At 1400 K,
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- The equilibrium constant Kc, for the reaction 2 NOCI(g) 2 NO(g) + Cl2(g) is 3.9 103 at 300 C. A mixture contains the gases at the following concentrations: [NOCl] = 5.0 103 mol/L, [NO] = 2.5 103 mol/L, and [Cl2] = 2.0 103 mol/L. Is the reaction at equilibrium at 300 C? If not, in which direction does the reaction proceed to come to equilibrium?arrow_forwardKc = 5.6 1012 at 500 K for the dissociation of iodine molecules to iodine atoms. I2(g) 2 I(g) A mixture has [I2] = 0.020 mol/Land [I] = 2.0 108 mol/L. Is the reaction at equilibrium (at 500 K)? If not, which way must the reaction proceed to reach equilibrium?arrow_forwardKc for the decomposition of ammonium hydrogen sulfide is 1.8 104 at 25 C. NH4HS(s) NH3(g) + H2S(g) (a) When the pure salt decomposes in a flask, what are the equilibrium concentrations of NH3 and H2S? (b) If NH4HS is placed in a flask already containing 0.020 mol/L of NH3 and then the system is allowed to come to equilibrium, what are the equilibrium concentrations of NH3 and H2S?arrow_forward
- Dinitrogen tetroxide, N2O4, is a colorless gas (boiling point, 21C), which dissociates to give nitrogen dioxide, NO2 a reddish brown gas. N2O4(g)2NO2(g) The equilibrium constant Kc at 25C is 0.125. What percentage of dinitrogen tetroxidc is dissociated when 0.0400 mol N2O4 is placed in a 1.00-L flask at 25C?arrow_forwardFor the equilibrium 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g) Kc = 245 (at 1000 K) the equilibrium concentrations are [SO2] = 0.102, [O2] = 0.0132, and [SO3] = 0.184. The concentration of SO2 is suddenly doubled. Show that the forward reaction takes place to reach a new equilibrium.arrow_forwardNitrosyl chloride, NOC1, decomposes to NO and Cl2 at high temperatures. 2 NOCl(g) ⇌ 2 NO(g) + Cl2(g) Suppose you place 2.00 mol NOC1 in a 1.00–L flask, seal it, and raise the temperature to 462 °C. When equilibrium has been established, 0.66 mol NO is present. Calculate the equilibrium constant Kc for the decomposition reaction from these data.arrow_forward
- A solution is prepared by dissolving 0.050 mol of diiodocyclohexane, C5H10I2, in the solvent CCl4.The total solution volume is 1.00 L When the reaction C6H10I2 C6H10 + I2 has come to equilibrium at 35 C, the concentration of I2 is 0.035 mol/L. (a) What are the concentrations of C6H10I2 and C6H10 at equilibrium? (b) Calculate Kc, the equilibrium constant.arrow_forwardThe reaction 2 NO2(g) N2O4(g) has an equilibrium constant, Kc, of 170 at 25 C. If 2.0 103 mol of NO2 is present in a 10.-L. Flask along with 1.5 103 mol of N2O4, is the system at equilibrium? If it is not at equilibrium, does the concentration of NO2 increase or decrease as the system proceeds to equilibrium?arrow_forwardHydrogen fluoride decomposes according to the following equation: 2HF(g)H2(g)+F2(g) The value of Kc at room temperature is 10 1095. From the magnitude of Kc, do you think the decomposition occurs to any great extent at room temperature? If an equilibrium mixture in a 1.0-L vessel contains 1.0 mol HF, what is the amount of H2 formed? Does this result agree with what you expect from the magnitude of Kc?arrow_forward
- Sulfuryl chloride is used in organic chemistry as a chlorinating agent. At moderately high temperatures it decomposes as follows: SO2Cl2(g)SO2(g)+Cl2(g) with Kc = 0.045 at 650 K. a A sample of 8.25 g of SO2Cl2 is placed in a 1.00-L reaction vessel and heated to 650 K. What are the equilibrium concentrations of all of the species? b What fraction of SO2Cl2 has decomposed? c If 5 g of chlorine is inserted into the reaction vessel, what qualitative effect would this have on the fraction of SO2Cl2 that has decomposed?arrow_forwardFluorine, F2, dissociates into atoms on heating. 12F2(g)F(g) The value of Kp at 842C is 7.55 102 What is the value of Kc at this temperature?arrow_forwardCalcium carbonate, CaCO3, decomposes when heated to give calcium oxide. CaO, and carbon dioxide, CO2. CaCO3(s)CaO(s)+CO2(g) Kp for this reaction at 900C is 1.040 What would be the yield of carbon dioxide (in grams) when 1.000 g of CaCO3 and 1.000 g CaO are heated to 900C in a 1.000-L vessel. (Ignore the volume occupied by the solids.) What would be the effect of adding a similar quantity of carbon dioxide to this equilibrium mixture? What would happen if the quantity of calcium carbonate were doubled?arrow_forward
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