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Chemical equilibrium

In a chemical reaction, chemical equilibrium is the state in which both the reactants and products are present in concentrations which have no further tendency to change with time, so that there is no observable change in the properties of the system.[1] This state results when the forward reaction proceeds at the same rate as the reverse reaction. The reaction rates of the forward and backward reactions are generally not zero, but they are equal. Thus, there are no net changes in the concentrations of the reactants and products. Such a state is known as dynamic equilibrium.[2][3]

Historical introduction edit

The concept of chemical equilibrium was developed in 1803, after Berthollet found that some chemical reactions are reversible.[4] For any reaction mixture to exist at equilibrium, the rates of the forward and backward (reverse) reactions must be equal. In the following chemical equation, arrows point both ways to indicate equilibrium.[5] A and B are reactant chemical species, S and T are product species, and α, β, σ, and τ are the stoichiometric coefficients of the respective reactants and products:

α A + β B ⇌ σ S + τ T

The equilibrium concentration position of a reaction is said to lie "far to the right" if, at equilibrium, nearly all the reactants are consumed. Conversely the equilibrium position is said to be "far to the left" if hardly any product is formed from the reactants.

Guldberg and Waage (1865), building on Berthollet's ideas, proposed the law of mass action:

 

where A, B, S and T are active masses and k+ and k are rate constants. Since at equilibrium forward and backward rates are equal:

 

and the ratio of the rate constants is also a constant, now known as an equilibrium constant.

 

By convention, the products form the numerator. However, the law of mass action is valid only for concerted one-step reactions that proceed through a single transition state and is not valid in general because rate equations do not, in general, follow the stoichiometry of the reaction as Guldberg and Waage had proposed (see, for example, nucleophilic aliphatic substitution by SN1 or reaction of hydrogen and bromine to form hydrogen bromide). Equality of forward and backward reaction rates, however, is a necessary condition for chemical equilibrium, though it is not sufficient to explain why equilibrium occurs.

Despite the limitations of this derivation, the equilibrium constant for a reaction is indeed a constant, independent of the activities of the various species involved, though it does depend on temperature as observed by the van 't Hoff equation. Adding a catalyst will affect both the forward reaction and the reverse reaction in the same way and will not have an effect on the equilibrium constant. The catalyst will speed up both reactions thereby increasing the speed at which equilibrium is reached.[2][6]

Although the macroscopic equilibrium concentrations are constant in time, reactions do occur at the molecular level. For example, in the case of acetic acid dissolved in water and forming acetate and hydronium ions,

CH3CO2H + H2O ⇌ CH3CO2 + H3O+

a proton may hop from one molecule of acetic acid onto a water molecule and then onto an acetate anion to form another molecule of acetic acid and leaving the number of acetic acid molecules unchanged. This is an example of dynamic equilibrium. Equilibria, like the rest of thermodynamics, are statistical phenomena, averages of microscopic behavior.

Le Châtelier's principle (1884) predicts the behavior of an equilibrium system when changes to its reaction conditions occur. If a dynamic equilibrium is disturbed by changing the conditions, the position of equilibrium moves to partially reverse the change. For example, adding more S (to the chemical reaction above) from the outside will cause an excess of products, and the system will try to counteract this by increasing the reverse reaction and pushing the equilibrium point backward (though the equilibrium constant will stay the same).

If mineral acid is added to the acetic acid mixture, increasing the concentration of hydronium ion, the amount of dissociation must decrease as the reaction is driven to the left in accordance with this principle. This can also be deduced from the equilibrium constant expression for the reaction:

 

If {H3O+} increases {CH3CO2H} must increase and CH3CO2 must decrease. The H2O is left out, as it is the solvent and its concentration remains high and nearly constant.

A quantitative version is given by the reaction quotient.

J. W. Gibbs suggested in 1873 that equilibrium is attained when the Gibbs free energy of the system is at its minimum value (assuming the reaction is carried out at a constant temperature and pressure). What this means is that the derivative of the Gibbs energy with respect to reaction coordinate (a measure of the extent of reaction that has occurred, ranging from zero for all reactants to a maximum for all products) vanishes (because dG = 0), signaling a stationary point. This derivative is called the reaction Gibbs energy (or energy change) and corresponds to the difference between the chemical potentials of reactants and products at the composition of the reaction mixture.[1] This criterion is both necessary and sufficient. If a mixture is not at equilibrium, the liberation of the excess Gibbs energy (or Helmholtz energy at constant volume reactions) is the "driving force" for the composition of the mixture to change until equilibrium is reached. The equilibrium constant can be related to the standard Gibbs free energy change for the reaction by the equation

 

where R is the universal gas constant and T the temperature.

When the reactants are dissolved in a medium of high ionic strength the quotient of activity coefficients may be taken to be constant. In that case the concentration quotient, Kc,

 

where [A] is the concentration of A, etc., is independent of the analytical concentration of the reactants. For this reason, equilibrium constants for solutions are usually determined in media of high ionic strength. Kc varies with ionic strength, temperature and pressure (or volume). Likewise Kp for gases depends on partial pressure. These constants are easier to measure and encountered in high-school chemistry courses.

Thermodynamics edit

At constant temperature and pressure, one must consider the Gibbs free energy, G, while at constant temperature and volume, one must consider the Helmholtz free energy, A, for the reaction; and at constant internal energy and volume, one must consider the entropy, S, for the reaction.

The constant volume case is important in geochemistry and atmospheric chemistry where pressure variations are significant. Note that, if reactants and products were in standard state (completely pure), then there would be no reversibility and no equilibrium. Indeed, they would necessarily occupy disjoint volumes of space. The mixing of the products and reactants contributes a large entropy increase (known as entropy of mixing) to states containing equal mixture of products and reactants and gives rise to a distinctive minimum in the Gibbs energy as a function of the extent of reaction.[7] The standard Gibbs energy change, together with the Gibbs energy of mixing, determine the equilibrium state.[8][9]

In this article only the constant pressure case is considered. The relation between the Gibbs free energy and the equilibrium constant can be found by considering chemical potentials.[1]

At constant temperature and pressure in the absence of an applied voltage, the Gibbs free energy, G, for the reaction depends only on the extent of reaction: ξ (Greek letter xi), and can only decrease according to the second law of thermodynamics. It means that the derivative of G with respect to ξ must be negative if the reaction happens; at the equilibrium this derivative is equal to zero.

 :     equilibrium

In order to meet the thermodynamic condition for equilibrium, the Gibbs energy must be stationary, meaning that the derivative of G with respect to the extent of reaction, ξ, must be zero. It can be shown that in this case, the sum of chemical potentials times the stoichiometric coefficients of the products is equal to the sum of those corresponding to the reactants.[10] Therefore, the sum of the Gibbs energies of the reactants must be the equal to the sum of the Gibbs energies of the products.

 

where μ is in this case a partial molar Gibbs energy, a chemical potential. The chemical potential of a reagent A is a function of the activity, {A} of that reagent.

 

(where μo
A
is the standard chemical potential).

The definition of the Gibbs energy equation interacts with the fundamental thermodynamic relation to produce

 .

Inserting dNi = νi dξ into the above equation gives a stoichiometric coefficient ( ) and a differential that denotes the reaction occurring to an infinitesimal extent (). At constant pressure and temperature the above equations can be written as

 

which is the "Gibbs free energy change for the reaction. This results in:

 .

