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Showing posts with label Chemical equilibrium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chemical equilibrium. Show all posts

Thursday, 4 December 2025

Chemical equilibrium

Kc and Kp — Equilibrium Constants Explained

Kc and Kp: A Clear Guide to Chemical Equilibrium Constants

Audience: Class 11–12 students, chemistry teachers, and learners preparing competitive exams.

Introduction

Chemical equilibrium describes a dynamic situation where the rates of the forward and reverse reactions are equal. At equilibrium, macroscopic properties (concentrations, pressure) remain constant. Two commonly used equilibrium constants are Kc (concentration-based) and Kp (pressure-based). Understanding these helps solve many equilibrium problems in physical chemistry.

What is Kc?

Kc is the equilibrium constant expressed in terms of molar concentrations (mol·L−1). For a general reaction

aA + bB ⇌ cC + dD

the expression for Kc is

Kc = [C]c[D]d / [A]a[B]b

Only species in the gas or aqueous phase (soluble) appear in this expression. Pure solids and liquids are omitted because their concentrations do not change during the reaction.

What is Kp?

Kp is the equilibrium constant expressed using partial pressures (usually in atm) for gaseous reactions. For the same stoichiometric reaction where all species are gases:

Kp = (PC)c(PD)d / (PA)a(PB)b

Partial pressures are used because gases in a mixture contribute independently to the total pressure (Dalton's law).

Relation between Kp and Kc

Kp and Kc are related when gases are involved. The formula is:

Kp = Kc (RT)Δn

Here:

  • R = 0.082057 L·atm·K−1·mol−1
  • T = temperature in Kelvin
  • Δn = moles of gaseous products − moles of gaseous reactants

If Δn = 0 (no net change in the number of gas moles), then Kp = Kc.

Why does the (RT)Δn factor appear?

Convert concentration [A] (mol·L−1) to partial pressure using the ideal gas law: P = [A]RT. Substituting pressures into the Kp expression and rearranging leads to the (RT)Δn factor. Thus the relationship is a direct consequence of the ideal gas law and stoichiometry.

Worked Example 1 — Converting Kc to Kp

For the reaction:

2SO2(g) + O2(g) ⇌ 2SO3(g)

Δn = (2) − (2 + 1) = −1.

So Kp = Kc (RT)−1 = Kc / (RT).

At T = 298 K, using R = 0.082057, compute (RT) and divide Kc by this value to get Kp.

Worked Example 2 — Using Kp to find equilibrium partial pressures

Consider:

N2(g) + 3H2(g) ⇌ 2NH3(g)

Suppose Kp at the given temperature is 4.0 × 10−3. If initial partial pressures are PN2 = 1.0 atm and PH2 = 3.0 atm, and no NH3 initially, let x be the change (atm) of N2 consumed. At equilibrium:

PN2 = 1.0 − x, PH2 = 3.0 − 3x, PNH3 = 0 + 2x.

Write Kp = (PNH3)2 / (PN2)(PH2)3 and solve for x (usually by approximation or numerically when algebra becomes complex). Check that pressures remain positive.

Practical Tips & Common Mistakes

  • Always check the phases — include only gases and aqueous species in K expressions; omit pure liquids and solids.
  • Keep units consistent. Kc and Kp are usually reported as dimensionless in thermodynamic treatments by dividing by standard states, but in problems you may see units; follow your textbook or exam convention.
  • Calculate Δn carefully: count only gaseous coefficients.
  • If initial amounts include products, set up an ICE (Initial–Change–Equilibrium) table to track changes systematically.
  • When K is very large or very small, approximations (neglecting x compared to initial values) are often valid — but check the approximation for consistency (x should be <5% of initial concentration or pressure for safe use).

Summary

Kc and Kp give a quantitative measure of where an equilibrium lies. Kc uses concentrations; Kp uses partial pressures. Their relationship, Kp = Kc(RT)Δn, provides a bridge between concentration- and pressure-based descriptions. Mastering ICE tables and the Kp/Kc relation will make equilibrium problems straightforward and exam-ready.

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