Methanol liquid burns readily in air. One way to represent this equilibrium is: 2 CO2(g) + 4 H2O(g)2 CH3OH(l) + 3 O2(g) We could also write this reaction three other ways, listed below. The equilibrium constants for all of the reactions are related. Write the equilibrium constant for each new reaction in terms of K, the equilibrium constant for the reaction above. 1) CH3OH(l) + 3/2 O2(g) CO2(g) + 2 H2O(g) K1 = 2) CO2(g) + 2 H2O(g) CH3OH(l) + 3/2 O2(g) K2 = 3) 2 CH3OH(l) + 3 O2(g) 2 CO2(g) + 4 H2O(g)

Respuesta :

Answer:

Answers are in the explanation

Explanation:

It is possible to obtain K of equilibrium of related reactions knowing the laws:

A + B ⇄ C K₁

C ⇄ A + B K = 1 /K₁

The inverse reaction has the inverse K equilibrium

2A + 2B ⇄ 2C K = K₁²

The multiplication of the coefficients of reaction produce a k powered to the number you are multiplying the coefficients

For the reaction:

2 CO2(g) + 4 H2O(g) ⇄ 2 CH3OH(l) + 3 O2(g) K

1) CH3OH(l) + 3/2 O2(g) ⇄ CO2(g) + 2 H2O(g)

This is the inverse reaction but also the coefficients are dividing in the half, that means:

[tex]K_1 = \frac{1}{k^{1/2}} = (1/K)^{1/2}[/tex]

2) CO2(g) + 2 H2O(g) ⇄ CH3OH(l) + 3/2 O2(g)

Here,the only change is the coefficients are the half of the original reaction:

[tex]K_2 = K^{1/2}[/tex]

3) 2CH3OH(l) + 3 O2(g) ⇄ 2 CO2(g) + 4 H2O(g)

This is the inverse reaction. Thus, you have the inverse K of equilibrium:

[tex]K_3 = \frac{1}{K}[/tex]