By substituting the chemical potentials:

 ,

the relationship becomes:

 
 :

which is the standard Gibbs energy change for the reaction that can be calculated using thermodynamical tables. The reaction quotient is defined as:

 

Therefore,

 

At equilibrium:

 

leading to:

 

and

 

Obtaining the value of the standard Gibbs energy change, allows the calculation of the equilibrium constant.

 

Addition of reactants or products edit

For a reactional system at equilibrium: Qr = Keq; ξ = ξeq.

  • If the activities of constituents are modified, the value of the reaction quotient changes and becomes different from the equilibrium constant: Qr ≠ Keq
     
    and
     
    then
     
  • If activity of a reagent i increases
     
    the reaction quotient decreases. Then
     
    and
     
    The reaction will shift to the right (i.e. in the forward direction, and thus more products will form).
  • If activity of a product j increases, then
     
    and
     
    The reaction will shift to the left (i.e. in the reverse direction, and thus less products will form).

Note that activities and equilibrium constants are dimensionless numbers.

Treatment of activity edit

The expression for the equilibrium constant can be rewritten as the product of a concentration quotient, Kc and an activity coefficient quotient, Γ.

 

[A] is the concentration of reagent A, etc. It is possible in principle to obtain values of the activity coefficients, γ. For solutions, equations such as the Debye–Hückel equation or extensions such as Davies equation[11] Specific ion interaction theory or Pitzer equations[12] may be used.Software (below) However this is not always possible. It is common practice to assume that Γ is a constant, and to use the concentration quotient in place of the thermodynamic equilibrium constant. It is also general practice to use the term equilibrium constant instead of the more accurate concentration quotient. This practice will be followed here.

For reactions in the gas phase partial pressure is used in place of concentration and fugacity coefficient in place of activity coefficient. In the real world, for example, when making ammonia in industry, fugacity coefficients must be taken into account. Fugacity, f, is the product of partial pressure and fugacity coefficient. The chemical potential of a species in the real gas phase is given by

 

so the general expression defining an equilibrium constant is valid for both solution and gas phases.[citation needed]

Concentration quotients edit

In aqueous solution, equilibrium constants are usually determined in the presence of an "inert" electrolyte such as sodium nitrate, NaNO3, or potassium perchlorate, KClO4. The ionic strength of a solution is given by

 

where ci and zi stand for the concentration and ionic charge of ion type i, and the sum is taken over all the N types of charged species in solution. When the concentration of dissolved salt is much higher than the analytical concentrations of the reagents, the ions originating from the dissolved salt determine the ionic strength, and the ionic strength is effectively constant. Since activity coefficients depend on ionic strength, the activity coefficients of the species are effectively independent of concentration. Thus, the assumption that Γ is constant is justified. The concentration quotient is a simple multiple of the equilibrium constant.[13]

 

However, Kc will vary with ionic strength. If it is measured at a series of different ionic strengths, the value can be extrapolated to zero ionic strength.[12] The concentration quotient obtained in this manner is known, paradoxically, as a thermodynamic equilibrium constant.

Before using a published value of an equilibrium constant in conditions of ionic strength different from the conditions used in its determination, the value should be adjustedSoftware (below).

Metastable mixtures edit

A mixture may appear to have no tendency to change, though it is not at equilibrium. For example, a mixture of SO2 and O2 is metastable as there is a kinetic barrier to formation of the product, SO3.

2 SO2 + O2 ⇌ 2 SO3

The barrier can be overcome when a catalyst is also present in the mixture as in the contact process, but the catalyst does not affect the equilibrium concentrations.

Likewise, the formation of bicarbonate from carbon dioxide and water is very slow under normal conditions

CO2 + 2 H2O ⇌ HCO3 + H3O+

but almost instantaneous in the presence of the catalytic enzyme carbonic anhydrase.

Pure substances edit

When pure substances (liquids or solids) are involved in equilibria their activities do not appear in the equilibrium constant[14] because their numerical values are considered one.

Applying the general formula for an equilibrium constant to the specific case of a dilute solution of acetic acid in water one obtains

CH3CO2H + H2O ⇌ CH3CO2 + H3O+
 

For all but very concentrated solutions, the water can be considered a "pure" liquid, and therefore it has an activity of one. The equilibrium constant expression is therefore usually written as

 .

A particular case is the self-ionization of water

2 H2O ⇌ H3O+ + OH

Because water is the solvent, and has an activity of one, the self-ionization constant of water is defined as

 

It is perfectly legitimate to write [H+] for the hydronium ion concentration, since the state of solvation of the proton is constant (in dilute solutions) and so does not affect the equilibrium concentrations. Kw varies with variation in ionic strength and/or temperature.

The concentrations of H+ and OH are not independent quantities. Most commonly [OH] is replaced by Kw[H+]−1 in equilibrium constant expressions which would otherwise include hydroxide ion.

Solids also do not appear in the equilibrium constant expression, if they are considered to be pure and thus their activities taken to be one. An example is the Boudouard reaction:[14]

2 CO ⇌ CO2 + C

for which the equation (without solid carbon) is written as:

 

Multiple equilibria edit

Consider the case of a dibasic acid H2A. When dissolved in water, the mixture will contain H2A, HA and A2−. This equilibrium can be split into two steps in each of which one proton is liberated.

 

K1 and K2 are examples of stepwise equilibrium constants. The overall equilibrium constant, βD, is product of the stepwise constants.

 :      

Note that these constants are dissociation constants because the products on the right hand side of the equilibrium expression are dissociation products. In many systems, it is preferable to use association constants.

 

β1 and β2 are examples of association constants. Clearly β1 = 1/K2 and β2 = 1/βD; log β1 = pK2 and log β2 = pK2 + pK1[15] For multiple equilibrium systems, also see: theory of Response reactions.

Effect of temperature edit

The effect of changing temperature on an equilibrium constant is given by the van 't Hoff equation

 

Thus, for exothermic reactions (ΔH is negative), K decreases with an increase in temperature, but, for endothermic reactions, (ΔH is positive) K increases with an increase temperature. An alternative formulation is

 

At first sight this appears to offer a means of obtaining the standard molar enthalpy of the reaction by studying the variation of K with temperature. In practice, however, the method is unreliable because error propagation almost always gives very large errors on the values calculated in this way.

Effect of electric and magnetic fields edit

The effect of electric field on equilibrium has been studied by Manfred Eigen[16][17] among others.

Types of equilibrium edit

  1. N2 (g) ⇌ N2 (adsorbed)
  2. N2 (adsorbed) ⇌ 2 N (adsorbed)
  3. H2 (g) ⇌ H2 (adsorbed)
  4. H2 (adsorbed) ⇌ 2 H (adsorbed)
  5. N (adsorbed) + 3 H(adsorbed) ⇌ NH3 (adsorbed)
  6. NH3 (adsorbed) ⇌ NH3 (g)

Equilibrium can be broadly classified as heterogeneous and homogeneous equilibrium.[18] Homogeneous equilibrium consists of reactants and products belonging in the same phase whereas heterogeneous equilibrium comes into play for reactants and products in different phases.

In these applications, terms such as stability constant, formation constant, binding constant, affinity constant, association constant and dissociation constant are used. In biochemistry, it is common to give units for binding constants, which serve to define the concentration units used when the constant's value was determined.

Composition of a mixture edit

When the only equilibrium is that of the formation of a 1:1 adduct as the composition of a mixture, there are many ways that the composition of a mixture can be calculated. For example, see ICE table for a traditional method of calculating the pH of a solution of a weak acid.

There are three approaches to the general calculation of the composition of a mixture at equilibrium.

