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HW
Solutions
New Unit: Chemical Equilibrium
A.
New Vocabulary:
(1)
The Irreversible Reaction
(2)
Steady State
(3)
Reversible Reactions: Equilibrium
(1)
The Irreversible Reaction
Most
of the reactions we have considered so far have been irreversible, as implied
by the one-way arrow: à
In
such a reaction, none of the product molecules reacted again to produce the
original molecules.
Non-technical
examples
Burning
wood is irreversible because no matter how hard you pray, it is unlikely that
you'll get the wood back once it has turned into ashes.
The
digestion of food is irreversible within your body.
Chemical
examples:
1. Neutralization:
NaOH + HCl à H2O
+ NaCl
2. Oxidation of iron: 2Fe + 1.5 O2àFe2O3
(2)
Steady State
An open
system can be in a steady state if the input rate of a substance equals the output
rate. An open system is one that loses a substance from one "opening"
and then gets that same substance back from a totally different source.
Non-technical
examples :
You
open the valve that lets water out of a kiddie swimming pool. It flows out at a
rate of one litre per second. But in the meantime, your hose is letting water
into the pool at the same rate.
Chemical
Steady State Examples from the Natural World:
If the
volume of a lake is at steady state, then all the water that is lost through
evaporation and usage by people and animals is returned at the same rate by
streams, rain and animal and human waste.
The
amount of nitrogen in the air is at steady state. Whatever is removed by
bacteria as they turn it into nitrates is returned by other bacteria that
convert ions in the soil back into nitrogen
(3)
Equilibrium
Equilibrium
is a state where the rate of the forward reaction equals the rate of the
reverse reaction. At the macroscopic
level, the reaction seems to have stopped, but at the molecular level,
reactions continue in both directions. Equilibrium occurs in a closed
system, so that no matter or energy can
enter or leave.
Non-technical
examples:
If you
let a sealed flask of water
sit for a while on the counter, the rate of evaporation will equal the rate of
condensation so that the amount of H2O liquid will not change, and
of course there will also be a fixed amount of water vapour.
H2O(l) = H2O(g)
Your
neighbour dumps snow on your driveway, and you retaliate by dumping snow on his
driveway at the same rate.
At the
macroscopic level (let’s say you viewed the whole thing from an airplane) nothing seems to be going
on. The amount of snow on the driveways seems constant. The whole area is
white. But close up(microscopically), work is occurring; it’s just that its
effects are canceling out.
Chemical
Equilibrium Examples:
1. 2 NO2 = N2O4 +
heat
Macroscopic
observations:
At
t=0, we have no N2O4 (invisible)
and
2 moles/L of NO2. (red- brown gas). With time, the brown
colour fades. While these changes are occurring, we have not yet reached
equilibrium.
At
equilibrium, the brown colour stops fading, and the concentrations of the two
gases remain constant.
Microscopically,
what's happening?
Every
time 2 molecules of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) bond to form N2O4,
some other molecule of N2O4 absorbs heat and decomposes
into 2 molecules of nitrogen dioxide.
2. A large crystal of iodine is dropped
into CCl4. Describe what you would see before equilibrium is reached
and after equilibrium is attained. Also explain what occurs at the molecular
level once equilibrium is established.
Macrosopically, before
equilibrium is reached, you see the CCl4 getting progressively more purple as more and more
solid iodine dissolves. When equilibrium is attained, the purple colour becomes
constant, and any left over pieces of solid iodine will not be shrinking any
more.
Microsopically, after
equilibrium is attained, the rate at which solid iodine molecules enter into
solution will equal the rate at which the molecules stick together to create
visible chunks of solid iodine.
How
can you prove this? Well, if after equilibrium was reached, you replaced the
“undissolved” crystal with a radioactive one, a change would occur after
waiting a while. The solution would get progressively more enriched with radioactive iodine, even though to the naked
eye all would seem the same. The crystal would become less radioactive. If the
reaction had been truly dead and over with, then no radioactive iodine should
have appeared in the solution. Analogy:
let’s say the snow that you were shoveling from your side was a little dirtier
than your neighbour’s to begin with, then a close-up analysis would reveal that
your snow is getting a little cleaner, even though the total amount of snow on
either side did not change.
Copyright ©2008
Created:January/19/2001