Yanick said:
Keq's are derived by making the rates equal each other (the definition of an equilibrium) then doing some simple algebra to get a ratio of rate constants on one side and products/reactants on the other. The ratio of the rate constants becomes the new term-Keq-and the ratio of products/reactants can be used to determine concentrations at equilibrium. Rate laws and their orders are determined experimentally, by varying concentrations of reactants and measuring the change in rates.
The stoichiometric coefficients become the exponents in rate laws and since rate laws are used to derive Keq expressions, my guess would be that there is a typo in the book.
They
can be. In elementary teaching the equilibrium constant often is introduced this way, via simple kinetics, because that is rather easier to understand than thermodynamics. But thermodynamics, not using rate laws, demonstrates that for that reaction
[C
6H
12]
eq/ ( [H
2]
3eq [C
6H
6]
eq )
where the concentrations in brackets are the
equilibrium ones - I have made this explicit in the notation - is a constant.
I'll write this
K
eq = [C
6H
12]
eq/ ( [H
2]
3eq [C
6H
6]
eq )
This fact is independent of the reaction mechanism. Whereas on the other hand the rate laws are consequence of the reaction mechanism and can be various even for the same reaction. I can imagine a reaction mechanism that generates the law for R
f given by Settia which is quite suggestive actually. But if the mechanism of the reaction is changed - suppose the one with the kinetic law above is not catalysed, one catalysed by a solid metal for instance would give a different rate law but both would have the forward and back rate laws for R
f and R
r such as to give my equation above when R
f = R
r.
Very general - it is still true even if the substances participate in other side reactions, or even if the reaction considered is itself a side reaction!
Vulgar said:
I think this only goes for elementary reactions though,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elementary_reaction
That is just giving an elementary example but what I have said is general. In fact Settia's example is not an elementary reaction.