  1. The most basic approach is to manipulate the various equilibrium constants until the desired concentrations are expressed in terms of measured equilibrium constants (equivalent to measuring chemical potentials) and initial conditions.
  2. Minimize the Gibbs energy of the system.[20][21]
  3. Satisfy the equation of mass balance. The equations of mass balance are simply statements that demonstrate that the total concentration of each reactant must be constant by the law of conservation of mass.

Mass-balance equations edit

In general, the calculations are rather complicated or complex. For instance, in the case of a dibasic acid, H2A dissolved in water the two reactants can be specified as the conjugate base, A2−, and the proton, H+. The following equations of mass-balance could apply equally well to a base such as 1,2-diaminoethane, in which case the base itself is designated as the reactant A:

 
 

with TA the total concentration of species A. Note that it is customary to omit the ionic charges when writing and using these equations.

When the equilibrium constants are known and the total concentrations are specified there are two equations in two unknown "free concentrations" [A] and [H]. This follows from the fact that [HA] = β1[A][H], [H2A] = β2[A][H]2 and [OH] = Kw[H]−1

 
 

so the concentrations of the "complexes" are calculated from the free concentrations and the equilibrium constants. General expressions applicable to all systems with two reagents, A and B would be

 
 

It is easy to see how this can be extended to three or more reagents.

Polybasic acids edit

 
Species concentrations during hydrolysis of the aluminium.

The composition of solutions containing reactants A and H is easy to calculate as a function of p[H]. When [H] is known, the free concentration [A] is calculated from the mass-balance equation in A.

The diagram alongside, shows an example of the hydrolysis of the aluminium Lewis acid Al3+(aq)[22] shows the species concentrations for a 5 × 10−6 M solution of an aluminium salt as a function of pH. Each concentration is shown as a percentage of the total aluminium.

Solution and precipitation edit

The diagram above illustrates the point that a precipitate that is not one of the main species in the solution equilibrium may be formed. At pH just below 5.5 the main species present in a 5 μM solution of Al3+ are aluminium hydroxides Al(OH)2+, AlOH+2 and Al13(OH)7+32, but on raising the pH Al(OH)3 precipitates from the solution. This occurs because Al(OH)3 has a very large lattice energy. As the pH rises more and more Al(OH)3 comes out of solution. This is an example of Le Châtelier's principle in action: Increasing the concentration of the hydroxide ion causes more aluminium hydroxide to precipitate, which removes hydroxide from the solution. When the hydroxide concentration becomes sufficiently high the soluble aluminate, Al(OH)4, is formed.

Another common instance where precipitation occurs is when a metal cation interacts with an anionic ligand to form an electrically neutral complex. If the complex is hydrophobic, it will precipitate out of water. This occurs with the nickel ion Ni2+ and dimethylglyoxime, (dmgH2): in this case the lattice energy of the solid is not particularly large, but it greatly exceeds the energy of solvation of the molecule Ni(dmgH)2.

Minimization of Gibbs energy edit

At equilibrium, at a specified temperature and pressure, and with no external forces, the Gibbs free energy G is at a minimum:

 

where μj is the chemical potential of molecular species j, and Nj is the amount of molecular species j. It may be expressed in terms of thermodynamic activity as:

 

where   is the chemical potential in the standard state, R is the gas constant T is the absolute temperature, and Aj is the activity.

For a closed system, no particles may enter or leave, although they may combine in various ways. The total number of atoms of each element will remain constant. This means that the minimization above must be subjected to the constraints:

 

where aij is the number of atoms of element i in molecule j and b0
i
is the total number of atoms of element i, which is a constant, since the system is closed. If there are a total of k types of atoms in the system, then there will be k such equations. If ions are involved, an additional row is added to the aij matrix specifying the respective charge on each molecule which will sum to zero.

This is a standard problem in optimisation, known as constrained minimisation. The most common method of solving it is using the method of Lagrange multipliers[23][19] (although other methods may be used).

Define:

 

where the λi are the Lagrange multipliers, one for each element. This allows each of the Nj and λj to be treated independently, and it can be shown using the tools of multivariate calculus that the equilibrium condition is given by

 
 

(For proof see Lagrange multipliers.) This is a set of (m + k) equations in (m + k) unknowns (the Nj and the λi) and may, therefore, be solved for the equilibrium concentrations Nj as long as the chemical activities are known as functions of the concentrations at the given temperature and pressure. (In the ideal case, activities are proportional to concentrations.) (See Thermodynamic databases for pure substances.) Note that the second equation is just the initial constraints for minimization.

This method of calculating equilibrium chemical concentrations is useful for systems with a large number of different molecules. The use of k atomic element conservation equations for the mass constraint is straightforward, and replaces the use of the stoichiometric coefficient equations.[19] The results are consistent with those specified by chemical equations. For example, if equilibrium is specified by a single chemical equation:,[24]

 

where νj is the stoichiometric coefficient for the j th molecule (negative for reactants, positive for products) and Rj is the symbol for the j th molecule, a properly balanced equation will obey:

 

Multiplying the first equilibrium condition by νj and using the above equation yields:

 

As above, defining ΔG

 

where Kc is the equilibrium constant, and ΔG will be zero at equilibrium.

