Chemical Forums
Chemistry Forums for Students => Undergraduate General Chemistry Forum => Topic started by: Win,odd Dhamnekar on November 17, 2020, 11:59:48 AM
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(http://SharedScreenshotequilibrium concentrations.jpg)
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Do you know the mass Action Law
Write it for the given reaction.
Then build the subtraction between initial concentration to the target x .
The Second question :
Values obtained by experiments and measurment of all components.
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Law of Mass Action
For a general reaction of the form [itex]aA +bB \rightarrow cC +dD [/itex], the law of mass actions states that the equilibrium condition is expressed by the equation,[itex] \frac {C^c \cdot D^d}{A^a\cdot B^b}[/itex]
Now, for the reaction [itex] H_2(g) + I_2(g) \rightleftharpoons 2HI (g)[/itex], initial concentrations of Hydrogen molecule and Iodine molecule as per experiment (1) 0.024M and 0.0138M respectively. Let X mole/liter of each of the product be formed.
At equilibrium, the concentrations would be [itex]H_2=[0.024M-X], I_2=[0.0138-X], 2HI=[X \cdot M] [/itex]
So, [itex]K_c=\frac{X^2}{(0.024-X)(0.0138-X)}=46.42 \Rightarrow X^2=46.42(X^2-0.0378 \cdot X +0.0003312[/itex]
Now, solving for X, we get X=1.3432205555e-2 or X=2.52000269414e-2.
Now X=1.34322e-2 do not match with 0.0252 M of 2HI. So X=0.0252 M of 2HI.
So, equilibrium concentration of [itex]H_2[/itex] is 0.024M - 0.0252 =-0.0012 M which is actual equilibrium concentration of [itex]I_2[/itex] with minus sign. Does this mean it is the equilibrium centration of Iodine molecules?
and,
equilibrium of concentration of [itex]I_2[/itex] is 0.0138 M- 0.0252 M=-0.0114M which is actual equilibrium concentration [itex]H_2[/itex] with minus sign. Does this mean it is the equilibrium concentration of Hydrogen molecules?
Why we should neglect the first value of X?
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Is the negative concentration something physically possible?
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There is a mistake in your calculation. If the concentrations of H2 and I2 each decrease by X M, by how much does the concentration of HI increase? (Note, there is no such compound as 2HI; "2HI" in the equation simply means two equivalents of HI.)
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So, X=0.0252 is for HI. But in other 3 cases of experiments 2,3,4, using the known initial concentrations of [itex]H_2,I_2[/itex], we could not get the correct concentration of HI. That means This formula is not universal. It is invalid in most of the cases.
Taking the initial concentrations of HI from the experiment 5,6 also, we could not get the correct initial concentrations of [itex]H_2, I_2[/itex]. For experiment 5, i used the following formula [tex]46.4=\frac{(X-0.0304)\cdot(X-0.0304)}{(0.0304)^2}[/tex]
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So, X=0.0252 is for HI.
No it isn't. [HI] ≠ X
That means This formula is not universal. It is invalid in most of the cases.
No, it means you've got it wrong. Look at the stoichiometry of the equation. Answer the question I asked you. If [H2] = 0.024 - X, what is [HI]?
Write the correct expression for Kc and solve for X.
You're getting it wrong for 5 and 6 for the same reason.
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A)Using experiment (1) data, [tex]\frac{(2x)^2}{(0.024-x)*(0.0138-x)}=46.42[/tex]
If we solve for x, we get x=0.012599979 or x=0.028764377. The value of 0.028764 should be neglected because it is the concentration of reactants which is more than the initial concentrations of [itex] H_2, I_2[/itex] Hence the equilibrium concentrations are [itex] HI=x=0.0252 M,H_2=0.024-x=0.024-0.0126=0.0114,I_2=0.0138-0.0126=0.0012[/itex]
B)Using experiment (2) data, [tex]\frac{(2x)^2}{(0.024-x)(0.0168-x)}=46.42[/tex]
If we solve for x, we get x=0.0147655623466 or x=0.02988167952 . For the same reason mentioned in A), we should neglect the value x=0.0298816. Hence the equilibrium concentrations are [itex]HI=x=0.029531, H_2=0.024-0.0147655=0.009234, I_2=0.0168-0.0147655623=0.0020344[/itex]
Likewise, for experiment 3 and 4 also, we get correct answers.
But i don't understand how to formulate the correct expression for [itex] K_c[/itex] in experiment 5 and 6 where reaction is reversed?
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I got the correct final concentrations of reactants and products in experiment 5 and 6 after forming correct expression for [itex]K_c[/itex]
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Well done.