The formation of CoCl4 2- from Co 2+ and Cl- is endothermic. Are the color changes that accompany heating and cooling of equilibrium mixture in accord with Le Chatelier's principle?

1 Answer
Jan 20, 2015

Yes, the color changes that accompany the heating or cooling of the equilibrium mixture are very much in accordance with Le Chatelier's Principle. Here's what actually goes on.

The main species involved in the reaction is cobalt (II) chloride, or CoCl2, which usually comes in the form of a hexahydrate, CoCl26H2O. When dissolved in water, both CoCl2, and CoCl26H2O will produce the complex ion [Co(H2O)6]2+.

In aqueous solution, the following equilibrium will be established between the following two ions:

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[Co(H2O)6]2++4ClCoCl24+6H2O

The [Co(H2O)6]2+ ion is pink, while the CoCl24 ion is blue. The forward reaction is endothermic, which means the equilibrium could be written as

[Co(H2O)6]2++4Cl+heatCoCl24+6H2O

We can say that heat is a reactant in this equilibrium. This means that when heat is added, i.e. the solution is being heated, the equilibrium will shift in the direction of the products. This shift in the equilibrium will turn the solution blue, the color of the CoCl24 ion.

When the solution is being cooled, heat is being removed from the equilibrium, which means that a shift towards to the reactants will take place - the solution will turn pink, the color of the [Co(H2O)6]2+ ion.

Likewise, any other stress applied to the equilibrium will produce a color change in the solution. If you add water, the equilibrium will shift to the left and the color will be pink. If you add HCl, which will increase the concentration of Cl ions, the equilibrium will shift to the right and the color will be blue.

If you add AgNO3, which will remove Cl ions from the solution, the equilibrium will shift to the left and the color will be pink again.

So, as you can see, all these changes are undoubtedly in accordance with Le Chatelier's Principle.

Here's another video on this great lab experiment: