Hi everyone,
I'm not really sure where to post this, but these questions arose when I studied organic chemistry 2 years ago, so here goes. My first question is about the equilibrium of reactions. As far as I know (after taking g chem), every reaction has an equilibrium point, even if it is highly small or highly large. But say you have a mol of O2 and a mol of H2 and let them react to form water. At 25 C I believe K is so high that it says there is less than 1 molecule of oxygen and hydrogen at equilibrium. In this case, since you cannot have a fraction of a molecule, does the reaction go 100% to completion and stay this way, or does one molecule of hydrogen and oxygen pop up now and then and then react to form 100% water shortly after? Hope that makes sense.... I was also wondering if every reaction can, at least in theory, go backward (if every equilibrium is a dynamic equilibrium), or if some mechanisms can only go one way. Some funkier mechanisms like ozonolysis and Bayer-Villager oxidation seem to only be able to go in one direction, but maybe I'm wrong.