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Introduction to Chemical Equilibrium

Chemical equilibrium occurs in a reversible reaction when the rate of the forward reaction equals the rate of the backward reaction, and the concentrations of reactants and products remain constant over time.

  • It is a dynamic equilibrium, meaning reactions continue at the molecular level, but macroscopic properties appear unchanged.

  • Important for NEET as questions often involve equilibrium concepts, Le Chatelier’s principle, and factors affecting equilibrium.


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1. Chemical Arithmetic

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2. Structure of Atom

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3. Chemical Bonding and Molecular Structure

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4. Solutions

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5. The Solid State

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6. Gaseous State

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7. Nuclear Chemisty

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8. Chemical Equilibrium

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9. Ionic Equilibrium

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10. Thermodynamics

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11. Chemical Kinetics

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12. Electrochemistry

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14. Surface Chemistry

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15. Chemical Periodicity

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16. General Principles Of Extraction Of Metals

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17. Hydrogen

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18. s and p-Block Elements

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19. The d-and f-Block Elements

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20. Co-Ordination Chemistry

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21. Chemical Analysis

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22. Purification, Classification & Nomenclature Of Organic Compounds

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23. Organic Chemistry – Some Basic Principles & Techniques

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24. Hydrocarbons

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25. Halogen Containing Compounds

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26. Alcohols, Phenols and Ethers

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27. Aldehydes And Ketones

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28. Carboxylic Acids & Their Derivatives

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29. Nitrogen Containing Compounds

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30. Polymers

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31. Biomolecules

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32. Chemistry In Action

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33. Chemistry Formula PDF for Entrance Exam

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Characteristics of Chemical Equilibrium

  • Dynamic Nature: Forward and backward reactions occur simultaneously.

  • Constant Concentration: Concentrations of reactants and products remain constant, not necessarily equal.

  • Reversibility: Only occurs in reversible reactions.

  • Macroscopic Stability: Pressure, concentration, and color appear unchanged.

NEET Tip: Always remember dynamic vs static equilibrium – dynamic is continuous at molecular level; static is not.


Equilibrium Constant (K)

  • The equilibrium constant expresses the ratio of product concentrations to reactant concentrations at equilibrium.

  • For a reaction:
    aA+bB⇌cC+dDaA + bB ⇌ cC + dDaA+bB⇌cC+dD
    Conceptually, Kc=[C]c[D]d[A]a[B]bK_c = \frac{[C]^c [D]^d}{[A]^a [B]^b}Kc​=[A]a[B]b[C]c[D]d​

  • Key points:

    • K is dimensionless when expressed correctly.

    • Large K (>1) → products favored

    • Small K (<1) → reactants favored

  • NEET Focus: Compare relative amounts of products and reactants without calculations.


Types of Equilibrium

1. Homogeneous Equilibrium:

  • All reactants and products are in same phase (gas or liquid).

  • Example: N2(g)+3H2(g)⇌2NH3(g)N_2(g) + 3H_2(g) ⇌ 2NH_3(g)N2​(g)+3H2​(g)⇌2NH3​(g)

2. Heterogeneous Equilibrium:

  • Reactants and products are in different phases.

  • Example: CaCO3(s)⇌CaO(s)+CO2(g)CaCO_3(s) ⇌ CaO(s) + CO_2(g)CaCO3​(s)⇌CaO(s)+CO2​(g)

  • NEET Tip: Concentrations of pure solids and liquids are ignored in equilibrium expressions.


Factors Affecting Chemical Equilibrium (Le Chatelier’s Principle)

Le Chatelier’s principle states:

If a system at equilibrium is disturbed, it shifts in a direction that opposes the disturbance.

1. Effect of Concentration:

  • Increasing reactants → equilibrium shifts toward products

  • Increasing products → equilibrium shifts toward reactants

2. Effect of Pressure (for gases):

  • Increase in pressure → equilibrium shifts toward side with fewer moles of gas

  • Decrease in pressure → shifts toward side with more moles of gas

3. Effect of Temperature:

  • Exothermic reactions: Heat acts as a product

    • Increase temperature → shifts toward reactants

    • Decrease temperature → shifts toward products

  • Endothermic reactions: Heat acts as a reactant

    • Increase temperature → shifts toward products

    • Decrease temperature → shifts toward reactants

4. Effect of Catalyst:

  • Catalyst does not change position of equilibrium

  • Increases rate of both forward and backward reactions equally

NEET Focus: Concentration, pressure, and temperature changes are commonly tested in reasoning-based questions.


Relationship Between Equilibrium and Gibbs Free Energy

  • At equilibrium, Gibbs free energy change (ΔG) = 0.

  • Conceptually, equilibrium is the point of maximum stability for a system.

  • Reaction proceeds spontaneously until ΔG = 0.

NEET Tip: Understanding the thermodynamic perspective helps explain why reactions reach equilibrium.


Applications of Chemical Equilibrium

1. Industrial Processes:

  • Haber Process: Production of ammonia, equilibrium manipulated by pressure, temperature, and catalyst.

  • Contact Process: Production of sulfuric acid, equilibrium shifts influenced by temperature and pressure.

2. Biological Systems:

  • Oxygen transport in hemoglobin involves equilibrium between oxygen-bound and free hemoglobin.

  • Enzyme-catalyzed reversible reactions maintain equilibrium in metabolic pathways.

3. Environmental Chemistry:

  • Equilibrium concepts explain CO₂ in oceans and acid-base buffering in natural waters.


Common NEET Conceptual Questions

  • Predicting direction of shift when concentration, pressure, or temperature changes.

  • Comparing K values to determine product vs reactant dominance.

  • Differentiating homogeneous vs heterogeneous equilibrium.

  • Understanding why catalysts do not affect equilibrium position.

  • Linking thermodynamics (ΔG) with chemical equilibrium.


Quick Concept Summary Table

Concept Key Points NEET Focus
Equilibrium Dynamic balance in reversible reactions Identify dynamic vs static equilibrium
Equilibrium Constant (K) Ratio of product to reactant concentrations Predict products/reactants favored
Types of Equilibrium Homogeneous, Heterogeneous Phase-based questions
Le Chatelier’s Principle System shifts to oppose change Concentration, pressure, temperature effects
Pressure Effect Only affects gases Direction shifts toward fewer/more moles
Temperature Effect Exo/Endothermic reactions Direction shifts with heat
Catalyst Speeds up reaction, no shift MCQs on reaction rate vs position
Gibbs Free Energy ΔG = 0 at equilibrium Thermodynamic explanation
Applications Haber process, Contact process, biological systems Real-life relevance

Conclusion

Chemical Equilibrium is a critical chapter for NEET Chemistry, emphasizing dynamic nature, equilibrium constant, Le Chatelier’s principle, and factors affecting equilibrium. Conceptual understanding is key for reasoning-based MCQs. Linking equilibrium concepts to thermodynamics and real-life applications ensures students can answer both theoretical and application-oriented NEET questions confidently. StudentBro.in provides structured, conceptual notes to help aspirants master Chemical Equilibrium efficiently.