What will be the equilibrium constant at #127^circC#, if #K# at #27^circC# is #4# for reaction #N_2+3H_2->2NH_3#; #DeltaH=-46.06kJcolor(white)(l)mol^(-1)#?

1 Answer
Dec 11, 2017

We're looking to relate two sets of conditions with a measure activity that is dependent on those conditions. With this equation,

#ln(K_1/K_2) = (DeltaH)/R(1/T_2 - 1/T_1)#

we'll do just that.

A few common mistakes are (i) not using absolute temperature, and (ii) using the wrong gas constant. The new equilibrium constant is,

#ln(4) - ln(K_2) = ((-46.06kJ)/(mol) * (10^3J)/(kJ))/((8.314J)/(mol*K))(1/(400K) - 1/(300K))#
#therefore K_(127°C) approx 4.0*10^-2#

This may seem counterintuitive, since activity is generally directly proportional to temperature in a chemical system. However, the rate forward won't increase as much when the system is exothermic. Hence, this is likely the answer.