Hey guys, I'm kinda stuck. It's to do with one of Le Chatelier's principles (i.e.
if the temperature of a reaction mixture at equilibrium is increased, the equilibrium moves in the direction which absorbs heat). What I don't understand is how you are able to determine which (forward) reactions are endothermic and which are exothermic.
In my textbook, there is an example saying that (note : i'm using '=' as the reversiblity symbol)
2 SO2(g) + O2 (g) = 2 SO3 (g) is exothermic in the forward direction. Why is this? Is it possible to simply look at an equation and determine whether it's forward/reverse reaction is endothermic/exothermic, without the change in enthalpy being given?
Also, there is text in my textbook that says..
Exothermic reactions move left as the temperature increases; endothermic ones move to the right....which is nothing short of confusing
.
Thanks.