When 1.0 mol of ammonia gas is injected into a 0.50 L flask, the following reaction proceeds to equilibrium.
At equilibrium, 0.30 mol of hydrogen gas is present.
[NH3]initial = 1.0 mol / 0.50 L = 2.0 mol/L
[H2]equilibrium = .30 mol/L
You should work with molarity as you did with ammonia, not with moles.
I was not sure if I should have converted H2 equilbrium the same way I did with NH3 because it stated that .30 was the amount at equilibrium, but then I noticed it was still in a gas so how about this?
2) When 1.0 mol of ammonia gas is injected into a 0.50 L flask, the following reaction proceeds to equilibrium.
2NH3(g) <> N2(g) + 3H2(g)
At equilibrium, 0.30 mol of hydrogen gas is present.
a) Calculate the equilibrium concentrations of N2(g) and NH3(g) (3 marks)
[NH3]initial = 1.0 mol / 0.50 L = 2.0 mol/L
[H2]equilibrium = .30 mol / 0.50 L = 0.6 mol/L
2NH3 <> N2 + 3H2
Initial concentration (mol/L) 2.0 0.00 0.00
Change in concentration (mol/L) -2x +x +3x
Equilibrium concentration (mol/L) 2.0 mol/L – 2x X 3x
[3H2]equilibrium= .60 mol/L = 3x
X = .60 mol/L / 3
X = 0.2 mol/L
[NH3]equilibrium = 2.0 mol/L – 2(0.2 mol/L)
[NH3]equilibrium = 2.0 mol/L – 0.4 mol/L
[NH3]equilibrium = 1.6 mol/L
[N2]equilibrium = x = 0.2 mol/L
b) What is the value of Kc? (2 marks)
Kc= products / recants
= [N2] [H2]3 / [NH3]2
= [0.2][.60]3 / [1.6]2
= .0432 / 2.56
= 0.016875