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No, removing water from an equilibrium reaction does not change the equilibrium constant. The equilibrium constant is determined by the stoichiometry of the reaction and temperature, not by the presence or absence of water.
would molarity increase, decrease, or stay the same if the room temperature increased by 5 degrees centigrade
Concentration of products would increase in order to attain equilibrium in the system again.For example:H2CO3 --> H+ + HCO3-K= ([H+][žHCO3-])/([H2CO3])K is constant for this process, so if you increase the concentration of reactants (H2CO3), in order for K to stay the same, concentration of products (H+, HCO3-) would also have to increase.It's part of Le Chatelier's principle: "If a chemical system at equilibrium experiences a change in concentration, temperature, volume, or partial pressure, then the equilibrium shifts to counteract the imposed change and a new equilibrium is established."So, in your case, adding more reactant would cause equilibrium to shift to the right (toward products), and therefore, their concentration would increase so that new equilibrium could be established.
The amount of NO and SO3 would increased.
The temperature would be the boiling point of water at the given pressure, which is 100 degrees Celsius. At this temperature, water and steam coexist in equilibrium.
If the temperature of a system at equilibrium changed, the equilibrium position would shift to counteract the change. If the temperature increased, the equilibrium would shift in the endothermic direction to absorb the excess heat. If the temperature decreased, the equilibrium would shift in the exothermic direction to release more heat.
the equilibrium constant would change
the equilibrium constant would change
Increasing the temperature would shift the equilibrium towards the forward reaction as it is endothermic. This shift would lead to an increase in the yield of ethanol at equilibrium.
No, removing water from an equilibrium reaction does not change the equilibrium constant. The equilibrium constant is determined by the stoichiometry of the reaction and temperature, not by the presence or absence of water.
An example of liquid to gas would be water turning to steam without a change in temperature. This is known as vaporization.
The luminosity of a star is proportional to the fourth power of its temperature. Since the total flux has increased by a factor of 625, the temperature of the star would increase by the fourth root of 625, which is 5. Therefore, the temperature of the star would have increased by a factor of 5.
Because if the temperature is increased, the equilibrium position moves in the direction of the endothermic reaction. and if the temperature is low the reaction would be slow.
The reaction would shift to balance the change
If the temperature increased to 125 degrees Celsius, the density of most substances would decrease. This is because as temperature goes up, the particles in the substance gain more kinetic energy and move farther apart, decreasing the density.
The temperature increase from 90 to 100 degrees for heptane would not cause a chemical change. It would only result in a physical change, such as a phase change from liquid to gas.
The answer is "The equilibrium would shift to reduce the pressure change" on Apex