Analogous procedures exist for the minimization of other thermodynamic potentials.[19]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Atkins, Peter; De Paula, Julio (2006). Atkins' Physical Chemistry (8th ed.). W. H. Freeman. pp. 200–202. ISBN 0-7167-8759-8.
  2. ^ a b Atkins, Peter W.; Jones, Loretta (2008). Chemical Principles: The Quest for Insight (2nd ed.). ISBN 978-0-7167-9903-0.
  3. ^ IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "chemical equilibrium". doi:10.1351/goldbook.C01023
  4. ^ Berthollet, C.L. (1803). Essai de statique chimique [Essay on chemical statics] (in French). Paris, France: Firmin Didot. On pp. 404–407, Berthellot mentions that when he accompanied Napoleon on his expedition to Egypt, he (Berthellot) visited Lake Natron and found sodium carbonate along its shores. He realized that this was a product of the reverse of the usual reaction Na2CO3 + CaCl2 → 2NaCl + CaCO3↓ and therefore that the final state of a reaction was a state of equilibrium between two opposing processes. From p. 405: " … la décomposition du muriate de soude continue donc jusqu'à ce qu'il se soit formé assez de muriate de chaux, parce que l'acide muriatique devant se partager entre les deux bases en raison de leur action, il arrive un terme où leurs forces se balancent." ( … the decomposition of the sodium chloride thus continues until enough calcium chloride is formed, because the hydrochloric acid must be shared between the two bases in the ratio of their action [i.e., capacity to react]; it reaches an end [point] at which their forces are balanced.)
  5. ^ The notation ⇌ was proposed in 1884 by the Dutch chemist Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff. See: van 't Hoff, J.H. (1884). Études de Dynamique Chemique [Studies of chemical dynamics] (in French). Amsterdam, Netherlands: Frederik Muller & Co. pp. 4–5. Van 't Hoff called reactions that didn't proceed to completion "limited reactions". From pp. 4–5: "Or M. Pfaundler a relié ces deux phénomênes … s'accomplit en même temps dans deux sens opposés." (Now Mr. Pfaundler has joined these two phenomena in a single concept by considering the observed limit as the result of two opposing reactions, driving the one in the example cited to the formation of sea salt [i.e., NaCl] and nitric acid, [and] the other to hydrochloric acid and sodium nitrate. This consideration, which experiment validates, justifies the expression "chemical equilibrium", which is used to characterize the final state of limited reactions. I would propose to translate this expression by the following symbol:
    HCl + NO3 Na ⇌ NO3 H + Cl Na .
    I thus replace, in this case, the = sign in the chemical equation by the sign ⇌, which in reality doesn't express just equality but shows also the direction of the reaction. This clearly expresses that a chemical action occurs simultaneously in two opposing directions.)
  6. ^ Brady, James E. (2004-02-04). Chemistry: Matter and Its Changes (4th ed.). Fred Senese. ISBN 0-471-21517-1.
  7. ^ Atkins, P.; de Paula, J.; Friedman, R. (2014). Physical Chemistry – Quanta, Matter and Change, 2nd ed., Fig. 73.2. Freeman.
  8. ^ Schultz, Mary Jane (1999). "Why Equilibrium? Understanding Entropy of Mixing". Journal of Chemical Education. 76 (10): 1391. Bibcode:1999JChEd..76.1391S. doi:10.1021/ed076p1391.
  9. ^ Clugston, Michael J. (1990). "A mathematical verification of the second law of thermodynamics from the entropy of mixing". Journal of Chemical Education. 67 (3): 203. Bibcode:1990JChEd..67Q.203C. doi:10.1021/ed067p203.
  10. ^ Mortimer, R. G. Physical Chemistry, 3rd ed., p. 305, Academic Press, 2008.
  11. ^ Davies, C. W. (1962). Ion Association. Butterworths.
  12. ^ a b Grenthe, I.; Wanner, H. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-12-17. Retrieved 2007-05-16.
  13. ^ Rossotti, F. J. C.; Rossotti, H. (1961). The Determination of Stability Constants. McGraw-Hill.
  14. ^ a b c Eagleson, Mary (1994). "Biochemistry (2nd Ed.)". Concise Encyclopedia Chemistry. ISBN 0-89925-457-8.
  15. ^ Beck, M. T.; Nagypál, I. (1990). Chemistry of Complex Equilibria (2nd ed.). Budapest: Akadémiai Kaidó.
  16. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1967". NobelPrize.org. Retrieved 2019-11-02.
  17. ^ Eigen, Manfred (December 11, 1967). "Immeasurably fast reactions" (PDF). Nobel Prize. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  18. ^ "Equilibrium constants - Kc".
  19. ^ a b c d Gordon, Sanford; McBride, Bonnie J. (1994). (PDF). NASA Reference publication 1311. NASA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-04-21.
  20. ^ Smith, W. R.; Missen, R. W. (1991). Chemical Reaction Equilibrium Analysis: Theory and Algorithms (Reprinted ed.). Malabar, FL: Krieger Publishing.
  21. ^ "Mathtrek Systems".
  22. ^ The diagram was created with the program HySS
  23. ^ . NASA. Archived from the original on September 1, 2000. Retrieved October 5, 2019.
  24. ^ C. Kittel, H. Kroemer (1980). "9". Thermal Physics (2 ed.). W. H. Freeman Company. ISBN 0-7167-1088-9.

Further reading edit

  • Van Zeggeren, F.; Storey, S. H. (1970). The Computation of Chemical Equilibria. Cambridge University Press. Mainly concerned with gas-phase equilibria.
  • Leggett, D. J., ed. (1985). Computational Methods for the Determination of Formation Constants. Plenum Press.
  • Martell, A. E.; Motekaitis, R. J. (1992). The Determination and Use of Stability Constants. Wiley-VCH.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Chemical equilibria at Wikimedia Commons

