Chemistry 10: Equilibrium—General A. The Equilibrium State (15.1 to 15.6) 1. N2O4(g) 2 NO2(g) a. reversible because reactants and products are confined in same state and Ea ≈ Ea’ b. reaction rates change as [R] and [P] change until ratef = kf[N2O4] = rater = kr[NO2]2 EQUAL REACTION RATES NOT CONCENTRATIONS c. law of mass action: 1. K = kf/kr = [NO2]2/[N2O4] 2. K = [Products]/[Reactants] 3. liquid and solid are not included in expression because [ ] can’t change (part of K) 4. same as “Q” in Nernst equation 2. equilibrium constant, K a. unit-less quantity b. independent of original concentrations c. depends on temperature d. Kc vs. Kp for gaseous systems 1. concentration in mol/L, then Kc 2. concentration in atm, then Kp 3. Kp = Kc x (RT)n(gas)—R = 0.0821 e. size of K and the reactant/product balance 1. large K, means [products] > [reactants] 2. small K, means [products] < [reactants] f. if reaction is written backwards, then: K' = K-1 g. if coefficient x factor "n", then K’' = Kn h. combining reactions to form a new equilibrium 2 NOBr(g) 2 NO(g) + Br2(g) K1 Br2(g) + Cl2(g) 2 BrCl(g) K2 2 NOBr(g) + Cl2(g) 2 NO(g) + 2 BrCl(g) K1 x K2 i. K, Go and Eo 1. equilibrium: G = E = 0, but Go and Eo 0 2. "o" [ ] = 1 M and P = 1 atm (not always 298 K) 3. Go = -RTlnK and Eo = (RT/nF)lnK (R = 8.31, T in K, n = moles e-, F = 96,500) 4. when K > 1, then Go < 0, and Eo > 0 3. equilibrium problems a. determine direction ( or from [ ]o substitute [ ]o into equilibrium expression = Q if Q > K, then , if Q < K, then b. determine K, given [ ]E write expression from equation substitute [ ]E, solve for K c. determine K, given [ ]o and one [ ]E set up an "ICE Box" (shaded boxes are given) o I is initial concentration o C is change in concentration o E is equilibrium concentration [] A + 2B C + 3D [A]o [B]o [C]o [D]o I C -x -2x [C]E – [C]o = x 3x E [A]o - x [B]o – 2x [C]E [D]o + 3x write expression from balanced equation substitute [ ]E , solve for K d. determine one [ ]E, given other [ ]E and K write expression from equation substitute given [ ]E and K, solve for missing [ ]E Name __________________________ e. B. determine [ ]E, given [ ]o and K set up an "ICE Box" (shaded boxes are given) [] A + 2B C + 3D [A]o [B]o [C]o [D]o I -x -2x +x +3x C [A]o – x [B]o – 2x [C]o + x [D]o + 3x E write expression from balanced equation substitute [ ]E and K, solve for x substitute x back into formulas solve for [ ]E Le Chatelier's Principle (15.7) 1. when a system at equilibrium is disturbed, the system shifts ( or ) to minimize the disturbance 2. determine response using Le Chatelier’s principle a. adding reactant or product: system shifts away from added species (K is unchanged) 1. increase [R]: Q < K shifts to the right a. increase [ ]E of products + added reactant b. decrease [ ]E of other reactants b. c. d. e. c. example: 3 H2(g) + N2(g) 2 NH3(g) 2. increase [P]: Q > K shifts to the left removing reactant or product: system, shifts toward removed species (K is unchanged) 1. decrease [R]: Q > K shifts to the left 2. decrease [P]: Q < K shifts to the right change temperature: system shifts to restore equilibrium temperature (K changes) 1. increase T: initial rateendo > initial rateexo (shifts toward +H or away from –H) 2. decrease T: initial rateendo < initial rateexo (shifts toward –H or away from +H) 3. predict change in K a. shifts to the right K increased b. shift to the left K decreased change volume of the container: system shifts to restore equilibrium [ ]gases (K is unchanged) 1. ngas reactant > ngas product a. increase V decreases [ ]gases: Q > K shifts to the left (toward more gas) b. decrease V increases [ ]gases: Q < K shifts to the right (toward less gas) 2. ngas reactant < ngas product a. increase V decreases [ ]gases: Q < K shifts to the right (toward more gas) b. decrease V increases [ ]gases: Q > K shifts to the left (toward less gas) 3. ngas reactants = ngas product: Q = K system is unresponsive adding species that are neither reactants or products has no effect on equilibrium 1. catalyst (affect both rates equally) 2. inert substances ([ ] and T are unaffected) c. Experiments 1. Equilibrium Constant Lab—Mix reactants, measure the color of the equilibrium state to determine the equilibrium concentrations and calculate Kc. Fill each of five cuvette tubes with the number of drops of 0.00200 M Fe(NO3)3 in 1 M HNO3, 0.00200 M KSCN, and distilled water listed in the table below. Cuvette 1 2 3 4 5 drops H2O 32 24 16 8 0 drops Fe(NO3)3 40 40 40 40 40 drops KSCN 8 16 24 32 40 Mix each solution by placing the rubber dam over the cuvette mouth and turning the tube upside down. Measure the absorbance (Abs) using the spectrophotometer. a. Determine [Fe3+]o, [SCN-]o, and [FeSCN2+]E. [Fe3+]o x 10-3 [SCN-]o x 10-3 2 x (# d/80) mean absolute average % 2. [FeSCN2+]E x 10-3 Abs (447 nm) 0.11 x Abs 1 2 3 1.00 4 5 b. Complete the "ICE" Boxes to determine [Fe3+]E and [SCN-]E. Calculate Kc for each cuvette. [] Fe3+ + SCN FeSCN2+ I C 1 E Kc I Le Chatelier's Principle Lab—Predict how stress will shift the following equilibrium based on Le Chatelier's Principle and compare the prediction to the observed changes. Co(H2O)62+(aq) + 4 Cl-(aq) CoCl4-(aq) + 6 H2O(aq) pink blue a. The equilibrium system is endothermic. Predict how the system will respond to the following stress in terms of color change. Color Add Add Add Remove Change ClH2O Heat Heat Pink (shift to the left) Blue (shift to the right) b. Perform the procedure step. Indicate the color shift (toward pink = shift to the left or toward blue = shift to the right). Justify your observations using Le Chatelier's Principle. Procedure Match Color Shift (Start with 20 drops) Prediction? Add 10 drops of 12 M HCl and note the color shift. Add 10 drops of H2O and note the color shift Place the tube in boiling hot water for 30 s and note the color shift. Place the tube in ice cold water for 30 s and note the color shift. Practice Problems C 2 E Determine the % deviation between the five cuvettes by completing the chart. 1 2 3 4 5 Kc 1. A. The Equilibrium State Write equilibrium expressions for the following gas systems. Kc 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g) I Ni(s) + 4 CO(g) Ni(CO)4(g) C 4 NH3(g) + 7 O2(g) 4 NO2(g) + 6 H2O(g) 3 E Kc I C 4 E Kc I C 5 E Kc 2. The following represents the equilibrium: A B. Initially the container (on the left) holds pure A. Each frame represents 1 minute of time. 0 min 1 min 2 min 3 min 4 min A A A A A B A B A B A A A B B A A A B A B A B B A A A A A A A A B A B A B B B A A A A A B A A B B B a. At what time does the system reach equilibrium? b. Calculate the equilibrium constant, K. 3. The following results were collected for the equilibrium: 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g) for different initial [ ]o. Experiment 1 Experiment 2 [ ]o [] [ ]o [] 2.00 M 1.50 M 0.500 M 0.590 M SO2 1.50 M 1.25 M 0M 0.0450 M O2 3.00 M 3.50 M 0.350 M 0.260 M SO3 a. Write the equilibrium expression for the reaction 8. b. 9. 4. b. Calculate K for experiment 1. c. Calculate K for experiment 2. For the reaction: N2(g) + 3 F2(g) 2 NF3(g) at equilibrium, PN2 = 0.021 atm, PF2 = 0.063 atm and PNF3 = 0.48 atm. a. Calculate Kp. b. 