Factors Affecting Chemical Equilibrium

🔥 Key NEET Concepts

  • Le Chatelier’s Principle applications
  • ΔG° = -RT ln K relationship
  • Pressure effects on gas equilibria
  • Temperature vs. equilibrium constant
  • Catalyst role in equilibrium

⚖️ Le Chatelier’s Principle

When equilibrium is disturbed, the system counteracts the change:

  • Added reactant? → Reaction consumes it (shifts forward)
  • Removed product? → Reaction makes more (shifts forward)

Example for H₂ + I₂ ⇌ 2HI:
Adding H₂ makes \( Q_c = \frac{[HI]^2}{[H_2][I_2]} < K_c \) → Forward shift ✅

🎚️ Concentration Changes

Industrial applications:

  • Ammonia synthesis: Remove NH₃(liquid) → Forward shift
  • CaO production: CaCO₃(s) → CaO(s) + CO₂(g) → Remove CO₂ → Completes reaction

Experiment: Fe³⁺(aq) + SCN⁻(aq) ⇌ [Fe(SCN)]²⁺(aq) (red)
→ Add oxalic acid: Removes Fe³⁺ → Less red (reverse shift)
→ Add HgCl₂: Removes SCN⁻ → Less red
→ Add KSCN: More SCN⁻ → Deeper red (forward shift) 🔴

📦 Pressure Changes (Gas Reactions Only)

Matters when reactant & product gas moles differ:

  • Increase pressure? → Shifts to side with fewer gas moles
  • Decrease pressure? → Shifts to side with more gas moles

Example 1: CO(g) + 3H₂(g) ⇌ CH₄(g) + H₂O(g) (4 mol → 2 mol)
↑ Pressure → Forward shift ✅

Example 2: C(s) + CO₂(g) ⇌ 2CO(g) (1 mol → 2 mol)
↑ Pressure → Reverse shift ⬅️

🌡️ Temperature Changes

Changes the equilibrium constant K:

  • Exothermic (ΔH < 0): ↑ Temp → ↓ K ← Favors reverse reaction
  • Endothermic (ΔH > 0): ↑ Temp → ↑ K ← Favors forward reaction

Experiment 1: 2NO₂(brown) ⇌ N₂O₄(colorless) ΔH = -57.2 kJ/mol
→ Cool (270K): More colorless N₂O₄
→ Heat (363K): More brown NO₂ ☕

Experiment 2: [Co(H₂O)₆]³⁺(pink) + 4Cl⁻ ⇌ [CoCl₄]²⁻(blue) ΔH > 0
→ Cool: Turns pink (reverse shift) 💧

⚡ Effect of Catalyst

Speeds up both forward/reverse reactions equally
No change in equilibrium position!
Just helps reach equilibrium faster ⏩
Example: Fe catalyst in NH₃ synthesis lets us use moderate temps (500°C)

🔋 Ionic Equilibrium

Solutions with ions conduct electricity → Electrolytes:

  • Strong electrolytes: ≈100% ionized (e.g., NaCl → Na⁺ + Cl⁻)
  • Weak electrolytes: Partial ionization (e.g., CH₃COOH ⇌ CH₃COO⁻ + H⁺, <5%)