chemical, equilibrium, also, equilibrium, chemistry, chemical, reaction, chemical, equilibrium, state, which, both, reactants, products, present, concentrations, which, have, further, tendency, change, with, time, that, there, observable, change, properties, s. See also Equilibrium chemistry In a chemical reaction chemical equilibrium is the state in which both the reactants and products are present in concentrations which have no further tendency to change with time so that there is no observable change in the properties of the system 1 This state results when the forward reaction proceeds at the same rate as the reverse reaction The reaction rates of the forward and backward reactions are generally not zero but they are equal Thus there are no net changes in the concentrations of the reactants and products Such a state is known as dynamic equilibrium 2 3 Contents 1 Historical introduction 2 Thermodynamics 2 1 Addition of reactants or products 2 2 Treatment of activity 2 3 Concentration quotients 2 4 Metastable mixtures 3 Pure substances 4 Multiple equilibria 5 Effect of temperature 6 Effect of electric and magnetic fields 7 Types of equilibrium 8 Composition of a mixture 8 1 Mass balance equations 8 1 1 Polybasic acids 8 1 2 Solution and precipitation 8 2 Minimization of Gibbs energy 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistorical introduction editThe concept of chemical equilibrium was developed in 1803 after Berthollet found that some chemical reactions are reversible 4 For any reaction mixture to exist at equilibrium the rates of the forward and backward reverse reactions must be equal In the following chemical equation arrows point both ways to indicate equilibrium 5 A and B are reactant chemical species S and T are product species and a b s and t are the stoichiometric coefficients of the respective reactants and products a A b B s S t TThe equilibrium concentration position of a reaction is said to lie far to the right if at equilibrium nearly all the reactants are consumed Conversely the equilibrium position is said to be far to the left if hardly any product is formed from the reactants Guldberg and Waage 1865 building on Berthollet s ideas proposed the law of mass action forward reaction rate k A a B b backward reaction rate k S s T t displaystyle begin aligned text forward reaction rate amp k ce A alpha ce B beta text backward reaction rate amp k ce S sigma ce T tau end aligned nbsp where A B S and T are active masses and k and k are rate constants Since at equilibrium forward and backward rates are equal k A a B b k S s T t displaystyle k left ce A right alpha left ce B right beta k left ce S right sigma left ce T right tau nbsp and the ratio of the rate constants is also a constant now known as an equilibrium constant K c k k S s T t A a B b displaystyle K c frac k k frac ce S sigma ce T tau ce A alpha ce B beta nbsp By convention the products form the numerator However the law of mass action is valid only for concerted one step reactions that proceed through a single transition state and is not valid in general because rate equations do not in general follow the stoichiometry of the reaction as Guldberg and Waage had proposed see for example nucleophilic aliphatic substitution by SN1 or reaction of hydrogen and bromine to form hydrogen bromide Equality of forward and backward reaction rates however is a necessary condition for chemical equilibrium though it is not sufficient to explain why equilibrium occurs Despite the limitations of this derivation the equilibrium constant for a reaction is indeed a constant independent of the activities of the various species involved though it does depend on temperature as observed by the van t Hoff equation Adding a catalyst will affect both the forward reaction and the reverse reaction in the same way and will not have an effect on the equilibrium constant The catalyst will speed up both reactions thereby increasing the speed at which equilibrium is reached 2 6 Although the macroscopic equilibrium concentrations are constant in time reactions do occur at the molecular level For example in the case of acetic acid dissolved in water and forming acetate and hydronium ions CH3CO2H H2O CH3CO 2 H3O a proton may hop from one molecule of acetic acid onto a water molecule and then onto an acetate anion to form another molecule of acetic acid and leaving the number of acetic acid molecules unchanged This is an example of dynamic equilibrium Equilibria like the rest of thermodynamics are statistical phenomena averages of microscopic behavior Le Chatelier s principle 1884 predicts the behavior of an equilibrium system when changes to its reaction conditions occur If a dynamic equilibrium is disturbed by changing the conditions the position of equilibrium moves to partially reverse the change For example adding more S to the chemical reaction above from the outside will cause an excess of products and the system will try to counteract this by increasing the reverse reaction and pushing the equilibrium point backward though the equilibrium constant will stay the same If mineral acid is added to the acetic acid mixture increasing the concentration of hydronium ion the amount of dissociation must decrease as the reaction is driven to the left in accordance with this principle This can also be deduced from the equilibrium constant expression for the reaction K CH 3 CO 2 H 3 O CH 3 CO 2 H displaystyle K frac ce CH3CO2 ce H3O ce CH3CO2H nbsp If H3O increases CH3CO2H must increase and CH3CO 2 must decrease The H2O is left out as it is the solvent and its concentration remains high and nearly constant A quantitative version is given by the reaction quotient J W Gibbs suggested in 1873 that equilibrium is attained when the Gibbs free energy of the system is at its minimum value assuming the reaction is carried out at a constant temperature and pressure What this means is that the derivative of the Gibbs energy with respect to reaction coordinate a measure of the extent of reaction that has occurred ranging from zero for all reactants to a maximum for all products vanishes because dG 0 signaling a stationary point This derivative is called the reaction Gibbs energy or energy change and corresponds to the difference between the chemical potentials of reactants and products at the composition of the reaction mixture 1 This criterion is both necessary and sufficient If a mixture is not at equilibrium the liberation of the excess Gibbs energy or Helmholtz energy at constant volume reactions is the driving force for the composition of the mixture to change until equilibrium is reached The equilibrium constant can be related to the standard Gibbs free energy change for the reaction by the equation D r G R T ln K e q displaystyle Delta r G ominus RT ln K mathrm eq nbsp where R is the universal gas constant and T the temperature When the reactants are dissolved in a medium of high ionic strength the quotient of activity coefficients may be taken to be constant In that case the concentration quotient Kc K c S s T t A a B b displaystyle K ce c frac ce S sigma ce T tau ce A alpha ce B beta nbsp where A is the concentration of A etc is independent of the analytical concentration of the reactants For this reason equilibrium constants for solutions are usually determined in media of high ionic strength Kc varies with ionic strength temperature and pressure or volume Likewise Kp for gases depends on partial pressure These constants are easier to measure and encountered in high school chemistry courses Thermodynamics editAt constant temperature and pressure one must consider the Gibbs free energy G while at constant temperature and volume one must consider the Helmholtz free energy A for the reaction and at constant internal energy and volume one must consider the entropy S for the reaction The constant volume case is important in geochemistry and atmospheric chemistry where pressure variations are significant Note that if reactants and products were in standard state completely pure then there would be no reversibility and no equilibrium Indeed they would necessarily occupy disjoint volumes of space The mixing of the products and reactants contributes a large entropy increase known as entropy of mixing to states containing equal mixture of products and reactants and gives rise to a distinctive minimum in the Gibbs energy as a function of the extent of reaction 7 The standard Gibbs energy change together with the Gibbs energy of mixing determine the equilibrium state 8 9 In this article only the constant pressure case is considered The relation between the Gibbs free energy and the equilibrium constant can be found by considering chemical potentials 1 At constant temperature and pressure in the absence of an applied voltage the Gibbs free energy G for the reaction depends only on the extent of reaction 3 Greek letter xi and can only decrease according to the second law of thermodynamics It means that the derivative of G with respect to 3 must be negative if the reaction happens at the equilibrium this derivative is equal to zero d G d 3 T p 0 displaystyle left frac dG d xi right T p 0 nbsp equilibriumIn order to meet the thermodynamic condition for equilibrium the Gibbs energy must be stationary