Anmelden

If a reaction has a small equilibrium constant, the equilibrium position favors the reactants. In such reactions, a negligible change in concentration may occur if the initial concentrations of reactants are high and the Kc value is small. In such circumstances, the equilibrium concentration is approximately equal to its initial concentration. This estimation can be used to simplify the equilibrium calculations by assuming that some equilibrium concentrations are equal to the initial concentrations. However, to make this assumption, the change in the concentration of a weak acid or base, i.e., x, must be less than 5% of its initial concentration. If x is more than 5%, then the quadratic formula needs to be used to solve the equilibrium equation.

Calculation of Equilibrium Concentrations Using an Algebra-Simplifying Assumption

What are the concentrations at equilibrium of a 0.15 M solution of HCN?

Eq1

Using x to represent the concentration of each product at equilibrium gives this ICE table.

HCN (aq) H+ (aq) CN(aq)
Initial Concentration (M) 0.15 0 0
Change (M) −x +x +x
Equilibrium Concentration (M) 0.15 − x x x

Substitute the equilibrium concentration terms into the Kc expression

Eq2

rearrange to the quadratic form and solve for x

Eq3

Thus, [H+] = [CN] = x = 8.6 × 10–6 M and [HCN] = 0.15 – x = 0.15 M.

Note in this case that the change in concentration is significantly less than the initial concentration (a consequence of the small K), and so the initial concentration experiences a negligible change:

Eq4

This approximation allows for a more expedient mathematical approach to the calculation that avoids the need to solve for the roots of a quadratic equation:

Eq5

The value of x calculated is, indeed, much less than the initial concentration

Eq6

and so the approximation was justified. If this simplified approach were to yield a value for x that did not justify the approximation, the calculation would need to be repeated without making the approximation.

This text has been adapted from Openstax, Chemistry 2e, Section 13.4 Equilibrium Calculations.

Tags
Small X AssumptionEquilibrium ExpressionQuadratic FormulaEquilibrium ConstantInitial ConcentrationsReactantsProductsApproximationChange In ConcentrationICE TableCarbonyl DichlorideCarbon MonoxideChlorine Gas

Aus Kapitel 14:

article

Now Playing

14.10 : The Small x Assumption

Chemisches Gleichgewicht

45.3K Ansichten

article

14.1 : Fließgleichgewicht

Chemisches Gleichgewicht

48.2K Ansichten

article

14.2 : Die Gleichgewichtskonstante

Chemisches Gleichgewicht

44.9K Ansichten

article

14.3 : Homogene Gleichgewichte für gasförmige Reaktionen

Chemisches Gleichgewicht

23.2K Ansichten

article

14.4 : Berechnung der Gleichgewichtskonstante

Chemisches Gleichgewicht

29.6K Ansichten

article

14.5 : Reaktionsquotient

Chemisches Gleichgewicht

47.0K Ansichten

article

14.6 : Berechnung von Gleichgewichtskonzentrationen

Chemisches Gleichgewicht

46.0K Ansichten

article

14.7 : Das Prinzip von Le Chatelier: Veränderte Konzentration

Chemisches Gleichgewicht

56.2K Ansichten

article

14.8 : Das Prinzip von Le Chatelier: Ändern des Volumens (Druck)

Chemisches Gleichgewicht

33.2K Ansichten

article

14.9 : Das Prinzip von Le Chatelier: Temperaturwechsel

Chemisches Gleichgewicht

28.1K Ansichten

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten