Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each...

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Transcript of Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each...

Page 1: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.
Page 2: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Equilibrium

• State of balance.

• Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other.

• Need a 2-way or reversible situation.

• Need a closed system.

Page 3: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Dynamic Equilibrium

• Macroscopic level – looks like nothing is happening.

• Microscopic level – lots going on.

Page 4: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Equilibrium

• Rate of forward process = rate of reverse process.

• Hallmark: Looks like nothing is happening. Variables describing system are constant.

Page 5: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

3 Kinds of Equilibria

• Phase equilibrium – physical

• Solution equilibrium – physical

• Chemical equilibrium - chemical

Page 6: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Phase Equilibrium

• Phase changes are reversible processesPhase changes are reversible processes.

• H2O(l) H2O(g)

• H2O(l) H2O(s)

• Same substance on both sides. Phase is different.

Page 7: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Examples - Phase Equilibrium

• Water & water vapor in a sealed water bottle.

• Perfume in a partially full, sealed flask.• Ice cubes & water in an insulated

container.

• Dry ice & CO2(g) in a closed aquarium.

Page 8: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Solution Equilibrium: Solids

• Saturated solution = dynamic equilibrium.

• Dissolving & Solidification occur at equal rates.

Page 9: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Solid in Liquid

• NaCl(s) NaCl(aq)

• Favored a little bit by higher temperature.

Page 10: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Solution Equilibrium: Gases

CO2 in water unopened.

CO2(g) CO2(aq)

Favored by high pressure & low temperature.

Page 11: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Reversible ReactionsReversible Reactions

• N2(g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g)

• ForwardForward: N2 & H2 consumed. NH3 produced.

• 2NH3(g) N2(g) + 3H2(g)

• ReverseReverse: NH3 consumed. N2 & H2 produced.

Page 12: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Reversible Reactions, 1 Equation

• N2(g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g)

• Forward rxn, reactants are on left. Read left to right.

• Reverse rxn, reactants are on right. Read in reverse – right to left.

• Rxns run in both directions all the time.

Page 13: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Time

Conce

ntr

ati

on

NH3

H2

N2

N2(g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g)

Why is this point Why is this point significant?significant?

Page 14: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Reaction Rate

• Depends on concentration of reactants.

• As concentration of reactants decreases, rate decreases.

• As concentration of NH3 increases, rate of reverse rxn increases.

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Chemical Equilibrium

• State in which forward & reverse rxns balance each other.

• RateRateforwardforward rxnrxn = Rate = Ratereversereverse rxnrxn

• Does it say anything about the concentrations of reactants & products being equal? NO!NO!

Page 16: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Chemical Equilibrium

• Rateforward rxn = Ratereverse rxn

• At equilibrium, the concentrations of all species are constantconstant. They stop changing.

• They are hardly ever equal.

Page 17: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Reversible Reactions vs. Reactions that “Go to Completion”

• If your goal is to maximize product yield:

• Easier in a reaction that goes to completion.

• Use up all the reactants.

• Left with nothing but product.

• Reversible reactions are different.

• Look at Conc/time picture again.

Page 18: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Time

Conce

ntr

ati

on

NH3

H2

N2

N2(g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g)

OriginalEquilibrium Point

Page 19: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Reversible Reactions

• Once you reach equilibrium, you don’t produce any more product.

• This is bad news if the product is what you’re selling.

• How can you change the equilibrium concentrations? For example, how can you maximize product?

Page 20: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

How can you get from here

Page 21: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Lots of product as fast as possible.

New equilibrium point

To here?

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Affecting Equilibrium

• Equilibrium can be changed or affected by any factor that affects the forward and reverse reactions differently.

Page 23: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

What factors affect rate of rxn?

• Concentration/Pressure

• Temperature

• Presence of a catalyst

Page 24: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Catalyst

• Has the same effect on the forward & reverse reactions.

• Equilibrium is reached more quickly, but the “equilibrium point” is not shifted.

• The equilibrium concentrations are the same with or without a catalyst.

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Concentration, Pressure, Temperature

• Changes in concentration, pressure, temperature affect forward & reverse rxns differently.

• Composition of equilibrium mixture will shift to accommodate these changes.

Page 26: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

LeChatelier’s Principle

• “If a system at equilibrium is subjected to a stress, the system will act to reduce the stress.”

• A stress is a change in concentration, pressure, or temperature.

• System tries to undo stress.

Page 27: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

N2(g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g)

N2

H2

NH3

Stress: Increased [N2]

Original Equilibrium

New Equilibrium

Page 28: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

System

• Only 2 possible actionsOnly 2 possible actions

• Shift to the rightShift to the right & form more product. The forward rxn speeds upforward rxn speeds up more than the reverse rxn.

• Shift to the leftShift to the left & form more reactant. The reverse reaction speeds upreverse reaction speeds up more than the forward rxn.

Page 29: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

A + B C + D, at equil.

• If I increase the concentration of A, how will the system react?

• How does the new equilibrium mixture compare to the original equilibrium mixture?

• Use logic. If you increase [A], the system wants to decrease [A]. It has to use A up, so it speeds up the forward reaction.

Page 30: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

A + B C + D

Stress Equil. Shift

[A] [B] [C] [D]

[A] Right ______ DEC INC INC

[D] Left INC INC DEC ______

[C] Right DEC DEC ______ INC

[B] Left INC ______ DEC DEC

Page 31: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Changes in Temp• Exothermic rxn:

• A + B C + D + heat

• If you increase the temperature, the system shifts to consumeconsume heat. So here, it shifts to the left.

• Endothermic rxn:

• A + B + heat C + D

• If you increase the temperature, the system shifts to consume heat. So here, it shifts to the right.

Page 32: Equilibrium State of balance. Condition in which opposing forces exactly balance or equal each other. Need a 2-way or reversible situation. Need a closed.

Changes in Pressure

• N2(g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g)

• If you increase pressure, the system shifts to the side with fewer moles of gas. Here, the right hand side has only 2 moles of gas while the LHS has 4. Increasing pressure will cause a shift to the right.

• If you decrease pressure, the system shifts to the side with more moles of gas.

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H2(g) + I2(g) 2HI(g)

• This system has 2 moles of gas on the LHS & 2 moles of gas on the RHS.

• Systems with equal moles of gas on each side cannotcannot respond to pressure changes.