13. In the reaction N₂(g) + 3H₂(g) ⇌ 2NH₃(g), the forward reaction is exothermic. Explain what happens to the equilibrium position if: [4]
a) Temperature is increased
b) Pressure is increased
Mark Scheme
1. Rate = change in amount of reactant or product per unit time [2]; any two: measure volume of gas produced per unit time; measure decrease in mass per unit time; measure change in colour/turbidity; measure change in concentration [2] [4]
2. Volume collected in 30 s = 30 cm³; rate = 30/30 = 1.0 cm³ s⁻¹ [2]
3. Temperature; concentration (of dissolved reactants or pressure of gases); surface area (of solid); catalyst [4]
4. Increasing temperature increases the kinetic energy of particles [1]; particles move faster so collide more frequently [1]; a greater proportion of particles have energy ≥ activation energy → more successful collisions per second [1] [3]
5. Powdered marble has a greater surface area than large chips [1]; more acid particles can collide with the marble surface at any one time [1]; more frequent successful collisions → faster rate [1] [3]
6. Higher concentration means more reactant particles in the same volume [1]; more frequent collisions with other reactant particles → greater rate [1] [2]
7. A substance that speeds up a chemical reaction [1] without being used up / without changing itself chemically [1] [2]
8. A catalyst provides an alternative reaction pathway [1]; with lower activation energy [1]; more particles have energy ≥ Ea, so more successful collisions occur per second [1] [3]
9. Haber process: iron catalyst; Contact process: vanadium(V) oxide (V₂O₅) [2]
10. A reaction in which the products can react to reform the original reactants [1]; represented using ⇌ symbol [1] [2]
11. CuSO₄·5H₂O (blue) ⇌ CuSO₄ (white) + 5H₂O [1]; heating drives the forward reaction (dehydration) [1]; adding water to the anhydrous solid reverses it [1] [3]
12. Dynamic equilibrium: the forward and reverse reactions proceed at equal rates [1]; concentrations of reactants and products remain constant [1]; conditions: closed system [1]; constant temperature [1] [4]
13. a) Increasing temperature favours the endothermic (reverse) reaction [1]; equilibrium shifts to the left, less NH₃ is produced [1]; b) Increasing pressure shifts equilibrium to the side with fewer moles of gas [1]; there are 4 moles on the left and 2 on the right → equilibrium shifts right, more NH₃ produced [1] [4]