Calculate P_{SO_2}PSO2 at equilibrium at 298 K?

For the following reaction run at 298 K; a mixture of equilibrium contains P_{O_2}=0.50PO2=0.50 atm, P_{SO_2}=2.0PSO2=2.0 atm. Calculate P_{SO_2}PSO2 at equilibrium at 298 K?
2SO_2(g)+O_2(g)\rightleftharpoons2SO_3(g)2SO2(g)+O2(g)2SO3(g)
\Delta G°_{f,SO_3(g)}=-371\frac{kJ}{mol}
\Delta G°_{f,SO_2(g)}=-300\frac{kJ}{mol}

1 Answer
Jul 28, 2018

Well, apparently all the "SO"_2 was consumed...


First, write the reaction and equilibrium constant:

2"SO"_2(g) + "O"_2(g) rightleftharpoons 2"SO"_3(g)

K_P = P_(SO_3)^2/(P_(SO_2)^2P_(O_2))

What we want to solve for is the (always positive) partial pressure of "SO"_2 (not "SO"_3, apparently):

P_(SO_2) = sqrt(P_(SO_3)^2/(K_PP_(O_2))

I assume you gave P_(O_2) and ulul(P_(SO_3))...

We know all of these quantities except for K_P. Remember that gas-phase reactions have K -= K_P, so:

DeltaG_(rxn)^@("gas-phase") = -RTlnK_P

We already have enough information to find DeltaG^@, so we can find K_P afterwards. These DeltaG_f^@ are correct and the reaction is balanced.

DeltaG_(rxn)^@ = ["2 SO"_3(g) cdot DeltaG_f("SO"_3(g))^@] - ["2 SO"_2(g) cdot DeltaG_f("SO"_2(g))^@ + "1 O"_2(g) cdot "0 kJ/mol O"_2(g)]

= [-"742 kJ/mol"] - [-"600 kJ/mol"]

= -"142 kJ/mol"

Therefore,

K_P = e^(-DeltaG_(rxn)^@//RT)

= e^(-(-"142 kJ/mol")//("0.008314 kJ/mol"cdot"K" cdot "298 K")

= e^(57.3)

As a result, we get the nearly zero partial pressure of "SO"_2:

P_(SO_2) = sqrt(("2.0 atm")^2/(e^(57.3)("0.50 atm"))

= ul(1.02 xx 10^(-12) "atm")

i.e. basically zero...