Which Action Decreases CO2 at Equilibrium?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on a chemical equilibrium involving NaOH and CO2, questioning which actions can decrease CO2 levels. Decreasing the volume of the container and adding N2 gas do not affect CO2 concentration, as the equilibrium constant remains unchanged by pressure changes from inert gases. Removing NaHCO3 does not impact CO2 levels either, but adding more solid NaOH increases the surface area for reaction, allowing more CO2 to react and thus reducing its concentration. The confusion arises from the role of solids in equilibrium calculations, as solids do not appear in the equilibrium constant expression. Understanding these principles clarifies why certain actions do not influence CO2 levels at equilibrium.
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Homework Statement



The following reaction is at equilibrium at one atmosphere, in a closed container
NaOH(s) + CO2(g)-> NaHCO3 (s)
which, if any, of the following actions will decrease the total amount of CO2 gas present at equilibrium?

1)decreasing the volume of the container
2) none of the above
3) removing half of the solid NaHCO3
4)adding mlore solid NaOH
5)adding N2 gas to double the pressure

The Attempt at a Solution



I chose (1) and got it wrong, so I chose (5) next but it was wrong again,
I thought that solid is not included in equilibrium constant which means that
it has little effect on equilibrium change, that's why I eliminated (3) and (4).
I guess for, (1), decreasing the volume wouldn't do much
to shift the equilibrium constant to the right.. then

I don't understand why (5) is wrong because if you add more gas,
it will double the pressure thus makeing the reactants to shift to the
right to re-establish the equilibrium constant,,

Is the answer none of the above?

Please help!
 
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5 is wrong because the equilibrium concentration of CO2 in the gas phase is constant regardless of how much pressure there is from N2. The concentration of CO2 is actually the partial pressure of CO2 in that case. Your thinking on #3 is logical but not #4. Remember that the reaction occurs on the surface of the sodium hydroxide solid. What would adding more NaOH surface do?
 
When you add more solid NaOH,, more CO2 molecules will react with NaOH; thus, decreasing the moles of CO2.. Am I right,,?
But still, does solid really have anything to do with this?

I don't think I understand the reason why we don't include solid in equilibrium constant
 
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