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Today, 06:22

At a different temperature (this means that Keq will be different than part a)), 6.0 mol of IF5 and 8.0 mol of I4F2 are placed in a 10.0 L container. At equilibrium, 6.0mol of I4F2 are left. Calculate the Keq for the new temperature.

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  1. Today, 09:37
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    Keq for the new temperature is 26.8

    Explanation:

    Let's propose the equilibrium:

    2IF₅ + I₄F₂ ⇄ 3I₂ + 6F₂

    Now we propose the situations:

    2IF₅ + I₄F₂ ⇄ 3I₂ + 6F₂

    Initial 6 mol 8 mol - -

    Initially we added 6 mol and 8 mol of our reactants

    React. x x/2 3/2x 3x

    By stoichiometry x amount has reacted, so a half of x react to the I₄F₂ and we finally produced 3/2x and 3x in the product side

    Eq. (6 - x) (8 - x/2) 3/2x 3x

    Notice we have the concentration left for the I₄F₂, so we can find the x value, the amount that has reacted:

    8 - x/2 = 6

    x = 4, so the concentrations in the equilibrium are:

    2 moles of IF₅, 6 moles I₄F₂, 6 moles of I₂ and 12 moles of F₂

    As we need molar concentration to determine Keq, we must divide the moles by the volume of the container:

    2/10 = [IF₅] → 0.2 M

    6/10 = [I₄F₂] → 0.6 M

    6/10 = [I₂] → 0.6 M

    12/10 = [F₂] → 1.2 M

    Let's make, expression for Keq:

    Keq = ([I₂]³. [F₂]⁶) / [IF₅]². [I₄F₂]

    Keq = 0.6³. 1.2⁶ / 0.2². 0.6 → 26.8
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