1 / 15

Chapter 18: Chemical Equilibrium

Table of Contents. Chapter 18: Chemical Equilibrium. 18.3: Using equilibrium constants. Chemical Equilibrium: Basic Concepts. Equilibrium Expressions and Constants. What is K eq ?. Why do we use K eq ?. Write K eq for the following reaction:. Chemical Equilibrium: Additional Concepts.

teresa
Download Presentation

Chapter 18: Chemical Equilibrium

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Table of Contents Chapter 18: Chemical Equilibrium 18.3: Using equilibrium constants

  2. Chemical Equilibrium: Basic Concepts Equilibrium Expressions and Constants • What is Keq? • Why do we use Keq? • Write Keq for the following reaction:

  3. Chemical Equilibrium: Additional Concepts Solubility equilibria • The solubility product constant(Ksp) is used for dissolving a sparingly soluble ionic compound in water. Equilibrium of a dissolved substance Tells us if we have more solid or more ions

  4. Chemical Equilibrium: Additional Concepts Solubility equilibria • When you know Ksp, you can… • 1. calculate the molar solubility of a sparingly soluble ionic compound • 2. calculate moles per liter of a saturated substance. • 3. calculate ion concentrations in a saturated solution. • These all use the same process!

  5. 1. Calculating Molar Solubility ex1)What is the molar solubility of copper II hydroxide? 1. Write the eq. expression 2. Look up Ksp 2.2 x 10-20 = [Cu2+][OH-]2 3. Replace Molarites with x 2.2 x 10-20 = [x][2x]2

  6. 1. Calculating Molar Solubility ex1)What is the molar solubility of copper II hydroxide? 2.2 x 10-20 = [x][2x]2 = x4x2 = 4x3 4. Solve for x [x]3 = 5.5 x 10-21 [x]= 1.8 x 10-7M The solubility of Cu(OH)2 is = 1.8 x 10-7 mol/L

  7. WE ALSO KNOW… The moles per liter of the saturated substance is 1.8x10-7mol/L x = [Cu2+]; 2x = [OH-] Ion concentrations [OH-] = 2x = 2(1.8 x 10-7 M) [Cu2+] = 1.8x10-7 M [OH-] = 3.6 x 10-7 M

  8. Practice Ex2) How many moles per liter of silver chloride will be in a saturated solution of AgCl? Ksp = 1.8x10-10 AgCl(s) Ag+(aq) + Cl-(aq) Ex3) Calculate the molar solubility of strontium chromate (SrCrO4)in water if Ksp = 3.7x10-5 1.3x10-5mol/L 1.3e-05 mol/L 0.00608 mol/L

  9. Chemical Equilibrium: Additional Concepts Predicting precipitates • The ion product (Q) • Ksp = Qsp at only at equilibrium • Q can predict the shift in equilibrium • Calculated the same way • Ksp = initial concentrations • Qsp = instantaneous concentrations

  10. Chemical Equilibrium: Additional Concepts Predicting precipitates • If Qsp < Ksp, shift to reactants, no precipitate forms • If Qsp> Ksp, shift to products, precipitate will form • If Qsp =Ksp, no change will occur

  11. Q ex4) Predict whether a precipitate of PbCl2 will form if 1L of 0.01M NaCl is added to 1L of 0.2M Pb(NO3)2. Ksp = 1.7x10-5 How did they know which precipitate? Solubility rules! Back of the periodic table

  12. Q ex4) Predict whether a precipitate of PbCl2 will form if 1L of 0.01MNaCl is added to 1L of 0.2MPb(NO3)2. Ksp = 1.7x10-5 • Calculate Q • 1)Q expression • 2) Molarities PbCl2(s) Pb2+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq) Qsp = [Pb2+] [Cl-]2 Total volume

  13. Q ex4) Predict whether a precipitate of PbCl2 will form if 1 L of 0.01 M NaCl is added to 1 L of 0.2 M Pb(NO3)2. Ksp = 1.7x10-5 • Calculate Q • 3) Solve! • 4) Compare: Qsp = [Pb2+] [Cl-]2 = [0.01M] [0.005M]2 = 2.5x10-7 Qsp (2.5x10-7) Ksp(1.7x10-5) So… shift to reactants no precipitate will form <

  14. Practice Ex5) Predict whether a precipitate of PbF2 will form when equal volumes of 0.10M Pb(NO3)2 and 0.30M NaF are mixed. Ksp = 3.3x10-8 PbF2(s) Pb2+(aq) + 2F-(aq) Ex6) Predict whether a precipitate Ag2SO4 will form when equal volumes of .25 M K2SO4 and .01 AgNO3 are mixed. Ksp = 1.2x10-5 Shift to reactants, precipitate of PbF2 Shift to products, no precipitate

  15. Chemical Equilibrium: Additional Concepts Common ion effect • Common ion effect: The solubility of a substance is reduced when the substance is dissolved in a solution containing a common ion. • For example, PbI2 is less soluble in an aqueous solution of NaI than in pure water. • Because the common ion I– is already present in the NaI solution. It reduces the maximum possible concentration of Pb2+ and thus reduces the solubility of PbI2.

More Related