chp13 equilibrium lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgchemical equilibrium: an introduction! a a + b b...

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Chemical Equilibrium Chapter 13 + Sections 16.1 & 16.2 + A brief revisit of Chp. 17 Henry Louis Le Châtelier (18501936) devised what came to be known as “Le Châtelier’s principle,” which is used by chemists to predict the effect a changing condition has on a system in chemical equilibrium.

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Page 1: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Chemical Equilibrium Chapter 13

+ Sections 16.1 & 16.2 + A brief revisit of Chp. 17

Henry Louis Le Châtelier (1850−1936) devised what came to be known as “Le Châtelier’s principle,” which is used by chemists to predict the effect a changing condition has on a system in chemical equilibrium.

Page 2: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Chemical Equilibrium: An Introduction!Many chemical reactions stop far short of completion and some only occur to a slight extent.!

Chemical Equilibrium:!•  Concentrations of all reactants & products remain constant with time.!

•  Not static, but highly dynamic.!

•  Rate of forward reaction = Rate of reverse reaction!

Page 3: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Chemical Equilibrium: An Introduction!a A + b B c C + d D

Equilibrium expression:!

K =[C]c[D]d

[A]a[B]b

K or Keq ≡ equilibrium constant![ ] ≡ molar concentration!*Note: K is customarily unitless.!

Page 4: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Chemical Equilibrium: An Introduction!a A + b B c C + d D

Equilibrium expression:!

K =[C]c[D]d

[A]a[B]b

Ø  Solids and pure liquids are NOT included in the equilibrium expression – only aqueous and gaseous reactants and products are included.!

Ø  K > 1 ⇒ products are, forward reaction is, favored.!Ø  K < 1 ⇒ reactants are, reverse reaction is, favored.!Ø  The magnitude (size) of K and the time required to reach

equilibrium are NOT directly related.!

Page 5: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Chemical Equilibrium: An Introduction!CaCO3(s) CaO(s) + CO2(g)!

K = CO2[ ]

Page 6: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Equilibrium Condition!Consider the following reaction!

H2O(g) + CO(g) H2(g) + CO2(g)!

•  closed vessel!•  high T!•  rapid reaction!

Page 7: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Equilibrium Condition!

Consider the following reaction:!

H2O(g) + CO(g) H2(g) + CO2(g)!

Page 8: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Equilibrium Condition!H2O(g) + CO(g) H2(g) + CO2(g)!

If we inject some H2O(g), what will happen to the forward reaction?!

Page 9: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Example 13.2, page 611!

!The production of ammonia, known as the Haber process, is shown above. The following equilibrium concentrations were observed for the Haber process at 127°C.!

[NH3] = 3.1 × 10−2 mol L−1!

[N2] = 8.5 × 10−1 mol L−1!

[H2] = 3.1 × 10−3 mol L−1!

(a)  Calculate the value of the equilibrium constant, K, at 127°C for this reaction.!

N2(g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g)

Page 10: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids
Page 11: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Example 13.2, page 611!!

!

The production of ammonia, known as the Haber process, is shown above. The following equilibrium concentrations were observed for the Haber process at 127°C.!

[NH3] = 3.1 × 10−2 mol L−1!

[N2] = 8.5 × 10−1 mol L−1!

[H2] = 3.1 × 10−3 mol L−1!

(b)  Calculate the value of the equilibrium constant, K′, at 127°C for the reaction!

2NH3(g) N2(g) + 3H2(g)

Page 12: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids
Page 13: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Example 13.2, page 611!!

!

The production of ammonia, known as the Haber process, is shown above. The following equilibrium concentrations were observed for the Haber process at 127°C.!

[NH3] = 3.1 × 10−2 mol L−1!

[N2] = 8.5 × 10−1 mol L−1!

[H2] = 3.1 × 10−3 mol L−1!

(c) Calculate the value of the equilibrium constant, K″, at 127°C for the reaction given by the equation!

12 N2(g) + 3

2 H2(g) NH3(g)

Page 14: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids
Page 15: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Aliases of K!

I.  2 H2S(g) + 3 O2(g) 2 H2O(g) + 2 SO2(g)!

All reactants and products are in the gas phase, so K can be expressed in terms of concentration (subscript c).!

Page 16: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Aliases of K!

