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9: Equilibrium and Acid Base Chemistry

  • Page ID
    432959
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    • 9.1: Chemical Equilibria
      A reaction is at equilibrium when the amounts of reactants or products no longer change. Chemical equilibrium is a dynamic process, meaning the rate of formation of products by the forward reaction is equal to the rate at which the products re-form reactants by the reverse reaction.
    • 9.2: Equilibrium Constants
      For any reaction that is at equilibrium, the reaction quotient Q is equal to the equilibrium constant K for the reaction. If a reactant or product is a pure solid, a pure liquid, or the solvent in a dilute solution, the concentration of this component does not appear in the expression for the equilibrium constant. At equilibrium, the values of the concentrations of the reactants and products are constant and the reaction quotient will always equal K.
    • 9.3: Shifting Equilibria- Le Châtelier’s Principle
      Systems at equilibrium can be disturbed by changes to temperature, concentration, and, in some cases, volume and pressure; volume and pressure changes will disturb equilibrium if the number of moles of gas is different on the reactant and product sides of the reaction. The system's response to these disturbances is described by Le Châtelier's principle: The system will respond in a way that counteracts the disturbance. Not all changes to the system result in a disturbance of the equilibrium.
    • 9.4: Brønsted-Lowry Acids and Bases
      Compounds that donate a proton (a hydrogen ion) to another compound is called a Brønsted-Lowry acid. The compound that accepts the proton is called a Brønsted-Lowry base. The species remaining after a Brønsted-Lowry acid has lost a proton is the conjugate base of the acid. The species formed when a Brønsted-Lowry base gains a proton is the conjugate acid of the base. Amphiprotic species can act as both proton donors and proton acceptors. Water is the most important amphiprotic species.
    • 9.5: pH and pOH
      The concentration of hydronium ion in a solution of an acid in water is greater than 1.0×10⁻⁷M at 25 °C. The concentration of hydroxide ion in a solution of a base in water is greater than 1.0×10⁻⁷M M at 25 °C. The concentration of H₃O⁺ in a solution can be expressed as the pH of the solution; pH=−log H₃O⁺. The concentration of OH⁻ can be expressed as the pOH of the solution: pOH=−log[OH⁻].
    • 9.6: Exercises
      These are homework exercises to accompany the Textmap created for "Chemistry" by OpenStax. Complementary General Chemistry question banks can be found for other Textmaps and can be accessed here. In addition to these publicly available questions, access to private problems bank for use in exams and homework is available to faculty only on an individual basis; please contact Delmar Larsen for an account with access permission.


    9: Equilibrium and Acid Base Chemistry is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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