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Chemical Systems and Equilibrium. - Le Châtelier's Principle -. Le Châtelier’s Principle (pp. 450-456 ). When a chemical system is disturbed by a change in property the system adjusts in a way that opposes the change – an equilibrium shift . What is an equilibrium shift?
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Chemical Systems and Equilibrium - Le Châtelier'sPrinciple -
Le Châtelier’s Principle(pp. 450-456) When a chemical system is disturbed by a change in property the system adjusts in a way that opposes the change – an equilibrium shift. What is an equilibrium shift? Equilibrium shift is the movement of a system at equilibrium resulting in a change in the concentration of reactants and products
Le Châtelier’sPrinciple According to Le Châtelier’s principle, an equilibrium shift always OPPOSESthe change in the system
Le Châtelier's Principle and Concentration Changes • predicts that if more reactant or product is added to a system at equilibrium, then that system will undergo an equilibrium shift • increasing the concentration of reactant or product will cause the equilibrium to shift to consume some of the added reactant or product • decreasing the concentration of reactant or product will cause the equilibrium to shift to replace some of the removed reactant or product
Le Châtelier's Principle and Concentration Changes Example: Freon-12 (chlorofluorocarbon) CCl4(g) + 2 HF(g)CCl2F2(g) + 2 HCl(g) ⇋
Le Châtelier's Principle and Temperature Changes • Energy in a chemical equilibrium equation can be treated as though it were a reactant or a product Endothermic Rxn: reactants + energy products Exothermic Rxn: reactants products + energy ⇋ ⇋
Le Châtelier's Principle and Temperature Changes • energy can be added to or removed from a system by heating or cooling the container • equilibrium will shift to minimize change • increase in temperature the system shifts to consume some of the added thermal energy • decrease in temperature the system shifts to replace some of the removed thermal energy
Le Châtelier's Principle and Temperature Changes Example: 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g) + energy ⇋
Le Châtelier's Principle and Gas Volume Changes • Boyle’s Law, the concentration of a gas in a container is directly related to the pressure of the gas (i.e. decreasing the volume to half its original value, doubles the concentration of every gas in the container) • always consider the total number of moles of gas reactants and the total number of moles of gas products Example: N2(g) + 3 H2(g) 2 NH3(g) (1 mol + 3 mol) 4 mol 2 mol ⇋
Le Châtelier's Principle and Gas Volume Changes • if the volume is increased (decrease in pressure) equilibrium shifts toward the side with the larger total amount of gaseous entities • if the volume is decreased (increase in pressure) equilibrium shifts towards the side with the smaller total amount of gaseous entities • system with equal number of gas molecules on each side of the equation will not shift after a change in volume • systems involving only liquids and solids are not affected appreciably – they are virtually incompressible – not affected by pressure
Le Châtelier's Principle and Gas Volume Changes ⇋ N2(g) + 3 H2(g) 2 NH3(g)
Changes That Do Not Affect the Position of Equilibrium Systems Adding Catalysts • a catalyst decreases the time required to reach the equilibrium position, but does not affect the final position of equilibrium • lowers activation energy for both forward and reverse reactions by an equal amount – therefore occurs faster but equilibrium establishes in the same position as it would without the catalyst
Changes That Do Not Affect the Position of Equilibrium Systems Adding Inert Gases • If a noble gas or a gas that cannot react with the entities in the system, the equilibrium position of the system will not change
Le Châtelier’s Principle at a High School Dance The Reaction MALE FEMALE
(2) What “reactants” and “products” are in equilibrium?
(3a) What would happen if a carload of boys from another school arrives? (addition of reactants)
(3b) What effects would many of the couples go outside to…??? so dance floor is less crowded (removal of products)
(3c) What would happen if thermostat in the gym gets stuck and the gym gets very hot? (addition of heat)
(3d) What would happen if part of the gym is closed off? (decrease in volume)
(3e) What would happen if a non-reacting species is added such as cows? Nuns? or VP’s (increase in internal pressure).
Learning Checkpoint Le Châtelier'sPrinciple (worksheets) AND p. 457 Practice UC # 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5
⇋ 2 CO2(g) 2 CO(g) + O2(g) ∆H = -281 kJ