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Chemical Equilibrium
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Chemical Equilibrium Heterogeneous and homogeneous equilibrium Law of Mass Action Acids and Bases The pH Scale Buffers
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The state where the concentrations of all reactants and products remain constant with time. On the molecular level, there is frantic activity. Equilibrium is not static, but is a highly dynamic situation. Chemical Equilibrium
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Dynamic Equilibrium in Chemical Systems Dynamic vs. Static Movement vs. Stationary Equilibrium in chemical systems are dynamic. Equilibrium occurs at the molecular level. Rate of forward rxn = rate of reverse rxn Changes do occur! At macroscopic level, no discernible change is apparent. Kinetics & Equilibrium are not related!
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Chemical Equilibrium
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The Law of Mass Action For jA + kB lC + mD The law of mass action is represented by the equilibrium expression:
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LeChatelier’s Principle “If an outside influence upsets an equilibrium, then the system undergoes a change in a direction that counteracts the disturbing influence and, if possible, returns the system to equilibrium.” “For every action, there is an opposite action.”
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Le Chatelier’s Principle If we disturb a reaction at equilibrium Changing the concentration or pressure of a reagent Altering the temperature The reaction rates will shift to try to re-establish equilibrium concentrations of all reagents The rate in one direction will exceed the other
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Effects of Changes on the System 1.Concentration: The system will shift away from the added component. 2.Temperature: K will change depending upon the temperature (treat the energy change as a reactant).
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Effects of Changes on the System 3.Pressure: a. Addition of inert gas does not affect the equilibrium position. b. Decreasing the volume shifts the equilibrium toward the side with fewer moles.
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N 2 + 3H 2 ↔ 2NH 3
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Strong Acid vs. Weak Acid Strong Acid HCl – hydrochloric acid HCl H + + Cl – 100 % dissociated No molecules of HCl Only H + and Cl – ions are present Reaction goes to completion. Weak Acid CH 3 COOH – acetic acid CH 3 COOH ↔ H + + CH 3 COO – ~10% dissociated ions ~90% molecular form Reaction reaches equilibrium
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Important Facts CH 3 COOH & NH 3 are weak electrolytes Incomplete ionization Undergoes equilibrium K
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Ionic Equilibria Weak acids, bases in dilute solution HA (aq) H + (aq) +A - (aq) [HA] K d = [H + ][A - ] Dissociation constant
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Relationship between and K d (1- )C HA ( x C HA )( x C HA ) 2 x C 2 HA Kd=Kd= = (1- )C HA [H + ]= x C HA [A - ]= x C HA ([H + ]=[A - ]) [HA]=(1- )C HA Kd=Kd= 2 x C 1- Ostwald’s dilution law (1888) Ionic Equilibria
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