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How do you express homogeneous reactions in the Keq formula? How is that different than how you express heterogeneous reactions?

asked
User Indolent
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1 Answer

4 votes
Consider the following homogenous reaction:
aA + bB ⇔ cC + dD

The equilibrium constant is written as:
Kc = ([C]^c * [D]^d) / ([A]^a * [B]^b)
Therefore the equilibrium constant is the ratio of the concentration of the products to concentration of the reactants at equilibrium.

For a heterogenous reaction, the species that are not in the same physical state as the rest of the chemical species are omitted from the expression. Considering the previous reaction, if reactant A was solid and the remaining were gaseous, the expression will be:
Kc = ([C]^c * [D]^d) / [B]^b
answered
User Hunter Larco
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7.6k points
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