JoVE Logo

Accedi

2.5 : Chemical Equilibria: Redefining Equilibrium Constant

The effect of an inert salt on the solubility of a sparingly soluble salt is known as the salt effect. The degree of the salt effect varies with the ionic strength of the solution, which in turn depends on the activity of the species in the solution. The activity is expressed as the product of concentration and the activity coefficient of the species.

To calculate the equilibrium constants of solutions of moderately high ionic strength, one must account for the salt effect. This redefined equilibrium constant is also called the thermodynamic equilibrium constant or standard equilibrium constant, as it expresses the Gibbs energy change of the process. The thermodynamic equilibrium constant incorporates the ionic strength of the solution.

In solutions of low ionic strength (nearly an ideal solution), the activity coefficient is close to 1. Thus, the thermodynamic equilibrium constant is approximately equal to the concentration equilibrium constant.

The activity coefficient corrections are often ignored to simplify the experimental calculations of equilibrium constants. This approximation is valid for dilute solutions containing singly charged ions or non-dissociating species with ionic strengths lower than 0.01 mol/L. Activity coefficient corrections become more critical for solutions with ionic strengths greater than 0.01 mol/L or of multiply charged ions. Ignoring the activity coefficient in such cases results in significant errors in calculations.

Tags

Chemical EquilibriaEquilibrium ConstantInert SaltSalt EffectIonic StrengthActivity CoefficientThermodynamic Equilibrium ConstantGibbs Energy ChangeIdeal SolutionDilute SolutionsSingly Charged IonsNon dissociating SpeciesMultiply Charged Ions

Dal capitolo 2:

article

Now Playing

2.5 : Chemical Equilibria: Redefining Equilibrium Constant

Chemical Equilibria

515 Visualizzazioni

article

2.1 : Ionic Strength: Overview

Chemical Equilibria

1.2K Visualizzazioni

article

2.2 : Ionic Strength: Effects on Chemical Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

1.3K Visualizzazioni

article

2.3 : Thermodynamics: Chemical Potential and Activity

Chemical Equilibria

856 Visualizzazioni

article

2.4 : Thermodynamics: Activity Coefficient

Chemical Equilibria

1.3K Visualizzazioni

article

2.6 : Factors Affecting Activity Coefficient

Chemical Equilibria

722 Visualizzazioni

article

2.7 : Chemical Equilibria: Systematic Approach to Equilibrium Calculations

Chemical Equilibria

621 Visualizzazioni

article

2.8 : Acid–Base Equilibria: Activity-Based Definition of pH

Chemical Equilibria

531 Visualizzazioni

article

2.9 : Ladder Diagrams: Acid–Base Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

437 Visualizzazioni

article

2.10 : Ladder Diagrams: Redox Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

418 Visualizzazioni

article

2.11 : Ladder Diagrams: Complexation Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

310 Visualizzazioni

article

2.12 : Solubility Equilibria: Overview

Chemical Equilibria

584 Visualizzazioni

article

2.13 : Solubility Equilibria: Ionic Product of Water

Chemical Equilibria

924 Visualizzazioni

article

2.14 : Complexation Equilibria: Overview

Chemical Equilibria

603 Visualizzazioni

article

2.15 : Complexation Equilibria: The Chelate Effect

Chemical Equilibria

425 Visualizzazioni

See More

JoVE Logo

Riservatezza

Condizioni di utilizzo

Politiche

Ricerca

Didattica

CHI SIAMO

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tutti i diritti riservati