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g) Calculate Kc for a. SO3(g) SO2(g) + ½ O2(g) Kc = 56 4 SO2(g) + 2 O2(g) 4 SO3(g) Given the following data at 25oC 2 NO(g) N2(g) + O2(g) Kc = 1 x 1030 2 NO(g) + Br2(g) 2 NOBr(g) Kc = 2 x 103 Calculate Kc for the reaction: N2(g) + O2(g) + Br2(g) 2 NOBr(g) 10. Given: H2(g) + S(s) H2S(g) Kc = 1.0 x 10-3 S(s) + O2(g) SO2(g) Kc = 5.0 x 106 calculate Kc for the reaction: H2(g) + SO2(g) H2S(g) + O2(g). Determine the equilibrium concentrations of N2, F2 and NF3 in mol/L at 25oC. 11. c. Calculate Kc. a. 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g) What is Go? b. What is Eo? 12. Calculate Kp using the equation, KP = Kc x (RT)ng. d. Cl2(g) 2 Cl(g) Calculate Go for the above reaction. Kpo is 1.0 x 10-37 Kpo = 2.3 5. The following represents the system reaching equilibrium. A2(g) + B(g) A2B(g) AA B AA AAB AA B AA B AA 6. B AAB B AAB AAB a. Calculate Kc. b. What is Kp at 25oC? b. Calculate Kp at 25oC. c. What is Go for the equilibrium at standard conditions? Given the following Kc values, calculate the corresponding values of Kp at 298 K. a. CO2(g) + H2(g) CO(g) + H2(g) Kc = 0.0431 b. 7. B AA 13. Given the following data at 25oC 2 NO(g) + Br2(g) 2 NOBr(g) Kc = 100 2 NO(g) N2(g) + O2(g) Kc = 0.50 a. What is Kc for the following equilibrium? N2(g) + O2(g) + Br2(g) 2 NOBr(g) 2 SO3(g) 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) Kc = 3.2 x 10-4 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g) Kc = 0.120 What are the equilibrium constants for the following? a. SO2(g) + ½ O2(g) SO3(g) 14. COCl2(g) CO(g) + Cl2(g) Kc = 1.0 x 10-5 What direction will the reaction proceed if 2.0 x 10-3 M COCl2, 3.3 x 10-6 M CO, and 6.6 x 10-6 M Cl2 are mixed? 15. The following represents three initial states for the system: A2 + B2 2 AB (Kc = 1.5). Indicate the direction that the system proceeds from its initial state to reach equilibrium. AB AA BB AB b. 2 SO3(g) 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) AB AB AB AB AB AA BB BB BB AB AA AA AB AA AB BB BB AA AA AB 16. a. [] I C E b. N2(g) + O2(g) 2 NO(g) Kc = 6.2 x 10-4 What is the initial direction of reaction when 0.052 mol N2, 0.0124 mol O2, and 0.0020 mol NO are added to a 5 L flask? Calculate the [H2]E, [N2]E, and [H2O]E. Calculate Kc. H2(g) + CO2(g) H2O(g) + CO(g) [H2] = 0.61 M, [CO2] = 1.6 M, [H2O] = 1.1 M and [CO] = 1.4 M. 25. The following represents the system: A2 + B A + AB. AA Calculate Kc. A AA AB 18. Br2(g) 2 Br(g) AB AB Given the equilibrium concentration: [Br2] = 0.97 M and A [Br] = 0.034 M, calculate Kc. AB Given Kp = 2, how many Bs should be added to the diagram in order to represent equilibrium? 19. A(g) B(g) + 2 C(g). Complete the chart, then calculate Kc for the equilibrium. [] A B + 2C 26. 2 BrCl(g) Br2(g) + Cl2(g) Kc = 0.040 0.75 0.0 0.0 I What is [BrCl] when [Cl 2] = [Br2] = 0.0325 M? C E 0.30 17. 27. 20. 21. SO2(g) + ½ O2(g) SO3(g) 0.012 moles of O2 and 0.027 moles of SO2 are placed in a sealed one-liter container. At equilibrium, the concentration of SO3 is 0.020 M. Calculate Kc. [] I C E 2 NOCl(g) 2 NO(g) + Cl2(g) At 220oC in a sealed flask, initial concentrations are 0.520 M NOCl, 0.010 M NO, and 0.053 M Cl2. At equilibrium is 4.23% of the NOCl is decomposed. Calculate Kc. [] I C E 2 N2O(g) + O2(g) 4 NO(g) Kc = 2.9 x 10-26 What is [NO] when [N2O] = 0.0035 M and [O2] = 0.0027 M? 28. N2(g) + 3 H2(g) 2 NH3(g) Kp = 1.5 x 10-5 At equilibrium PN2 = 0.40 atm, PH2 = 0.10 atm, what is PNH3? 29. H2(g) + I2(g) 2 HI(g) Kc = 81 What are the equilibrium concentrations of the three gases? [] H2 + I2 2 HI 0.50 0.50 0 I C E 30. 2 HI(g) H2(g) + I2(g) Kc = 0.012 [HI]o = 0.050 M, [H2]o = [I2]o = 0.100 M. What are the equilibrium concentrations of all species? [] I C E 22. 