Jump to content

Equilibrium between [math]SO_3 [/math](product) and [math]SO_2,O_2[/math] (reactants)


Dhamnekar Win,odd

Recommended Posts

1 hour ago, Dhamnekar Win,odd said:

image.png.7cbc34d9ff78f8c725b24ad876080f81.png

Are these above answers correct? specifically last one (c)?

Haven't you forgotten to square some things in ( b )? 

P.S. Oh I see, it looks as if you have squared them but not shown you are doing so in the fraction you wrote down.

Edited by exchemist
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 Yes, I forgot to square the concentration of SO3 in the numerator and the concentration of SO2  in the denominator of the fraction in (b). But R.H.S. 125 is correctly computed.

image.png.8dba4beb603eaef50216882b937ec8c5.png

 

 But what is your opinion about my answer to (c)?   

Edited by Dhamnekar Win,odd
new corrected answer was added
Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 minutes ago, Dhamnekar Win,odd said:

 Yes, I forgot to square the concentration of SO3 in the numerator and the concentration of SO2  in the denominator of the fraction in (b). But R.H.S. 125 is correctly computed.

image.png.8dba4beb603eaef50216882b937ec8c5.png

 

 But what is your opinion about my answer to (c)?   

Your logic looks right to me, certainly (well done for allowing for the decrease in free oxygen), though I don't pretend to do this sort of thing every day. You probably have a lot more practice at doing problems like this than I do.  

I seem to recall you have asked for confirmation of your answers before and they were OK then.  I have a feeling you may be quite good at this - unless I'm mixing you up with someone else.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Flawless application of Le Chatelier's principle.

I've no objection to there being good practical reasons to remove oxygen, and I totally trust @exchemist with this. But, why do you assume oxygen reducing its concentration --as per the exercise's statement? Are you re-calculating concentrations due to total volumes changing? Can you specify the whole chemical reaction equation with the phases?

I'm just curious.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

31 minutes ago, joigus said:

Flawless application of Le Chatelier's principle.

I've no objection to there being good practical reasons to remove oxygen, and I totally trust @exchemist with this. But, why do you assume oxygen reducing its concentration --as per the exercise's statement? Are you re-calculating concentrations due to total volumes changing? Can you specify the whole chemical reaction equation with the phases?

I'm just curious.

I by no means exclude the possibility I may get problems like wrong, but my understanding of the scenario from the description is you have a number of moles of O2, SO2 and SO3 at equilibrium in this fixed volume vessel, and then you shove in some more SO2, thereby causing a bit more SO3 to form as equilibrium is re-established.....which will inevitably absorb a bit of O2 as it does so. 

The volume is fixed so it is the pressures that will alter as more gas is added, but it is all expressed in moles, so you can work with concentration in moles/litre, rather than pressures - though it comes to the same thing as long as you have close to ideal gas behaviour.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh, I see; all of them are necessarily gases.

The bit I don't understand is, what assumption from the exercise's statement is at the basis of O2 going down from 0.2 mol/L to 0.2-0.05 = 0.15 mol/L when the extra SO2 is put there?

I seem to be missing something here...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

35 minutes ago, joigus said:

Oh, I see; all of them are necessarily gases.

The bit I don't understand is, what assumption from the exercise's statement is at the basis of O2 going down from 0.2 mol/L to 0.2-0.05 = 0.15 mol/L when the extra SO2 is put there?

I seem to be missing something here...

Yes all three are gases. If the SO3 in this 10l vessel increases from 15moles to 16 moles, one mole of O, that is, half a mole of O2, must be consumed. So on a mol/l basis, 0.05mol/l is consumed, isn't it?  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, exchemist said:

Yes all three are gases. If the SO3 in this 10l vessel increases from 15moles to 16 moles, one mole of O, that is, half a mole of O2, must be consumed. So on a mol/l basis, 0.05mol/l is consumed, isn't it?  

Silly me. You're right. So the total mass is constant? I didn't see that in the initial statement. By,

"How many moles of sulfur dioxide must be forced into the reaction vessel", I understood new moles of sulfur dioxide are added to the equilibrium. From what you say, the new SO3 must come from the pre-existing equilibrium, right?

I had difficulties implying that from the statement. Sorry if I sound obtuse.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 minutes ago, joigus said:

Silly me. You're right. So the total mass is constant? I didn't see that in the initial statement. By,

"How many moles of sulfur dioxide must be forced into the reaction vessel", I understood new moles of sulfur dioxide are added to the equilibrium. From what you say, the new SO3 must come from the pre-existing equilibrium, right?

I had difficulties implying that from the statement. Sorry if I sound obtuse.

No, there is 1 mole of new SO2 added. But that will put the system out of equilibrium, so more SO3 will form, consuming some of the oxygen as it does so.  As you say, it's Le Chatelier's principle (the chemist's version of Lenz's Law 😀 ).

Edited by exchemist
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, exchemist said:

No, there is 1 mole of new SO2 added. But that will put the system out of equilibrium, so more SO3 will form, consuming some of the oxygen as it does so.  As you say, it's Le Chatelier's principle (the chemist's version of Lenz's Law 😀 ).

Ah, OK. Got it!

So to me what's going on, schematically is,

                                                               2SO2         +            O2       <>      2SO3

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

First equilibrium:                                    0.3                          0.2                     1.5

Added SO(out of equilibrium):        0.3+0.1x                     0.2                     1.5

Second equilibrium:                        0.3+0.1x-0.1              0.2-0.05             1.5+0.1                

So I think the calculation should be,

\[ 125=\frac{1.6^{2}}{\left(0.2+0.1x\right)^{2}\left(0.2-0.05\right)} \]

Which is, I think, what @Dhamnekar Win,odd meant when they wrote,

7 hours ago, Dhamnekar Win,odd said:

My corrected answer to (c) is [1.6]2[0.30.1+x]2[0.200.05]=125x=0.17 mol SO2

 

 ∴(0.17 mol SO2/L) (10 L)= 1.7 mol of SO2.

That is, 0.3-0.1+0.1x instead of 0.3-0.1 +x

Am I right?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, joigus said:

Ah, OK. Got it!

So to me what's going on, schematically is,

                                                               2SO2         +            O2       <>      2SO3

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

First equilibrium:                                    0.3                          0.2                     1.5

Added SO(out of equilibrium):        0.3+0.1x                     0.2                     1.5

Second equilibrium:                        0.3+0.1x-0.1              0.2-0.05             1.5+0.1                

So I think the calculation should be,

 

125=1.62(0.2+0.1x)2(0.20.05)

 

Which is, I think, what @Dhamnekar Win,odd meant when they wrote,

That is, 0.3-0.1+0.1x instead of 0.3-0.1 +x

Am I right?

  Whichever and whatever computations of Kc   you use, eventually, final answer would be 0.17 mol /L SO2 should be added to the existing 0.2 mol/L SO2.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.