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Chapt. 6: Chemical Equilibrium
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Terrence Oas
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Concept map of textbook material (in black) and Key Concepts discussed in lecture (in red)
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Chapt. 6: Chemical Equilibrium
von
Terrence Oas
1. Heterogeneous Equilibria
1.1. Phases: gas, solid, liquid
1.2. Heterogeneous Equilibria: between multiple phases
1.3. Equilibrium constant for heterogeneous equilibria
1.4. Activity of pure phases (solids or liquids)
2. Applications of the Equilibrium Constant
2.1. Predictions based on the equilibrium constant
2.2. Extent of reaction
2.3. Reaction quotient (Q)
2.4. Calculating equilibrium pressures and concentrations
3. Solving Equilibrium Problems
4. Le Châtelier's Principle
4.1. Effect of a change in conditions on equilibria
4.2. Effect of a change in concentration
4.3. Effect of a change in pressure
5. Equilibria Involving Real Gases
5.1. Non-ideality
5.2. How to correct Kp for non-ideality
6. Acitivity of pure solid or liquid = 1
7. Q describes the position of a rxn not necessarily at equilibrium
8. ICE tables help organize equilibrium problems
9. Try to make x in the ICE table small. This simplifies the math!
10. You can do "math" with chemical equations
10.1. Adding c.e. means multiplying K
10.2. Multiplying c.e. by n means taking K^n
10.3. Reversing c.e. means taking 1/K
11. "Stress" on an equilibrium shifts reaction in direction that minimizes change
11.1. Add reactant (R) or product (P): rxn shifts to consume it Remove R or P: rxn shifts to replace it
11.2. Decrease the volume: rxn shifts to the side with the smallest n
11.3. Treat energy as R or P to predict effect of T on K
12. Activity coefficients correct for interactions between species
13. The Equilibrium Condition
13.1. How a reaction reaches equilibrium
13.2. Characteristics of chemical equilibrium
13.3. Equilibria are dynamic
14. The Equilibrium Constant
14.1. Law of mass action
14.2. Characteristics of the equilibrium expression
14.3. Equilibria in ammonia synthesis
14.4. Equilibrium position
15. Equilibrium Expressions Involving Pressures
15.1. Ideal gas law
15.2. Equilibrium partial pressures
15.3. Kp vs. K
16. The Concept of Activity
16.1. The reference state
16.2. For a gas, 1 atm
16.3. Definition of activity
17. Equilibria are dynamic but may be so slow that []s appear not to change
18. K is meaningful only at equilibrium
18.1. Can't be = 0 or 1/0
18.2. Large K (>>1) means products favored
18.3. Small K (<<1) means reactants favored
19. Activity is a way to compare the amount of a reactant or product to their standard state and make K unit-less
20. Partial pressures sum to total pressure
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