Definition and Concept

Equilibrium State

Equilibrium: dynamic state with equal forward and reverse reaction rates. Macroscopic properties constant over time. Reaction mixture composition stable.

Equilibrium Constant (K)

K: dimensionless ratio describing relative concentrations or partial pressures of products to reactants at equilibrium. Indicates reaction extent.

Significance

Measures position of equilibrium. K > 1 favors products, K < 1 favors reactants. Fundamental to predicting reaction behavior, yield, and direction.

Mathematical Definition

For reaction aA + bB ⇌ cC + dD:

K = [C]^c [D]^d / [A]^a [B]^b

Brackets denote concentration or partial pressure depending on context.

Types of Equilibrium Constants

Kc - Concentration Equilibrium Constant

Uses molar concentrations (mol/L) of reactants and products. Applicable in homogeneous liquid or aqueous phase reactions.

Kp - Pressure Equilibrium Constant

Uses partial pressures (atm or bar). Relevant for gas-phase reactions. Related to Kc via ideal gas law.

Other Constants

Ksp: Solubility product constant for sparingly soluble salts. Ka and Kb: Acid and base dissociation constants. Kw: Ionization constant of water.

Relationship Between Kc and Kp

Kp = Kc (RT)^Δn

Δn = moles gaseous products - moles gaseous reactants. R = gas constant, T = temperature (K).

Derivation of Equilibrium Constant Expressions

Law of Mass Action

Originates from Guldberg and Waage (1864). Reaction rate proportional to product of reactant concentrations raised to stoichiometric coefficients.

Dynamic Equilibrium Condition

At equilibrium: forward rate = reverse rate. Leads to ratio of rate constants as equilibrium constant.

Expression for General Reaction

For aA + bB ⇌ cC + dD, K = (k_forward / k_reverse) = [C]^c [D]^d / [A]^a [B]^b.

Thermodynamic Basis

Derived from Gibbs free energy change ΔG = 0 at equilibrium. Relation: ΔG° = -RT ln K.

Calculation Methods

From Experimental Data

Measure equilibrium concentrations or partial pressures. Substitute values into equilibrium expression.

Using Initial and Change Concentrations (ICE Table)

ICE: Initial, Change, Equilibrium concentrations. Solve algebraically for equilibrium values, then calculate K.

Using Thermodynamic Data

Calculate ΔG° from enthalpy and entropy, then find K via ΔG° = -RT ln K.

Example Calculation

Given reaction: N2 + 3H2 ⇌ 2NH3Initial: [N2] = 1.0 M, [H2] = 3.0 M, [NH3] = 0Equilibrium: [NH3] = 0.5 MCalculate Kc:Reaction stoichiometry used to find changes in N2 and H2Substitute equilibrium concentrations into expressionCompute Kc value

Reaction Quotient (Q) and Comparison to K

Definition of Q

Q analogous to K but calculated at any point, not necessarily equilibrium. Uses instantaneous concentrations or pressures.

Predicting Reaction Direction

Q < K: forward reaction favored. Q > K: reverse reaction favored. Q = K: system at equilibrium.

Calculation Method

Same formula as K but with non-equilibrium data.

Application

Used to monitor reaction progress, predict shifts after perturbations.

Thermodynamic Significance

Relation to Gibbs Free Energy

ΔG° = -RT ln K connects equilibrium constant to standard Gibbs free energy change.

Implications for Spontaneity

K > 1: ΔG° < 0, spontaneous in forward direction. K < 1: ΔG° > 0, favors reactants.

Temperature Dependence

Van’t Hoff equation relates temperature change to K variation.

Entropy and Enthalpy Contributions

ΔG° = ΔH° - TΔS°. Changes in enthalpy and entropy influence K value.

Applications in Chemical Systems

Acid-Base Equilibria

Ka and Kb quantify acid and base strengths. pH calculations rely on equilibrium constants.

Solubility Equilibria

Ksp determines solubility limits of ionic compounds. Predicts precipitation and dissolution.

Gas Phase Reactions

Kp controls composition of gas mixtures in industrial processes like Haber or Contact process.

Biochemical Systems

Equilibrium constants define enzyme-substrate affinities, binding equilibria, metabolic pathways.

Industrial Synthesis

Optimization of reaction conditions based on K values to maximize yield and efficiency.

Effect of Temperature on K

Le Châtelier's Principle

Temperature changes shift equilibrium to counteract disturbance. Endothermic reactions: K increases with T. Exothermic: K decreases.

Van’t Hoff Equation

ln(K2/K1) = -ΔH°/R (1/T2 - 1/T1)

Predicts K at new temperature T2 from K at T1 and standard enthalpy change ΔH°.

Practical Implications

Temperature control essential in industrial reactors to optimize K and product yield.

Graphical Representation

Plotting ln K vs 1/T yields straight line with slope -ΔH°/R.

Effect of Pressure and Volume

Gas Phase Equilibria

Pressure changes affect equilibrium position if number of moles of gases differ between reactants and products.

Le Châtelier’s Response

Increasing pressure favors side with fewer moles of gas.

Kp Independence

Equilibrium constant Kp is constant for given T; pressure changes shift reaction but do not change Kp value.

Volume Changes

Volume reduction increases pressure, shifting equilibrium accordingly.

Le Chatelier's Principle and K

Principle Statement

System opposes imposed change to re-establish equilibrium.

Effect on Concentrations

Addition/removal of reactants or products shifts equilibrium to restore K.

Effect on Temperature and Pressure

Temperature alters K; pressure changes shift equilibrium but do not affect K value.

Predictive Use

Qualitative tool to forecast direction of shifts in response to perturbations.

Limitations and Assumptions

Ideal Behavior Assumption

K expressions assume ideal gases or dilute solutions; deviations occur in real systems.

Constant Temperature

K is strictly constant only at fixed temperature; temperature changes alter K.

Closed Systems

Equilibrium constants apply to closed systems without mass loss or gain.

Neglect of Activity Coefficients

Concentrations used instead of activities can introduce errors in concentrated solutions.

Equilibrium Established

K valid only when true equilibrium is reached; transient states not described.

Experimental Determination

Analytical Techniques

Methods include spectroscopy, titration, gas chromatography, electrochemical measurements.

Equilibrium Concentration Measurement

Quantify reactants and products at equilibrium to compute K.

Temperature Control

Experiments conducted at constant temperature to ensure K reproducibility.

Example: Determining K for Esterification

Measure acid and ester concentrations after equilibration; calculate Kc from data.

Data Treatment and Error Analysis

Replicate measurements, statistical analysis to minimize uncertainty in K values.

MethodPrincipleApplication
SpectroscopyAbsorbance related to concentrationMonitoring reactants/products
TitrationNeutralization or redox reactionsDetermining concentration of species
Gas ChromatographySeparation of volatile componentsQuantification of gas-phase equilibria
Electrochemical MethodsPotential difference related to concentrationsRedox equilibria studies

References

  • Atkins, P., De Paula, J., "Physical Chemistry", 10th Ed., Oxford University Press, 2014, pp. 425-460.
  • Laidler, K.J., Meiser, J.H., "Physical Chemistry", 3rd Ed., Benjamin Cummings, 1999, pp. 340-375.
  • Chang, R., "Physical Chemistry for the Chemical Sciences", University Science Books, 2010, pp. 230-270.
  • Silberberg, M.S., "Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change", 6th Ed., McGraw-Hill, 2013, pp. 480-520.
  • Laidler, K.J., "Chemical Kinetics", 3rd Ed., Harper & Row, 1987, pp. 250-290.