meaning that the derivative of G with respect to the extent of reaction 3 must be zero It can be shown that in this case the sum of chemical potentials times the stoichiometric coefficients of the products is equal to the sum of those corresponding to the reactants 10 Therefore the sum of the Gibbs energies of the reactants must be the equal to the sum of the Gibbs energies of the products a m A b m B s m S t m T displaystyle alpha mu mathrm A beta mu mathrm B sigma mu mathrm S tau mu mathrm T nbsp where m is in this case a partial molar Gibbs energy a chemical potential The chemical potential of a reagent A is a function of the activity A of that reagent m A m A R T ln A displaystyle mu mathrm A mu A ominus RT ln mathrm A nbsp where moA is the standard chemical potential The definition of the Gibbs energy equation interacts with the fundamental thermodynamic relation to produce d G V d p S d T i 1 k m i d N i displaystyle dG Vdp SdT sum i 1 k mu i dN i nbsp Inserting dNi ni d3 into the above equation gives a stoichiometric coefficient n i displaystyle nu i nbsp and a differential that denotes the reaction occurring to an infinitesimal extent d3 At constant pressure and temperature the above equations can be written as d G d 3 T p i 1 k m i n i D r G T p displaystyle left frac dG d xi right T p sum i 1 k mu i nu i Delta mathrm r G T p nbsp which is the Gibbs free energy change for the reaction This results in D r G T p s m S t m T a m A b m B displaystyle Delta mathrm r G T p sigma mu mathrm S tau mu mathrm T alpha mu mathrm A beta mu mathrm B nbsp By substituting the chemical potentials D r G T p s m S t m T a m A b m B s R T ln S t R T ln T a R T ln A b R T ln B displaystyle Delta mathrm r G T p sigma mu mathrm S ominus tau mu mathrm T ominus alpha mu mathrm A ominus beta mu mathrm B ominus sigma RT ln mathrm S tau RT ln mathrm T alpha RT ln mathrm A beta RT ln mathrm B nbsp the relationship becomes D r G T p i 1 k m i n i R T ln S s T t A a B b displaystyle Delta mathrm r G T p sum i 1 k mu i ominus nu i RT ln frac mathrm S sigma mathrm T tau mathrm A alpha mathrm B beta nbsp i 1 k m i n i D r G displaystyle sum i 1 k mu i ominus nu i Delta mathrm r G ominus nbsp which is the standard Gibbs energy change for the reaction that can be calculated using thermodynamical tables The reaction quotient is defined as Q r S s T t A a B b displaystyle Q mathrm r frac mathrm S sigma mathrm T tau mathrm A alpha mathrm B beta nbsp Therefore d G d 3 T p D r G T p D r G R T ln Q r displaystyle left frac dG d xi right T p Delta mathrm r G T p Delta mathrm r G ominus RT ln Q mathrm r nbsp At equilibrium d G d 3 T p D r G T p 0 displaystyle left frac dG d xi right T p Delta mathrm r G T p 0 nbsp leading to 0 D r G R T ln K e q displaystyle 0 Delta mathrm r G ominus RT ln K mathrm eq nbsp and D r G R T ln K e q displaystyle Delta mathrm r G ominus RT ln K mathrm eq nbsp Obtaining the value of the standard Gibbs energy change allows the calculation of the equilibrium constant nbsp Addition of reactants or products edit For a reactional system at equilibrium Qr Keq 3 3eq If the activities of constituents are modified the value of the reaction quotient changes and becomes different from the equilibrium constant Qr Keq d G d 3 T p D r G R T ln Q r displaystyle left frac dG d xi right T p Delta mathrm r G ominus RT ln Q mathrm r nbsp and D r G R T ln K e q displaystyle Delta mathrm r G ominus RT ln K eq nbsp then d G d 3 T p R T ln Q r K e q displaystyle left frac dG d xi right T p RT ln left frac Q mathrm r K mathrm eq right nbsp If activity of a reagent i increases Q r a j n j a i n i displaystyle Q mathrm r frac prod a j nu j prod a i nu i nbsp the reaction quotient decreases Then Q r lt K e q displaystyle Q mathrm r lt K mathrm eq nbsp and d G d 3 T p lt 0 displaystyle left frac dG d xi right T p lt 0 nbsp The reaction will shift to the right i e in the forward direction and thus more products will form If activity of a product j increases then Q r gt K e q displaystyle Q mathrm r gt K mathrm eq nbsp and d G d 3 T p gt 0 displaystyle left frac dG d xi right T p gt 0 nbsp The reaction will shift to the left i e in the reverse direction and thus less products will form Note that activities and equilibrium constants are dimensionless numbers Treatment of activity edit The expression for the equilibrium constant can be rewritten as the product of a concentration quotient Kc and an activity coefficient quotient G K S s T t A a B b g S s g T t g A a g B b K c G displaystyle K frac mathrm S sigma mathrm T tau mathrm A alpha mathrm B beta times frac gamma mathrm S sigma gamma mathrm T tau gamma mathrm A alpha gamma mathrm B beta K mathrm c Gamma nbsp A is the concentration of reagent A etc It is possible in principle to obtain values of the activity coefficients g For solutions equations such as the Debye Huckel equation or extensions such as Davies equation 11 Specific ion interaction theory or Pitzer equations 12 may be used Software below However this is not always possible It is common practice to assume that G is a constant and to use the concentration quotient in place of the thermodynamic equilibrium constant It is also general practice to use the term equilibrium constant instead of the more accurate concentration quotient This practice will be followed here For reactions in the gas phase partial pressure is used in place of concentration and fugacity coefficient in place of activity coefficient In the real world for example when making ammonia in industry fugacity coefficients must be taken into account Fugacity f is the product of partial pressure and fugacity coefficient The chemical potential of a species in the real gas phase is given by m m R T ln f b a r m R T ln p b a r R T ln g displaystyle mu mu ominus RT ln left frac f mathrm bar right mu ominus RT ln left frac p mathrm bar right RT ln gamma nbsp so the general expression defining an equilibrium constant is valid for both solution and gas phases citation needed Concentration quotients edit In aqueous solution equilibrium constants are usually determined in the presence of an inert electrolyte such as sodium nitrate NaNO3 or potassium perchlorate KClO4 The ionic strength of a solution is given by I 1 2 i 1 N c i z i 2 displaystyle I frac 1 2 sum i 1 N c i z i 2 nbsp where ci and zi stand for the concentration and ionic charge of ion type i and the sum is taken over all the N types of charged species in solution When the concentration of dissolved salt is much higher than the analytical concentrations of the reagents the ions originating from the dissolved salt determine the ionic strength and the ionic strength is effectively constant Since activity coefficients depend on ionic strength the activity coefficients of the species are effectively independent of concentration Thus the assumption that G is constant is justified The concentration quotient is a simple multiple of the equilibrium constant 13 K c K G displaystyle K mathrm c frac K Gamma nbsp However Kc will vary with ionic strength If it is measured at a series of different ionic strengths the value can be extrapolated to zero ionic strength 12 The concentration quotient obtained in this manner is known paradoxically as a thermodynamic equilibrium constant Before using a published value of an equilibrium constant in conditions of ionic strength different from the conditions used in its determination the value should be adjustedSoftware below Metastable mixtures edit A mixture may appear to have no tendency to change though it is not at equilibrium For example a mixture of SO2 and O2 is metastable as there is a kinetic barrier to formation of the product SO3 2 SO2 O2 2 SO3The barrier can be overcome when a catalyst is also present in the mixture as in the contact process but the catalyst does not affect the equilibrium concentrations Likewise the formation of bicarbonate from carbon dioxide and water is very slow under normal conditions CO2 2 H2O HCO 3 H3O but almost instantaneous in the presence of the catalytic enzyme carbonic anhydrase Pure substances editWhen pure substances liquids or solids are involved in equilibria their activities do not appear in the equilibrium constant 14 because their numerical values are considered one Applying the general formula for an equilibrium constant to the specific case of a dilute solution of acetic acid in water one obtains CH3CO2H H2O CH3CO2 H3O K c C H 3 C O 2 H 3 O C H 3 C O 2 H H 2 O displaystyle K mathrm c frac mathrm CH 3 CO 2 H 3 O mathrm CH 3 CO 2 H H 2 O nbsp For all but very concentrated solutions the water can be considered a pure liquid and therefore it has an activity of one The equilibrium constant expression is therefore usually written as K C H 3 C O 2 H 3 O C H 3 C O 2 H K c displaystyle K frac mathrm CH 3 CO 2 H 3 O mathrm CH 3 CO 2 H K mathrm c nbsp A particular case is the self ionization of water 2 H2O H3O OH Because water is the solvent and has an activity of one the self ionization constant of water is defined as K w H O H displaystyle K mathrm w mathrm H OH nbsp It is perfectly legitimate to write H for the hydronium ion concentration since the state of solvation of the proton is constant in dilute solutions and so does not affect the equilibrium concentrations Kw