2 NO(g) + Br2(g) 2 NOBr(g) 0.100 mol NO and 0.050 mol Br2 are placed in a 1.0-L flask. At equilibrium [NOBr] = 0.060 M. Calculate Kc. [] I C E 23. H2(g) + I2(g) 2 HI(g) 31. SO2(g) + NO2(g) NO(g) + SO3(g) Kc = 85 0.200 mol H2 and 0.100 mol I2 are placed in a 2.0-L flask. At What will be the equilibrium concentrations of the four gases equilibrium, 48.0 % of the H2 is consumed. Calculate Kc. if the initial concentrations of SO2 and NO2 are 0.075 M? [] [] I I C C E E 24. 2 NO(g) + 2 H2(g) N2(g) + 2 H2O(g) The initial concentrations are 0.100 M NO, 0.050 M H2, and 0.100 M H2O. At equilibrium [NO] = 0.070 M. 32. PCl5(g) PCl3(g) + Cl2(g) Kc = 0.050 A sealed 4.0-L vessel initially contains 0.025 mol PCl5. a. What are the equilibrium concentrations of all species? [] I C E Questions 36-38 Indicate the direction ( or ) that the equilibrium system will shift in response to each disruption. 36. A(g) + 2 B(g) + Heat C(g) + D(g) Disruption Response Chemical A is added 37. b. What is the equilibrium pressure at 250oC? B. Le Chatelier's Principle 33. Determine the shift in an equilibrium system when it is stressed using Le Chatelier's principle. Condition Stress Shift (, ) Change K All Exothermic Endothermic 2 A(g) B(g) A(g) 2 B(g) A(g) B(g) Reactant Reactant Temperature is increased Volume is decreased A(g) + B(g) 2 C(g) + 3 D(g) + Heat Disruption Response Chemical A is removed Chemical C is added Temperature is decreased Volume is decreased 38. 3A(g) + Heat 2 C(g) + D(g) Disruption Response Chemical A is removed Product Chemical C is added Product Temperature is decreased Temperature Temperature Temperature Temperature Volume Volume Volume is decreased Practice Multiple Choice Briefly explain why the answer is correct in the space provided. Questions 1-10. Consider the equilibrium: 2 A(g) B(g) + C(g). 1. Which is the correct equilibrium expression? (A) K = [B][C]/[A]2 (B) K = [A]2/[B][C] (C) K = [B][C] – [A] (D) K = [A]2 + [B][C] Volume Volume Volume 2. Calculate Kc at 25oC given the equilibrium concentrations: [A] = 0.50 M, [B] = 1.0 M, and [C] = 4.0 M. (A) 8.0 (B) 0.013 (C) 200 (D) 16 3. Calculate Kp for the equilibrium at 25oC. (A) 4.5 (B) 2000 (C) 8.0 (D) 16 4. Calculate Go for the equilibrium at 25oC when all the species are at 1 atm partial pressure. (A) -(0.0821)(298)lnK (B) -(8.31)(298)lnK (C) (8.31)(298)lnK (D) -(8.31)(25)lnK 5. In another experiment 1.0 mol of B and 1.0 mol of C are placed in an evacuated 1.0-L vessel at 25oC. What is the concentration of A after equilibrium is established? (A) 0.050 M (B) 0.11 M (C) 0.22 M (D) 0.35 M 6. 1.0 M A is placed in a vessel at 100oC. At equilibrium, [C]E = 0.40 M. What is the equilibrium concentration of A? (A) 0.20 M (B) 0.55 M (C) 0.40 M (D) 0.90 M 7. What is Kc at 100oC? (A) 0.25 (B) 4.0 Volume All Add Inert Gas 34. Consider the reaction: 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g). a. What is H? (HfoSO2 = -296.8 kJ, HfoSO3 = -395.7 kJ) b. Chemical C is taken away How will each shift the equilibrium and change K? Change Equilibrium shift Change K Add O2 Remove SO3 Increase V Add He(g) Increase T 35. The following represents the system: A2 + B A + AB at 300 K (left side) and 500 K (right side). Is this an exothermic or endothermic process? Explain your reasoning. 300 K 500 K B A B AB AB AB AB A AA A AB AA AA A AA AB AB B AB B (C) 16 (D) 2.0 8. Which of the following is correct concerning this equilibrium? (A) The forward reaction is exothermic because raising temperature favors the exothermic reaction. (B) The forward reaction is endothermic because raising temperature favors the exothermic reaction. (C) The forward reaction is exothermic because raising temperature favors the endothermic reaction. (D) The forward reaction is endothermic because raising temperature favors the endothermic reaction. 