I have a reversible reaction How can I explain the reaction in terms of equilibr
ID: 508307 • Letter: I
Question
I have a reversible reactionHow can I explain the reaction in terms of equilibrium, in terms of thermodynamics, and in terms of kinetics?
What are the major points I should consider for each of these topics? I want to avoid mixing between the core of these topics because they're all related.
I need a chemist clear answer, not copied from Google.
Thanks! I have a reversible reaction
How can I explain the reaction in terms of equilibrium, in terms of thermodynamics, and in terms of kinetics?
What are the major points I should consider for each of these topics? I want to avoid mixing between the core of these topics because they're all related.
I need a chemist clear answer, not copied from Google.
Thanks!
How can I explain the reaction in terms of equilibrium, in terms of thermodynamics, and in terms of kinetics?
What are the major points I should consider for each of these topics? I want to avoid mixing between the core of these topics because they're all related.
I need a chemist clear answer, not copied from Google.
Thanks!
Explanation / Answer
Good Question
If you are traveling in a car for long journey, here you have consider three things
1.As long as you are moving, suppose you have seen that there was no way in that line,it means you can't move forever in that way.
Here,if you consider the "movement" as "reaction" , there was no reaction, that means A/c to Thermodynamics (TD), the reaction won't occur.
Then the next one is that if you are passing in your journey and there was a signal and you won't move front,back or side until that signal time, that means you are in a fixed positon that is called "Equilibrium Position "
Next one is that if you are in traffic, you will "move slowly" that means reaction is moving slowly, It's explained by Chemical Kinetics(CK).
In conclusion, TD tells about whethere the reaction is possible or not
CK tells that if reaction is possible with which speed it moves and Equilibrium tells about in which direction reaction is moving.
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