Chemical Equilibrium: Understanding & Equation

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Chemical equilibrium occurs when the rates of the forward and reverse reactions in a chemical process are equal, resulting in a stable concentration of reactants and products. The equilibrium constant (K) is a specific value at a given temperature and reflects the ratio of product concentrations to reactant concentrations, derived from the law of mass action. The equilibrium expression varies depending on the phases of the substances involved; for example, solids are not included in the expression since their concentration remains constant, while gases and aqueous solutions are represented by their pressures or concentrations, respectively. Changes in temperature or concentration can shift the equilibrium position, altering the value of K. Understanding chemical equilibrium involves solving a set of equations based on reaction quotients and mass balances, which can be mathematically complex.
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Can someone help me understand the concept of chemcial equilbrium. I think I understand in a certain chemical reaction, know matter the amount of reactants or products, the equilibrium constant will remain approximatly the same. I don't fully understand how the equation to solve for the equilibrium is formed. Also, is there a physical equilibrium, as in the phase of matter of the reactants and products?
 
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For a given temperature equilibrium constant is not "approximately the same" - it is constant.

Hard to help with other things not knowing where your problem lies. General approach to solving equilibrium problems is to list all reactions, write all reaction quotients and write all mass balances and a charge balance - that yields a set of equations that have to be solved. What is left is just a math that usually gets nasty. You will spend most of your time learning tricks that help simplify finding a solution.
 
Chemical equilibrium is the state of a reaction in which the rate of the forward reaction is equal to the rate of the reverse reaction. For instance, A + B > C. The rate at which A and B are combining to form C is equal to the rate at which C is decomposing into A and B. As Borek said above, the equilibrium constant is exactly that - a constant for specific temperatures. It changes at different temperatures because the rates of reactions change at certain temperatures. The equilibrium expression can be derived by rate laws, for example, knowing that the forward and reverse rates are equal it can be written that kf[A] = kr[C], which implies that kf/kr = [C]/([A]) and K = [C]/([A]). This is called the law of mass action, and if you want to understand its derivation even further it involves some highly complex math. Just be satisfied (for now) that it was derived using countless empirical data a long time ago before Rate Laws even existed.

The phases of individual reactants and products are important to equilibrium because there are different equilibrium constants for different phases. Solids are NOT incorporated into your equilibrium expression because the concentration of a solid is simply 1. For instance, if you were to say a solid has a concentration in mol/L, well, we know that moles are proportional to volume. Thus, if you increase the amount of moles of that solid, it's volume will increase proportionally, and thus its concentration remains 1. For gases, the equilibrium expression will make use of pressures. For aqueous reactants/products, the equilibrium expression will make use of concentrations in molarity or often times molality. It just depends.

Hopefully this answer helped you. :)
 
Put simply, Chemical equillibrium is when a reaction has stopped reacting and is at a point of being stable, think of it as a balance of reactants and products. once the temperature, concentration etc changes, the point of equillibrium changes.
 
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