How do the rates of the forward and reverse reactions compare at a state of dynamic chemical equilibrium?

1 Answer
May 4, 2018

They are equal, and NONzero.


At dynamic chemical equilibrium, the rates of the forward and reverse reactions are equal to each other, i.e.

aA + bB stackrel(k_1" ")(rightleftharpoons) cC + dD
" "" "" "" "^(k_(-1))

For this, assuming the equilibrium consists of elementary reactions, the forward rate law and reverse rate law are:

r_1(t) = k_1[A]^a[B]^b
r_(-1)(t) = k_(-1)[C]^c[D]^d

At equilibrium, r_1(t) = r_(-1)(t), so:

k_1[A]^a[B]^b = k_(-1)[C]^c[D]^d

From this, we obtain:

K -= k_1/(k_(-1)) = ([C]^c[D]^d)/([A]^a[B]^b)

We know that rate constants are temperature-dependent, and thus, so is K.

It is also important to note that the rates of the forward and reverse reactions MUST be nonzero to have a dynamic chemical equilibrium.