17. 2 SO3(g) 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) After equilibrium is established, some pure O2(g) is injected into the reaction vessel at constant temperature. After equilibrium is reestablished, which of the following has a lower value compared to its original equilibrium value? (A) Keq for the reaction (B) The amount of SO3(g) in the reaction vessel (C) The amount of O2(g) in the reaction vessel (D) The amount of SO2(g) in the reaction vessel 9. Which is correct concerning this equilibrium? (A) Increase [A] shifts the equilibrium to the left. (B) Increase [B] shifts the equilibrium to the right. (C) Decrease [C] shifts the equilibrium to the left. (D) Increasing the volume has no effect on the equilibrium. 18. 2 NO(g) + O2(g) 2 NO2(g) H < 0 Which of the following changes alone would cause a decrease in the value of Keq for the reaction above? (A) Decreasing the temperature (B) Increasing the temperature (C) Decreasing the volume of the reaction vessel (D) Increasing the volume of the reaction vessel 19. 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g) When 0.40 mole of SO2 and 0.60 mole of O2 are placed in an evacuated 1.00 L flask. After reaching equilibrium the flask contains 0.30 mole of SO3. Kc, is (A) (0.30)2/(0.45)(0.10)2 (B) (0.30)2/(0.60)(0.40)2 (C) (0.60)/(0.45)(0.20) (D) (0.30)/(0.45)(0.10) 10. What is Kc at 25oC for the equilibrium A(g) ½ B(g) + ½ C(g)? (A) 4.0 (B) 0.063 (C) 8.0 (D) 260 11. Which must be true for an equilibrium initially at standard state that proceeds spontaneously in the forward direction? (A) Go > 0 and Keq > 1 (B) Go > 0 and Keq < 1 (C) Go < 0 and Keq > 1 (D) Go < 0 and Keq < 1 12. The equilibrium constant for a reaction is 200. What is K for the reverse reaction at the same temperature? (A) -200 (B) -0.005 (C) 0.002 (D) 0.005 13. 14. 4 HCI(g) + O2(g) 2 Cl2(g) + 2 H2O(g) Equal moles of HCI and O2 are added to an evacuated vessel. Which must be true for the system at equilibrium? (A) [HCI] < [Cl2] (B) [HCI] > [Cl2] (C) [HCl] > [O2]. (D) [Cl2] = [H2O] Cu + 2 Ag+ Cu2+ + 2 Ag If the equilibrium constant is 3.7 x 1015, which of the following correctly describes the standard voltage, Eo, and the standard free energy change, Go, for this reaction? (A) Eo > 0 and Go < 0 (B) Eo < 0 and Go > 0 o o (C) E > 0 and G > 0 (D) Eo < 0 and Go < 0 15. For the reaction A(g) B(g) + C(g), Kp, = 2 x 10-4 at 25oC. A mixture of the three gases at 25oC is placed in a flask and the initial pressures are PA = 2 atm, PB = 0.5 atm, and PC = 1 atm. Which is true at the instant of mixing? (A) G < 0 (B) G > 0 (C) S = 0 (D) Go = 0 16. CuO + H2(g) Cu + H2O H = -2.0 kJ The equilibrium can be shifted to favor the products by (A) increasing the volume at constant temperature. (B) increasing the pressure by adding an inert gas. (C) decreasing the temperature. (D) releasing H2(g) at constant pressure and temperature. Practice Free Response 1. Given: 2 NO(g) + Br2(g) 2 NOBr(g) Kc = 2.0 2 NO(g) N2(g) + O2(g) Kc = 2.1 x 1030 What is Kc for the following equilibrium? N2(g) + O2(g) + Br2(g) 2 NOBr(g) 2. The equilibrium constant for the reaction is Kc = 2.19 x 10-10. COCl2(g) CO(g) + Cl2(g) Is a mixture containing 2.0 x 10-3 M COCl2, 3.3 x 10-6 M CO, and 6.6 x 10-6 M Cl2 at equilibrium? If not, what direction will the reaction proceed to achieve equilibrium? 