Hi all!
Could someone please help me with this question:
1.903 mol sulfur dioxide and 1.856 mol oxygen is placed in a 10L reaction vessel. At equilibrium 0.129 mol sulfur dioxide was left in the container. Calculate the equilibrium constant.
Could you please point me in the right direction.
Thankyou
Not sure if you have been taught this but ill explain anyways
What you do is write your equation with states and everything, for this one there all gases.
Then you split each substance into columns and you make 3 rows, which go downwards and you label it ICE.
I = Initial concentration
C = change in concentration
E = concentration at equilibrium.
For this question, note that they don't give you concentrations, they give you mol. So you do the same thing however when calculating equilibrium constant at the end, be sure to divide the mols by the 10L (volume) to make it concentration.
Initially you have 1.903 mol of sulfur dioxide and 1.856 of oxygen and 0 of sulfur trioxide.
When equilibrium is reached you have only 0.129 mol of sulfur dioxide remaining. Therefore the change of the mol of sulfur dioxide is the difference between initial and final. Once you have established the figure for the change in one of the substances, you can use the mol ratios to calculate the mol changes of other substances. For example mol ratio between sulfur dioxide and oxgen is 2:1, therefore you divide the mol change of sulfur dioxide by 2 to get oxygen. And you go on to do same for sulfur trioxide. Then equlibrium mol is just the difference between initial and change.
Then just divide the mol by the volume to get concentration and then just do it
Hope you understood