II.  2 H2S(g) + 3 O2(g) 2 H2O(g) + 2 SO2(g)!

All reactants and products are in the gas phase, so K can be expressed in terms of partial pressures (subscript p).!

Page 17: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Aliases of K!III.  PbCl2(s) Pb2+(aq) + 2 Cl−(aq)!

Since solids are left out of the equilibrium expression, K = Ksp, known as the “solubility product constant.” (Chapter 16)!

Page 18: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids
Page 19: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Example 16.2, page 762!Bismuth(III) sulfide, Bi2S3, has a solubility of 1.0 × 10−15 M at 25°C.!

(a)  Write the solubility-product constant expression for Bi2S3.!

(b)  Calculate the value of the solubility-product constant, Ksp, for Bi2S3 at 25°C.!

Page 20: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids
Page 21: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Aliases of K!IV.  HC2H3O2(aq) H+(aq) + C2H3O2

−(aq)!

Ka ≡ acid dissociation constant#

Page 22: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Aliases of K!V.  NH3(aq) + H2O(ℓ) NH4

+(aq) + OH−(aq)!

Kb ≡ base dissociation constant#

Page 23: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Aliases of K!VI.  H2O(ℓ) H+(aq) + OH−(aq)!

Kw describes the ionization constant of water.#

Page 24: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Aliases of K!

K has many aliases, but they all take the same form and tell you the same thing: the relative amounts of products and reactants at equilibrium.#

Page 25: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Reaction Quotient ( Q )

•  Determined in the same way as K, but initial conditions are used instead of equilibrium conditions.

•  Used to predict the direction in which a reaction will proceed from a given set of initial conditions.

Q < K

Q > K

Q = K

reaction proceeds forward, products generated

reaction proceeds backward, reactants generated

reaction is at equilibrium

Page 26: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The Reaction Quotient ( Q )

Page 27: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Adding Chemical Equations

If a reaction can be expressed as the sum of two or more reactions, K for the overall reaction is the product of the equilibrium constants of the individual reactions.

If Reaction 3 = Reaction 1 + Reaction 2, then

K3 = K1 · K2

Page 28: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Page 645, Problem 47

At a particular temperature, 12.0 mol SO3 is placed into a 3.0 L rigid container, and the SO3 decomposes by the reaction

2 SO3(g) 2 SO2(g) + O2(g)

At equilibrium, 3.0 mol of SO2 is present. Calculate the value of the equilibrium constant, K, for this reaction.

Page 29: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids
Page 30: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Page 645, Problem 49 An initial mixture of nitrogen gas and hydrogen gas is reacted in a rigid container at a certain temperature by the reaction

3 H2(g) + N2(g) 2 NH3(g)

At equilibrium, the concentrations are [H2] = 5.0 M, [N2] = 8.0 M, and [NH3] = 4.0 M. What were the concentrations, in mol L−1, of nitrogen gas and hydrogen gas that were reacted initially?

Page 31: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids
Page 32: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Connection to Thermochemistry (Chapter 17 revisited)

The equilibrium position represents the lowest free energy value available to a particular reaction system.

ΔG = ΔG° + RT ln Q

At equilibrium, ΔG = 0 and Q = K.

ΔG° = − RT ln K

Page 33: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Connection to Thermochemistry

Page 34: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Conventional Definitions of Standard States!(Page 265)!•  The standard state of a gaseous substance is a

pressure of exactly 1 atm.!

•  For a substance present in a solution, the standard state is a concentration of exactly 1 M.!

Page 35: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

•  Amount of NH3 present at equilibrium is favored by conditions of low T and high P .!

•  At low T, reaction is too slow to be feasible.!

N2(g) + 3 H2(g) 2 NH3(g) ΔH° = − 92.6 kJ

Page 36: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

We must study both the thermodynamics and the kinetics of a reaction before we really understand the factors that control it.!

N2(g) + 3 H2(g) 2 NH3(g) ΔH° = − 92.6 kJ

Page 37: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Le Châtelier’s Principle!

If a change is imposed on a system at equilibrium, the position of the equilibrium will shift in a direction that tends to reduce that change.!

Page 38: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Le Châtelier’s Principle!

I.  ΔConcentration: Adding or Removing a Component

If a component (reactant or product) is added to a reaction system at equilibrium (at constant T and P or constant T and V), the equilibrium position will shift in the direction that lowers [that component].

Page 39: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

N2(g) + 3 H2(g) 2 NH3(g)

Page 40: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Example 13.13, page 635 Arsenic can be extracted from its ores by first reacting the ore with oxygen (called roasting) to form solid As4O6, which is then reduced using carbon:

As4O6(s) + 6 C(s) As4(g) + 6 CO(g)

Predict the direction of the shift in the equilibrium position in response to each of the following changes in conditions.

(a) Addition of carbon monoxide.

Page 41: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Example 13.13, page 635 Arsenic can be extracted from its ores by first reacting the ore with oxygen (called roasting) to form solid As4O6, which is then reduced using carbon:

As4O6(s) + 6 C(s) As4(g) + 6 CO(g)

Predict the direction of the shift in the equilibrium position in response to each of the following changes in conditions.

(b) Removal of carbon

Page 42: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Example 13.13, page 635 Arsenic can be extracted from its ores by first reacting the ore with oxygen (called roasting) to form solid As4O6, which is then reduced using carbon:

As4O6(s) + 6 C(s) As4(g) + 6 CO(g)

Predict the direction of the shift in the equilibrium position in response to each of the following changes in conditions.

(c) Removal of As4(g)

Page 43: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Le Châtelier’s Principle!

II.  Changes in Pressure and Volume

•  The addition of an inert gas increases the total pressure but has no effect on the concentrations or partial pressures of the reactants or products.

•  When the volume of the container holding a gaseous system is reduced, the system responds by reducing its own volume. This is done by decreasing the total number of gaseous molecules in the system.

Page 44: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

2 NO2(g) N2O4(g) brown colorless!

(a) Brown NO2(g) and colorless N2O4(g) in equilibrium in a syringe. (b) The volume is suddenly decreased, giving the greater concentration of both N2O4 and NO2 (indicated by the darker brown color). (c) A few seconds after the sudden volume decrease, the color is much lighter brown as the equilibrium shifts the brown NO2(g) to colorless N2O4(g) as predicted by Le Châtelier’s principle, since in the equilibrium shown above the product side has the smaller number of molecules.

Page 45: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

N2(g) + 3 H2(g) 2 NH3(g)

Page 46: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Example 13.14, page 637 Predict the shift in equilibrium position that will occur for each of the following processes when the volume is reduced.

The preparation of liquid phosphorus trichloride by the reaction

P4(s) + 6 Cl2(g) 4 PCl3(ℓ)

Page 47: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Example 13.14, page 637 Predict the shift in equilibrium position that will occur for each of the following processes when the volume is reduced.

The preparation of gaseous phosphorus pentachloride according to the equation

PCl3(g) + Cl2(g) PCl5(g)

Page 48: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Example 13.14, page 637 Predict the shift in equilibrium position that will occur for each of the following processes when the volume is reduced.

The reaction of phosphorus trichloride with ammonia:

PCl3(g) + 3 NH3(g) P(NH2)3(g) + 3 HCl(g)

Page 49: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Le Châtelier’s Principle!

III.  Change in Temperature

Opening remarks:

•  Previously discussed changes may alter the equilibrium position, but they DO NOT alter the equilibrium constant.

•  However, the value of K changes with temperature.

•  Le Châtelier’s Principle does not predict the size of ΔK, but it does correctly predict the direction of the change.

Page 50: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Le Châtelier’s Principle!

III.  Change in Temperature

•  Increase in T favors the endothermic direction.

•  Decrease in T favors the exothermic direction.

Alternate method:

①  Treat energy as a reactant (endothermic) or product (exothermic).

②  Predict shift in the same way as when an actual reactant or product is added or removed.

Page 51: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

100°C 0°C!

N2O4(g) 2 NO2(g) ΔH° = 58 kJ colorless brown!

Page 52: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

Example 13.15, page 639 For each of the following reactions, predict how the value of K changes as the temperature is increased.

(a)  N2(g) + O2(g) 2 NO(g) ΔH° = 181 kJ

(b)  2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g) ΔH° = − 198 kJ

Page 53: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids

The End

Page 54: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids
Page 55: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids
Page 56: Chp13 Equilibrium Lecture student - stjohns-chs.orgChemical Equilibrium: An Introduction! a A + b B c C + d D Equilibrium expression:! € K= [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b! Solids and pure liquids