3. Consider the equilibrium at 25oC: A(g) + B(g) 2 C(g). a. Write the equilibrium expression for this equilibrium. b. Calculate Kc at 25oC given [A]E = 0.025 M, [B]E = 0.100 M, and [C]E = 0.500 M. c. Calculate Kp for the equilibrium at 25oC. d. State which direction the equilibrium will shift (, ) to relieve the following stresses on the system. Increase V Increase P Increase [A] e. What is Kc at 25oC for C(g) ½ A(g) + ½ B(g)? f. Calculate Go for the equilibrium at 25oC when all the species are at 1 atm partial pressure. g. In another experiment 1.00 mol of A and 1.00 mol of B are placed in an evacuated 1.00-L vessel at 25oC. What are the concentrations of the three gases after equilibrium is established? 6. [] I C E h. [] I C E i. j. Answer the following questions regarding the decomposition of arsenic pentafluoride, AsF5(g). a. A 55.8 g sample of AsF5(g) is introduced into an evacuated 10.5 L container at 105oC. (1) What is the initial molar concentration of AsF5(g)? (2) What is the initial pressure, in atmospheres, of the AsF5(g) in the container? A mixture of 1.00 M A and 0.50 M B are placed in a vessel at 100oC. At equilibrium, [C] = 0.90 M. What are the equilibrium concentrations of A and B? At 105oC, AsF5(g) decomposes into AsF3(g) and F2(g) according to the following chemical equation. AsF5(g) AsF3(g) + F2(g) b. In terms of molar concentrations, write the equilibriumconstant expression for the decomposition of AsF5(g). What is Kc at 100oC? c. Is the forward reaction endothermic or exothermic. Explain your reasoning. When equilibrium is established, 27.7 percent of the original number of moles of AsF5(g) has decomposed. (1) Calculate the molar concentration of AsF5(g) at equilibrium. (2) 4. 5. N2(g) + 3 H2(g) 2 NH3(g) Kp = 1.45 x 10-5 What is the partial pressure of NH3 if the partial pressures of N2 and H2 are 0.432 atm and 0.928 atm respectively? H2(g) + CO2(g) H2O(g) + CO(g) When H2 is mixed with CO2 at 2,000 K, equilibrium is achieved according to the equation. In one experiment, the following equilibrium concentrations were measured. [H2] = 0.20 M, [CO2] = 0.30 M, [H2O] = [CO] = 0.55 M a. Calculate the value of Kc. Consider bromine chloride. It is formed by the reaction between red-orange bromine vapor and yellow chlorine gas; BrCl is itself a gas. The reaction is endothermic. a. Write the chemical equation for the formation of BrCl, using simplest whole-number coefficients. Write the equilibrium expression for Kc. When the system is cooled to a lower temperature, 30.0 percent of the CO is converted back to CO2. (1) Calculate the change in [CO] c. At 400oC, after the reaction reached equilibrium, the mixture contained 0.82 M BrCl, 0.20 M Br2 and 0.48 M Cl2. Calculate Kc for the reaction. (2) Calculate Kc at this lower temperature. d. What is Kp at 400oC? e. Initially, a 2.00-L flask contains Cl2 with partial pressure 0.51 atm and Br2 with partial pressure 0.34 atm. After equilibrium is established, the partial pressure of BrCl is 0.46 atm. Calculate the equilibrium pressures of Cl2 and Br2. f. Initially, a 1.00-L flask contains 0.15 mol of each gas. What are the equilibrium concentrations of each gas at 400oC? Determine Kp in terms of Kc for this system. c. [] I C E In a different experiment, 0.500 mole of H2 is mixed with 0.500 mole of CO2 in a 3.00-liter vessel at 2,000 K. (1) Calculate the initial concentration of H2 and CO2. (2) Calculate the equilibrium concentrations. [] I C E 7. Calculate the mole fraction of F2(g) in the container at equilibrium. b. b. d. d. Using molar concentrations, calculate the value of the equilibrium constant, Keq, at 105oC. g. In what direction will the system shift if at equilibrium? the volume is increased? helium gas is added? the temperature is increased?