JoVE Logo

Sign In

14.3 : Homogeneous Equilibria for Gaseous Reactions

Homogeneous Equilibria for Gaseous Reactions

For gas-phase reactions, the equilibrium constant may be expressed in terms of either the molar concentrations (Kc) or partial pressures (Kp) of the reactants and products. A relation between these two K values may be simply derived from the ideal gas equation and the definition of molarity. According to the ideal gas equation:

Four-bar linkage diagram, mechanical motion transfer with rotational and translational components.

Molar concentration or molarity is given by number of moles divided by the volume:

Molecular orbital diagram for diatomic nitrogen; energy levels, electron configuration, bonding.

Thus,

Genetic code translation diagram with mRNA to amino acid sequence; includes codon chart and symbols.

where P is partial pressure, V is volume, n is number of moles, R is the gas constant, T is temperature, and M is molar concentration.

For the gas-phase reaction: m A + n B ⇌ x C + y D

Static equilibrium concept; ΣFx=0 equation; diagram; physics, force balance, educational tool.

And so, the relationship between Kc and KP is

Lewis structures of carbon dioxide (CO2) and carbonate ion (CO3^2-), chemical bonding diagram.

where Δn is the difference in the molar amounts of product and reactant gases, in this case:

Static equilibrium concept diagram, ΣFx=0, ΣFy=0, illustrating balanced forces and torques on lever.

This text has been adapted from Openstax, Chemistry 2e, Section 13.2 Equilibrium Constants.

Tags

Homogeneous EquilibriaGaseous ReactionsEquilibrium ConstantPartial PressuresMolar ConcentrationsReversible ReactionStoichiometric CoefficientsKpKcIdeal Gas EquationMolarityIndividual Partial PressuresMolar Concentration EquivalentModified Expression

From Chapter 14:

article

Now Playing

14.3 : Homogeneous Equilibria for Gaseous Reactions

Chemical Equilibrium

24.3K Views

article

14.1 : Dynamic Equilibrium

Chemical Equilibrium

49.8K Views

article

14.2 : The Equilibrium Constant

Chemical Equilibrium

46.2K Views

article

14.4 : Calculating the Equilibrium Constant

Chemical Equilibrium

30.6K Views

article

14.5 : Reaction Quotient

Chemical Equilibrium

47.8K Views

article

14.6 : Calculating Equilibrium Concentrations

Chemical Equilibrium

47.2K Views

article

14.7 : Le Chatelier's Principle: Changing Concentration

Chemical Equilibrium

57.1K Views

article

14.8 : Le Chatelier's Principle: Changing Volume (Pressure)

Chemical Equilibrium

33.8K Views

article

14.9 : Le Chatelier's Principle: Changing Temperature

Chemical Equilibrium

28.8K Views

article

14.10 : The Small x Assumption

Chemical Equilibrium

45.7K Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved