N2O4 ⇐→ 2NO2 Forward reaction rate law: rate = k1[N2O4]

Backward reaction rate law: k-1 [NO2]

If at equilibrium, the concentrations of the products and reactions do not chagne. For this to be true, what is true about the rates of the forwards and backwards reactions?

  • The reactions happen at the same rate frrl = brrl K1/K-1 = frrl/brrl = Kc which is the equilibrium constant

Acidity is only 7 at room temperature

Equilibrium happens when the forward and backward reaction rates are equal to each other. This means that the concentrations of both products and reactants stay constant, but crucially both reactions continue to happen

Any general equilibrium can be written as

aA + bB ⇐→ cC + dD

products over reactions in equilibrium rate law

A 0.5L glass container is charged with 45.0g of NO2 and 82.0g of Br2. Find the equilibrium concentrations of all the gasses

I1.05M0
C-x+2x
E
0.120=(2x)^2/(3.00-2x)^2(1.03-x)

3.00-2(.140)=2.72M [NO] [BR2] = 1.03-.14 = .89M [NoBr] = 2(.140) = .280M

If x is very tiny compared to your amount of starting material we can assume that the equilibrium amount is basically equal to the starting amount

5% rule: if x is 5% or less than our initial amount we ignore it

1.50 * 10^10=x(x/)/1-x x=1.23x10

5% rule, 1.50 x 10^-10=x^2/1

x=1.22x10^-5 M

x=0.167 M, nowhere near normal answer. Go back and get exact answer anyway

Kc = C^c d^d / A^a B^b = Kc/Keq

Constants are functions of temperature

If Kc >> 1 then All products A-⇒B If Kc << 1 then All reactants no reaction

Rate constant for forwards is larger than rate constant for backwards if Ae is bigger

Combining Equilibria

K2c1 = concH+F-/HF

Solids and liquids in equilibrium expressions

  • Ammonium + water = ammonium + oh-

Kc = NH4 OH / NH3 H2O

water is a constant value of ~55.6 you can just multiply and absorb into the constant so you only have one thing on the bottom

Kp = pressure equilibrium constant Kp = Pso2 squared Po2/ Pso3 squared

2SO3 ←> 2SO2 + O2

ICE Table for equilibrium?

Reaction Quotient

  • We often want to know which direction a reaction is going to shift based on current conditions. To determine this we calculate