Effect of Pressure

Learning Objectives

  • Describe the effect of pressure on an equilibrium reaction.

A dual purpose

The ammonia storage tank in the picture above does two things, One it stores ammonia at high pressure to minimize the reverse reaction that would lead to less ammonia and more nitrogen and hydrogen. Secondly, it sends an important message. Ammonia is used to make methamphetamine, a dangerous drug of abuse. Locks and other safety mechanisms built into the tanks help stop the theft of ammonia to be used in this illicit activity.

Ammonia storage tanks are under high pressure to prevent the ammonia from decomposing

Effect of Pressure

Changing the pressure of an equilibrium system in which gases are involved is also a stress to the system. A change in the pressure on a liquid or a solid has a negligible effect. We will return again to the equilibrium for the Haber-Bosch process. Imagine the gases are contained in a closed system in which the volume of the system is controlled by an adjustable piston as shown in Figure 1.

Compressing a mixture of nitrogen and hydrogen creates more ammonia

Figure 1. Effect of pressure on ammonia formation.

On the far left, the reaction system contains primarily N 2 and H 2 , with only one molecule of NH 3 present. As the piston is pushed inwards, the pressure of the system increases according to Boyle’s Law. This is a stress to the equilibrium. In the middle image, the same number of molecules is now confined in a smaller space and so the pressure has increased. According to LeChâtelier’s principle, the system responds in order to relieve the stress. In the image on the right, the forward reaction has been favored, in which one molecule of N 2 combines with three molecules of H 2 to form two molecules of NH 3 . The overall result is a decrease in the number of gas molecules in the entire system. This in turn decreases the pressure and provides a relief to the original stress of a pressure increase. An increase in pressure on an equilibrium system favors the reaction which produces fewer total moles of gas. In this case, it is the forward reaction that is favored.

A decrease in pressure on the above system could be achieved by pulling the piston outward, increasing the container volume. The equilibrium would respond by favoring the reverse reaction in which NH 3 decomposes to N 2 and H 2 . This is because the overall number of gas molecules would increases and so would the pressure. A decrease in pressure on an equilibrium system favors the reaction which produces more total moles of gas. This is summarized in the Table below.

Stress Response
pressure increase reaction produces fewer gas molecules
pressure decrease reaction produces more gas molecules

Like changes in concentration, the  K_{eq} value for a given reaction is unchanged by a change in pressure.

It is important to remember when analyzing the effect of a pressure change on equilibrium that only gases are affected. If a certain reaction involves liquids or solids, they should be ignored. Calcium carbonate decomposes according to the equilibrium reaction:

text{CaCO}_3(s) rightleftarrows text{CaO}(s)+text{O}_2(g)

Oxygen is the only gas in the system. An increase in the pressure of the system slows the rate of decomposition of CaCO 3 because the reverse reaction is favored. When a system contains equal moles of gas on both sides of the equation, pressure has no effect on the equilibrium position, as in the formation of HCl from H 2 and Cl 2 .

text{H}_2(g)+text{Cl}_2(g) rightleftarrows 2text{HCl}(g)

Summary

  • The influence of pressure on an equilibrium system is described.

Practice

Read the material on pressure at ChemGuide.co.uk and answer the following questions:

  1. How is pressure directly related to an equilibrium constant?
  2. What is done to related pressures to moles?
  3. If you decrease P, what has to happen to the mole fractions of C and D?

Review

  1. Why does the pressure increase in the middle picture?
  2. How is the stress due to increased pressure relieved?
  3. Why does an increase in pressure slow the rate of CaCO3 decomposition?