chem / reactions.mdon commit [chem] acid/base equilibria and tidy section on K_c value (d1a7749)
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   7
   8# Rates and Equilibria
   9
  10## Energy profile diagrams
  11
  12$$E_A = E_{\text{max}} - E_{\text{initial}}$$
  13
  14- Energy always needed to initiate reaction (break bonds of reactants)
  15- Reactant particles must collide at correct angle, energy etc
  16- Most collisions are not fruitful
  17- Energy must be greater than or equal to $E_A$
  18
  19**Endothermic** (products > reactants, $\Delta H > 0$)  
  20**Exothermic** (reactants > products, $\Delta H < 0$)
  21
  22![](graphics/endothermic-profile.png)
  23![](graphics/exothermic-profile.png)
  24
  25**Ways to increase rate of reaction:**
  26
  271. Increase surface area
  282. Increase concentration/pressure
  293. Increase temperature
  30
  31## Kinetic energy
  32
  33**Temperature** - measure of _avg_ kinetic energy of particles. Over time each particle will eventually have enough energy to overcome $E_A$.  
  34Note same distribution indicates same temperature.  
  35![](graphics/ke-temperature.png)
  36
  37## Catalysts
  38
  39- alternate reaction pathway, with lower $E_A$
  40- increased rate of reaction
  41- involved in reaction but regenerated at end
  42- does not alter $K_c$ or extent of reaction
  43- attracts reaction products
  44- removal/addition of catalyst does not push system out of equilibrium
  45
  46**Homogenous** catalyst: same state as reactants and products, e.g. Cl* radicals.  
  47**Hetrogenous** catalyst: different state, easily separated. Preferred for manufacturing.
  48![](graphics/catalyst-graph.png)
  49
  50Many catalysts involve transition elements.  
  51Haber process (ammonia producition) - enzymes are catalysts for one reaction each. Adsorption (bonding on surface) forms ammonia \ce{NH3}
  52
  53## Equilibrium systems
  54
  55*Equilibrium* - the stage at which quantities of reactants and products remain unchanged
  56
  57Reaction graphs - exponential/logarithmic curves for reaction rates with time (simultaneous curves forward/back)
  58
  59![](graphics/rxn-complete.png){#id .class width=20%}
  60**Complete reaction** - all reactant becomes product  
  61
  62![](graphics/rxn-incomplete.png){#id .class width=20%}
  63**Incomplete reaction** - goes both ways and reaches equilibrium  
  64
  65- All reactions are equilibrium reactions, but extent of backwards reaction may be negligible
  66- Double arrow indicates equilibrium reaction
  67- At equilibrium, rate of forward reaction = rate of back reaction.
  68
  69### States (not in course)
  70
  71- **Homogeneous** - all states are the same
  72- **Heterogeneous** - states are different
  73
  74## Equilibrium constant $K_c$
  75
  76For \ce{$\alpha$A + $\beta$B + $\dots$ <=> $\chi$X + $\psi$Y + $\dots$}:
  77
  78$$K_c = {{[\ce{X}]^\chi \cdot [\ce{Y}]^\psi \cdot \dots} \over {[\ce{A}]^\alpha \cdot [\ce{B}]^\beta \cdot \dots}}$$
  79
  80More generally, for reactants $n_i \ce{R}_i$ and products $m_i \ce{P}_i$:
  81
  82$$K_c = {{\prod\limits^{|P|}_{i=1} [P_i]^{m_i}} \over {\prod\limits^{|R|}_{i=1} [R_i]^{n_i}}} \> | \> i \in \mathbb{N}^*$$
  83
  84Indicates extent of reaction  
  85If value is high ($> 10^4$), then [products] > [reactants]  
  86If value is low ($< 10^4$), then [reactants] > [products]
  87
  88- **$K_c$ depends on direction that equation is written (L to R)**
  89- If $K_c$ is small, equilibrium lies *to the left*
  90- aka *equilibrium expression*
  91
  92## Reaction constant (quotient) $Q$
  93
  94Proportion of products/reactants at a give time (specific $K_C$). If $Q=K_c$, then reaction is at equilibrium.
  95
  96## Le Châtelier’s principle
  97
  98> Any change that affects the position of an equilibrium causes that equilibrium to shift, if possible, in such a way as to partially oppose the effect of that change.
  99
 100### Changing volume / pressure
 101
 1021. $\Delta V < 0 \implies [\Sigma \text{particles}] \uparrow$, therefore system reacts in direction that produces less particles
 1032. $\Delta V > 0 \implies [\Sigma \text{particles}] \downarrow$, therefore system reacts in direction that produces more particles
 1042. $n(\text{left}) = n(\text{right})$ (volume change does not disturb equilibrium)
 105
 106### Changing temperature
 107
 108Only method that alters $K_c$.
 109
 110Changing temperature changes kinetic energy. System's response depends on whether reaction is exothermic or endothermic.
 111
 112- Exothermic - increase temp decreases $K_c$
 113- Endothermic - increase temp increases $K_c$
 114
 115Time-concentration graph: smooth change
 116
 117### Changing concentration
 118
 119- Decreasing "total" concentration of system causes a shift towards reaction which produces more particles
 120
 121## Yield
 122
 123$$\text{yield \%} = {{\text{actual mass obtained} \over \text{theoretical maximum mass}} \times 100}$$
 124
 125## Acid/base equilibria
 126
 127Strong acid: $\ce{HA -> H+ + A-}$  
 128Weak acid: $\ce{HA <=> H+ + A-}$
 129
 130For weak acids, dilution causes increase in % ionisation.  
 131$\therefore [\ce{HA}] \propto 1 \div \text{\% ionisation}$  
 132(see 2013 exam, m.c. q20)
 133
 134$$\text{\% ionisation} = {{[\ce{H+}] \over [\ce{HA}]} \times 100}$$
 135
 136When a weak acid is diluted:
 137
 138- amount of $\ce{H3O+}$ increases
 139- equilibrium shifts right
 140- overall $[\ce{H3O+}]$ decreases
 141- therefore pH increases