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This reasoning reveals that the amounts of
reactant and product present at equilibrium are determined by therates of the forward and reverse reactions. If the rate of theforward reaction (
It was noted above that the equilibrium partial pressures of the gases in a reaction vary depending upon avariety of conditions. These include changes in the initial numbers of moles of reactants and products, changes in the volume of thereaction flask, and changes in the temperature. We now study these variations quantitatively.
Consider first the reaction here . Following on our previous study of this reaction, we inject an initial amount of into a 100L reaction flask at 298K. Now, however, we vary the initial number of moles of in the flask and measure the equilibrium pressures of both the reactant and product gases. The results of a number of such studiesare given here .
Initial | (atm) | (atm) |
---|---|---|
0.1 | 0.00764 | 0.033627 |
0.5 | 0.071011 | 0.102517 |
1 | 0.166136 | 0.156806 |
1.5 | 0.26735 | 0.198917 |
2 | 0.371791 | 0.234574 |
2.5 | 0.478315 | 0.266065 |
3 | 0.586327 | 0.294578 |
3.5 | 0.695472 | 0.320827 |
4 | 0.805517 | 0.345277 |
4.5 | 0.916297 | 0.368255 |
5 | 1.027695 | 0.389998 |
We might have expected that the amount of produced at equilibrium would increase in direct proportion to increases in the amount of we begin with. shows that this is not the case. Note that when we increase the initial amountof by a factor of 10 from 0.5 moles to 5.0 moles, the pressure of at equilibrium increases by a factor of less than 4.
The relationship between the pressures at equilibrium and the initial amount of is perhaps more easily seen in a graph of the data in , as shown in . There are some interesting features here. Note that, when the initial amount of is less than 1 mol, the equilibrium pressure of is greater than that of . These relative pressures reverse as the initial amount increases,as the equilibrium pressure keeps track with the initial amount but the pressure falls short. Clearly, the equilibrium pressure of does not increase proportionally with the initial amount of . In fact, the increase is slower than proportionality, suggestingperhaps a square root relationship between the pressure of and the initial amount of .
We test this in by plotting at equilibrium versus the square root of the initial number of moles of . makes it clear that this is not a simple proportional relationship, but it is closer. Note in that the equilibrium pressure increases close to proportionally with the initial amount of . This suggests plotting versus the square root of . This is done in , where we discover that there is a very simple proportional relationshipbetween the variables plotted in this way. We have thus observed that
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