varies with variation in ionic strength and or temperature The concentrations of H and OH are not independent quantities Most commonly OH is replaced by Kw H 1 in equilibrium constant expressions which would otherwise include hydroxide ion Solids also do not appear in the equilibrium constant expression if they are considered to be pure and thus their activities taken to be one An example is the Boudouard reaction 14 2 CO CO2 Cfor which the equation without solid carbon is written as K c C O 2 C O 2 displaystyle K mathrm c frac mathrm CO 2 mathrm CO 2 nbsp Multiple equilibria editConsider the case of a dibasic acid H2A When dissolved in water the mixture will contain H2A HA and A2 This equilibrium can be split into two steps in each of which one proton is liberated H 2 A HA H K 1 HA H H 2 A HA A 2 H K 2 A 2 H HA displaystyle begin array rl ce H2A lt gt HA H amp K 1 frac ce HA H ce H2A ce HA lt gt A 2 H amp K 2 frac ce A 2 H ce HA end array nbsp K1 andK2 are examples of stepwise equilibrium constants The overall equilibrium constant bD is product of the stepwise constants H 2 A A 2 2 H displaystyle ce H2A lt gt A 2 2H nbsp b D A 2 H 2 H 2 A K 1 K 2 displaystyle beta ce D frac ce A 2 H 2 ce H 2A K 1 K 2 nbsp Note that these constants are dissociation constants because the products on the right hand side of the equilibrium expression are dissociation products In many systems it is preferable to use association constants A 2 H HA b 1 HA A 2 H A 2 2 H H 2 A b 2 H 2 A A 2 H 2 displaystyle begin array ll ce A 2 H lt gt HA amp beta 1 frac ce HA ce A 2 H ce A 2 2H lt gt H2A amp beta 2 frac ce H2A ce A 2 H 2 end array nbsp b1 and b2 are examples of association constants Clearly b1 1 K2 and b2 1 bD log b1 pK2 and log b2 pK2 pK1 15 For multiple equilibrium systems also see theory of Response reactions Effect of temperature editThe effect of changing temperature on an equilibrium constant is given by the van t Hoff equation d ln K d T D H m R T 2 displaystyle frac d ln K dT frac Delta H mathrm m ominus RT 2 nbsp Thus for exothermic reactions DH is negative K decreases with an increase in temperature but for endothermic reactions DH is positive K increases with an increase temperature An alternative formulation is d ln K d T 1 D H m R displaystyle frac d ln K d T 1 frac Delta H mathrm m ominus R nbsp At first sight this appears to offer a means of obtaining the standard molar enthalpy of the reaction by studying the variation of K with temperature In practice however the method is unreliable because error propagation almost always gives very large errors on the values calculated in this way Effect of electric and magnetic fields editThe effect of electric field on equilibrium has been studied by Manfred Eigen 16 17 among others Types of equilibrium editHaber Bosch process N2 g N2 adsorbed N2 adsorbed 2 N adsorbed H2 g H2 adsorbed H2 adsorbed 2 H adsorbed N adsorbed 3 H adsorbed NH3 adsorbed NH3 adsorbed NH3 g Equilibrium can be broadly classified as heterogeneous and homogeneous equilibrium 18 Homogeneous equilibrium consists of reactants and products belonging in the same phase whereas heterogeneous equilibrium comes into play for reactants and products in different phases In the gas phase rocket engines 19 The industrial synthesis such as ammonia in the Haber Bosch process depicted right takes place through a succession of equilibrium steps including adsorption processes Atmospheric chemistry Seawater and other natural waters chemical oceanography Distribution between two phases log D distribution coefficient important for pharmaceuticals where lipophilicity is a significant property of a drug Liquid liquid extraction Ion exchange Chromatography Solubility product Uptake and release of oxygen by hemoglobin in blood Acid base equilibria acid dissociation constant hydrolysis buffer solutions indicators acid base homeostasis Metal ligand complexation sequestering agents chelation therapy MRI contrast reagents Schlenk equilibrium Adduct formation host guest chemistry supramolecular chemistry molecular recognition dinitrogen tetroxide In certain oscillating reactions the approach to equilibrium is not asymptotically but in the form of a damped oscillation 14 The related Nernst equation in electrochemistry gives the difference in electrode potential as a function of redox concentrations When molecules on each side of the equilibrium are able to further react irreversibly in secondary reactions the final product ratio is determined according to the Curtin Hammett principle In these applications terms such as stability constant formation constant binding constant affinity constant association constant and dissociation constant are used In biochemistry it is common to give units for binding constants which serve to define the concentration units used when the constant s value was determined Composition of a mixture editWhen the only equilibrium is that of the formation of a 1 1 adduct as the composition of a mixture there are many ways that the composition of a mixture can be calculated For example see ICE table for a traditional method of calculating the pH of a solution of a weak acid There are three approaches to the general calculation of the composition of a mixture at equilibrium The most basic approach is to manipulate the various equilibrium constants until the desired concentrations are expressed in terms of measured equilibrium constants equivalent to measuring chemical potentials and initial conditions Minimize the Gibbs energy of the system 20 21 Satisfy the equation of mass balance The equations of mass balance are simply statements that demonstrate that the total concentration of each reactant must be constant by the law of conservation of mass Mass balance equations edit In general the calculations are rather complicated or complex For instance in the case of a dibasic acid H2A dissolved in water the two reactants can be specified as the conjugate base A2 and the proton H The following equations of mass balance could apply equally well to a base such as 1 2 diaminoethane in which case the base itself is designated as the reactant A T A A H A H 2 A displaystyle T mathrm A mathrm A HA H 2 A nbsp T H H H A 2 H 2 A O H displaystyle T mathrm H mathrm H HA 2 H 2 A OH nbsp with TA the total concentration of species A Note that it is customary to omit the ionic charges when writing and using these equations When the equilibrium constants are known and the total concentrations are specified there are two equations in two unknown free concentrations A and H This follows from the fact that HA b1 A H H2A b2 A H 2 and OH Kw H 1 T A A b 1 A H b 2 A H 2 displaystyle T mathrm A mathrm A beta 1 mathrm A H beta 2 mathrm A H 2 nbsp T H H b 1 A H 2 b 2 A H 2 K w H 1 displaystyle T mathrm H mathrm H beta 1 mathrm A H 2 beta 2 mathrm A H 2 K w mathrm H 1 nbsp so the concentrations of the complexes are calculated from the free concentrations and the equilibrium constants General expressions applicable to all systems with two reagents A and B would be T A A i p i b i A p i B q i displaystyle T mathrm A mathrm A sum i p i beta i mathrm A p i mathrm B q i nbsp T B B i q i b i A p i B q i displaystyle T mathrm B mathrm B sum i q i beta i mathrm A p i mathrm B q i nbsp It is easy to see how this can be extended to three or more reagents Polybasic acids edit nbsp Species concentrations during hydrolysis of the aluminium The composition of solutions containing reactants A and H is easy to calculate as a function of p H When H is known the free concentration A is calculated from the mass balance equation in A The diagram alongside shows an example of the hydrolysis of the aluminium Lewis acid Al3 aq 22 shows the species concentrations for a 5 10 6 M solution of an aluminium salt as a function of pH Each concentration is shown as a percentage of the total aluminium Solution and precipitation edit The diagram above illustrates the point that a precipitate that is not one of the main species in the solution equilibrium may be formed At pH just below 5 5 the main species present in a 5 mM solution of Al3 are aluminium hydroxides Al OH 2 AlOH 2 and Al13 OH 7 32 but on raising the pH Al OH 3 precipitates from the solution This occurs because Al OH 3 has a very large lattice energy As the pH rises more and more Al OH 3 comes out of solution This is an example of Le Chatelier s principle in action Increasing the concentration of the hydroxide ion causes more aluminium hydroxide to precipitate which removes hydroxide from the solution When the hydroxide concentration becomes sufficiently high the soluble aluminate Al OH 4 is formed Another common instance where precipitation occurs is when a metal cation interacts with an anionic ligand to form an electrically neutral complex If the complex is hydrophobic it will precipitate out of water This occurs with the nickel ion Ni2 and dimethylglyoxime dmgH2 in this case the lattice energy of the solid is not particularly large but it greatly exceeds the energy of solvation of the molecule Ni dmgH 2 Minimization of Gibbs energy edit At equilibrium at a specified temperature and pressure and with no external forces the Gibbs free energy G is at a minimum d G j 1 m m j d N j 0 displaystyle dG sum j 1 m mu j dN j 0 nbsp where mj is the chemical potential of molecular species j and Nj is the amount of molecular species j It may be expressed in terms of thermodynamic activity as m j m j R T ln A j displaystyle mu j mu j ominus RT ln A j nbsp where m j displaystyle mu j ominus nbsp is the chemical potential in the standard state R is the gas constant T is the absolute temperature and Aj is the activity For a closed system no particles may enter or leave although they may combine in various ways The total number of atoms of each element will remain constant This means that the minimization above must be subjected to the constraints j 1 m a i j N j b i 0 displaystyle sum j 1 m a ij N j b i 0 nbsp where aij is the number of atoms of element i in molecule j and b0i is the total number of atoms of element i which is a constant since the system is closed If there are a total of k types of atoms in the system then there will be k such equations If ions are involved an additional row is added to the aij matrix specifying the respective charge on each molecule which will sum to zero This is a standard problem in optimisation known as constrained minimisation The most common method of solving it is using the method of Lagrange multipliers 23 19 although other methods may be used Define G G i 1 k l i j 1 m a i j N j b i 0 0 displaystyle mathcal G G sum i 1 k lambda i left sum j 1 m a ij N j b i 0 right 0 nbsp where the li are the Lagrange multipliers one for each element This allows each of the Nj and lj to be treated independently and it can be shown using the tools of multivariate calculus that the equilibrium condition is given by 0 G N j m j i 1 k l i a i j displaystyle 0 frac partial mathcal G partial N j mu j sum i 1 k lambda i a ij nbsp 0 G l i j 1 m a i j N j b i 0 displaystyle 0 frac partial mathcal G partial lambda i sum j 1 m a ij N j b i 0 nbsp For proof see Lagrange multipliers This is a set of m k equations in m k unknowns the Nj and the li and may therefore be solved for the equilibrium concentrations Nj as long as the chemical activities are known as functions of the concentrations at the given temperature and pressure In the ideal case activities are proportional to concentrations See Thermodynamic databases for pure substances Note that the second equation is just the initial constraints for minimization This method of calculating equilibrium chemical concentrations is useful for systems with a large number of different molecules The use of k atomic element conservation equations for the mass constraint is straightforward and replaces the use of the stoichiometric coefficient equations 19 The results are consistent with those specified by chemical equations For example if equilibrium is specified by a single chemical equation 24 j 0 m n j R j 0 displaystyle sum j 0 m nu j R j 0 nbsp where nj is the stoichiometric coefficient for the j th molecule negative for reactants positive for products and Rj is the symbol for the j th molecule a properly balanced equation will obey j 1 m a i j n j 0 displaystyle sum j 1 m a ij nu j 0 nbsp Multiplying the first equilibrium condition by nj and using the above equation yields 0 j 1 m n j m j j 1 m i 1 k n j l i a i j j 1 m n j m j displaystyle 0 sum j 1 m nu j mu j sum j 1 m sum i 1 k nu j lambda i a ij sum j 1 m nu j mu j nbsp As above defining DG D G j 1 m n j m j j 1 m n j m j R T ln R j D G R T ln j 1 m R j n j D G R T ln K c displaystyle Delta G sum j 1 m nu j mu j sum j 1 m nu j mu j ominus RT ln R j Delta G ominus RT ln left prod j 1 m R j nu j right Delta G ominus RT ln K c nbsp where Kc is the equilibrium constant and DG will be zero at equilibrium Analogous procedures exist for the minimization of other thermodynamic potentials 19 See also editAcidosis Alkalosis Arterial blood gas Benesi Hildebrand method Determination of equilibrium constants Equilibrium constant Henderson Hasselbalch equation Michaelis Menten kinetics pCO2 pH pKa Redox equilibria Steady state chemistry Thermodynamic databases for pure substances Non random two liquid model NRTL model Phase equilibrium calculations UNIQUAC model Phase equilibrium calculationsReferences edit a b c Atkins Peter De Paula Julio 2006 Atkins Physical Chemistry 8th ed W H Freeman pp 200 202 ISBN 0 7167 8759 8 a b Atkins Peter W Jones Loretta 2008 Chemical Principles The Quest for Insight 2nd ed ISBN 978 0 7167 9903 0 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 chemical equilibrium doi 10 1351 goldbook C01023 Berthollet C L 1803 Essai de statique chimique Essay on chemical statics in French Paris France Firmin Didot On pp 404 407 Berthellot mentions that when he accompanied Napoleon on his expedition to Egypt he Berthellot visited Lake Natron and found sodium carbonate along its shores He realized that this was a product of the reverse of the usual reaction Na2CO3 CaCl2 2NaCl CaCO3 and therefore that the final state of a reaction was a state of equilibrium between two opposing processes From p 405 la decomposition du muriate de soude continue donc jusqu a ce qu il se soit forme assez de muriate de chaux parce que l acide muriatique devant se partager entre les deux bases en raison de leur action il arrive un terme ou leurs forces se balancent the decomposition of the sodium chloride thus continues until enough calcium chloride is formed because the hydrochloric acid must be shared between the two bases in the ratio of their action i e capacity to react it reaches an end point at which their forces are balanced The notation was proposed in 1884 by the Dutch chemist Jacobus Henricus van t Hoff See van t Hoff J H 1884 Etudes de Dynamique Chemique Studies of chemical dynamics in French Amsterdam Netherlands Frederik Muller amp Co pp 4 5 Van t Hoff called reactions that didn t proceed to completion limited reactions From pp 4 5 Or M Pfaundler a relie ces deux phenomenes s accomplit en meme temps dans deux sens opposes Now Mr Pfaundler has joined these two phenomena in a single concept by considering the observed limit as the result of two opposing reactions driving the one in the example cited to the formation of sea salt i e NaCl and nitric acid and the other to hydrochloric acid and sodium nitrate This consideration which experiment validates justifies the expression chemical equilibrium which is used to characterize the final state of limited reactions I would propose to translate this expression by the following symbol HCl NO3 Na NO3 H Cl Na I thus replace in this case the sign in the chemical equation by the sign which in reality doesn t express just equality but shows also the direction of the reaction This clearly expresses that a chemical action occurs simultaneously in two opposing directions Brady James E 2004 02 04 Chemistry Matter and Its Changes 4th ed Fred Senese ISBN 0 471 21517 1 Atkins P de Paula J Friedman R 2014 Physical Chemistry Quanta Matter and Change 2nd ed Fig 73 2 Freeman Schultz Mary Jane 1999 Why Equilibrium Understanding Entropy of Mixing Journal of Chemical Education 76 10 1391 Bibcode 1999JChEd 76 1391S doi 10 1021 ed076p1391 Clugston Michael J 1990 A mathematical verification of the second law of thermodynamics from the entropy of mixing Journal of Chemical Education 67 3 203 Bibcode 1990JChEd 67Q 203C doi 10 1021 ed067p203 Mortimer R G Physical Chemistry 3rd ed p 305 Academic Press 2008 Davies C W 1962 Ion Association Butterworths a b Grenthe I Wanner H Guidelines for the extrapolation to zero ionic strength PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 12 17 Retrieved 2007 05 16 Rossotti F J C Rossotti H 1961 The Determination of Stability Constants McGraw Hill a b c Eagleson Mary 1994 Biochemistry 2nd Ed Concise Encyclopedia Chemistry ISBN 0 89925 457 8 Beck M T Nagypal I 1990 Chemistry of Complex Equilibria 2nd ed Budapest Akademiai Kaido The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1967 NobelPrize org Retrieved 2019 11 02 Eigen Manfred December 11 1967 Immeasurably fast reactions PDF Nobel Prize Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved November 2 2019 Equilibrium constants Kc a b c d Gordon Sanford McBride Bonnie J 1994 Computer Program for Calculation of Complex Chemical Equilibrium Compositions and Applications PDF NASA Reference publication 1311 NASA Archived from the original PDF on 2006 04 21 Smith W R Missen R W 1991 Chemical Reaction Equilibrium Analysis Theory and Algorithms Reprinted ed Malabar FL Krieger Publishing Mathtrek Systems The diagram was created with the program HySS Chemical Equilibrium with Applications NASA Archived from the original on September 1 2000 Retrieved October 5 2019 C Kittel H Kroemer 1980 9 Thermal Physics 2 ed W H Freeman Company ISBN 0 7167 1088 9 Further reading editVan Zeggeren F Storey S H 1970 The Computation of Chemical Equilibria Cambridge University Press Mainly concerned with gas phase equilibria Leggett D J ed 1985 Computational Methods for the Determination of Formation Constants Plenum Press Martell A E Motekaitis R J 1992 The Determination and Use of Stability Constants Wiley VCH External links edit nbsp Media related to Chemical equilibria at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chemical equilibrium amp oldid 1173166778, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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