How do you solve this chemistry question? Consider the following reaction at 298 K.
Consider the following reaction at 298 K.
2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g)
An equilibrium mixture contains O2(g) and SO3(g) at partial pressures of 0.50 atm and 2.0 atm, respectively. Using data from Appendix 4, determine the equilibrium partial pressure of SO2 in the mixture.
In the appendix I have the following:
SO2(g)
ΔG(f)= -300kJ/mol
O2(g)
ΔG(f)= 0kJ/mol
SO3(g)
ΔG(f)= -371kJ/mol
Consider the following reaction at 298 K.
2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g)
An equilibrium mixture contains O2(g) and SO3(g) at partial pressures of 0.50 atm and 2.0 atm, respectively. Using data from Appendix 4, determine the equilibrium partial pressure of SO2 in the mixture.
In the appendix I have the following:
SO2(g)
ΔG(f)= -300kJ/mol
O2(g)
ΔG(f)= 0kJ/mol
SO3(g)
ΔG(f)= -371kJ/mol
1 Answer
You can do it like this:
Explanation:
For which:
If we find the standard free energy change
The relationship between
At equilibrium
We can find
This is such a large number that we can infer that the position of equilibrium is so far to the right that the equilibrium partial pressure of
To test this you could put the numbers into the expression for