibrium Constant
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Origin of Equilibrium Constant
Equilibrium occurs when the rates of the forward
and reverse reactions are exactly equal
rateforward = ratereverse
Reaction rate is the number (mol) of molecules produced or
consumed
d iin a chemical
h i l reaction
ti per reaction
ti volume
l (L) per ti
time ((s))
rateforward
rateforward
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Origin of Equilibrium Constant
For simple reactions (like this one), reaction rate is proportional to the
concentrations of the reactants raised to their stoichiometric coefficients
rate constants
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Example
The reaction of CO with Cl2 to form COCl2 is another single-step reaction. A vessel
is filled with only CO and Cl2. Describe how equilibrium is achieved and the
connection between the reaction rates and the equilibrium constant.
rateforward = kf x [[CO][Cl
][ 2]
Initially: rateforward >> ratereverse
rateforward = ratereverse
Equilibrium
constant expression
constant expression
Equilibrium
constant = constant
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Equilibrium Expressed in Partial Pressures
a A + b B c C + d D
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Equilibrium Expressed in Partial Pressures
In general Kc ≠ Kp , but they are related:
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Sample Problem
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Homogeneous Equilibria
Refers to reactions in which all reactants and products are in the
same phase.
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Heterogeneous Equilibria
In heterogeneous equilibria, reactants and products are in different phases
The concentrations of pure solids and pure liquids are constant and
are not included in the expression for the equilibrium constant
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Example
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Manipulating Equilibrium Constant Expressions
Each of these proper chemical equations will have a different
equilibrium expression and a different numerical value of Kc:
N2(g) + 3H2(g) ֎ 2NH3(g)
1/2N2(g) + 3/2H2(g) ֎ NH3(g)
2NH3(g) ֎ N2(g) + 3H2(g)
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Multiple Equilibria
43
Example
N2 (g) +O2 (g) ֎ 2 NO (g)
+ 2 NO(g) + O2(g) ֎ 2 NO2(g)
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Another Example
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Reaction Quotients
We can determine the direction in which a reaction has to shift to
reach equilibrium by calculating the reaction quotient, Qc
The expression for Qc is the same as Kc. The difference is that the
instantaneous concentration values are used when calculating Q
instantaneous concentration are used when calculating Qc.
Qc can vary from zero (no products) to infinity (no reactants)
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Three possible situations:
Qc < K
< Kc
Too many reactants. There must be additional net conversion of
reactants to products to achieve equilibrium.
Qc = Kc
Equilibrium.
Qc > Kc
Too many products. There must be additional net conversion of
products to reactants to achieve equilibrium.
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Sample Problem
Assume that the reaction quotient for the following reaction is 1.0 x 10–8
2 NO2 (g) ֎
( ) 2 NO (g) + O
( ) ( ) Kc = 7.4 x 10–16
2 (g)
16 (at 25°C)
( ° )
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Sample Problem
If the equilibrium constant for the following reaction is Kc = 1 x 102
2 C2H6 (g) + 7 O
2 C (g) ֎ 4 CO
(g) + 7 O2 (g) ֎ 4 CO2 (g) + 6 H
(g) + 6 H2O (g)
O (g)
and all the concentrations were initially 0.10 M,
y ,
we can predict that the reaction:
(a) is at equilibrium initially.
(b) must shift from left to right to reach equilibrium.
(c) must shift from right to left to reach equilibrium.
Q < K
(d)
(d) cannot reach equilibrium.
h ilib i
(e) cannot be determined unless we have the
information necessary to calculate Qc for the reaction.
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Sample Problem
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Calculating Equilibrium Concentrations
When Qc ≠ Kc, we can calculate exactly how much additional reactant or
product will form in order to reach equilibrium.
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Set up the problem in the following way:
Set up the problem in the following way:
Initial: 0.10 0 0
Change: ‐x +x +x
Equilibrium: 0.10 –
q x x x
The equation to be solved is:
Rearrange to give quadratic equation:
Solve with quadratic formula:
Reject negative root!
Reject negative root!
x= 0.042 M
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The concentrations at equilibrium are:
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Sample Problem
The equilibrium constant for the decomposition of solid NH4Cl is Kp = 0.01
atm at a certain high temperature. Calculate the equilibrium vapor
pressures of ammonia gas and HCl gas starting from pure NH4Cl (s).
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Sample Problem
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(0.012 – 2x)2 = 0.0011x + 6.93 x 10-5
x = 0.0105 , x = 0.00178
Suppose we had this equilibrium:
The equation to solve would be:
This is a cubic equation!
q
Truly frightening.
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Making Approximations
Note that the equilibrium constant is very small. When equilibrium is
reached, 2x will be very small compared to 0.100, so we can ignore it.
The resulting approximate (but quite accurate) equation to solve is
Which gives:
h h 2x is much smaller than
0.10, so 0.10 – 2x ≈ 0.10
and our approximation
x = 7.4 x 10‐5 M is valid!
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Th
The concentrations at equilibrium are:
t ti t ilib i
SO3 SO2 O2
0.10 M – 2(7.4 x 10‐5) 2(7.4 x 10‐5) 7.4 x 10‐5 M
≈ 0.10 M = 1.5 x 10‐4 M
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