Chemical equilibrium-FOE
Chemical equilibrium-FOE
Chemical equilibrium-FOE
Chemical
Equilibrium
– High concentration of O2
• In the muscles:
• As the forward reaction slows and the reverse reaction accelerates, eventually they
reach the same rate.
• Dynamic equilibrium is the condition wherein the rates of the forward and reverse
reactions are equal.
• Once the reaction reaches equilibrium, the concentrations of all the chemicals
remain constant because the chemicals are being consumed and made at the
same rate.
– Unitless
The equilibrium constant is very small, indicating that the equilibrium point for
the reaction lies far to the left—high concentrations of reactants, and low
concentrations of products. This is fortunate because N2 and O2 are the main
components of air. If this equilibrium constant were large, much of the N2 and
O2 Education,
© 2014 Pearson in the air
Inc. would react to form NO, a toxic gas.
Relationships between K and Chemical Equations
or
– Kp = Kc when Dn = 0
substituting
Solution: Since CaCO3(s) and CaO(s) are both solids, omit them from the
equilibrium expression. Kc = [CO2]
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Disturbing a Chemical Equilibrium
The equilibrium between reactants and products may be disturbed in three ways:
(1) by changing the temperature
(2) by changing the concentration of a reactant
(3) by changing the volume (for systems involving gases)
A change in any of these factors will cause a system at equilibrium to shift back
towards a state of equilibrium.
This statement is often referred to as Le Chatelier’s principle.
Conclusion: