K_c = \frac{[C]^c [D]^d}{[A]^a [B]^b}
| Item | Key Features | Notes / Differences |
|---|---|---|
| Kc magnitude | : favors products; : favors reactants | Indicates equilibrium position |
| Effect of temperature | Endothermic: heat acts as reactant, shifts right when increased | Exothermic: heat acts as product, shifts left when increased |
| Pressure (gases) | Higher pressure favors fewer moles of gas | Only relevant for gaseous reactions |
| Catalysts | Speed up both forward and reverse reactions equally | No change in Kc or equilibrium position |
Chemical Equilibrium
├─ State of balance in reversible reactions
├─ Determined by Kc expression
├─ Influenced by:
│ ├─ Concentration changes
│ ├─ Temperature variations
│ └─ Pressure (for gases)
└─ Catalysts speed reactions but do not shift equilibrium
This revision sheet emphasizes high-yield facts, key concepts, and common pitfalls to prepare effectively for exams on chemical equilibrium.
Pon a prueba tus conocimientos sobre Understanding Chemical Equilibrium con 10 preguntas de opción múltiple con correcciones detalladas.
1. What does the equilibrium constant (Kc) indicate about a chemical reaction?
2. What does a large value of the equilibrium constant, Kc (e.g., greater than 1000), indicate about the position of equilibrium in a reaction?
Memoriza los conceptos clave de Understanding Chemical Equilibrium con 10 tarjetas de memoria interactivas.
Le Châtelier’s principle — effect?
System shifts to counteract disturbances to restore equilibrium.
Chemical equilibrium — definition?
State with constant concentrations over time.
Chemical equilibrium — definition?
State where reactant and product concentrations remain constant.
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