Chemistry, asked by pratyushssb, 8 months ago

Can anyone explain the Le-Chatelier's principle to me?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
3

Let's talk about "equilibrilium"

It is necessarily just balancing out two sides, if you will. The correct definition of a state of equilibrium is just  a state in which the rate of the forward reaction equals the rate of the backward reaction. In other words, there is no net change in concentrations of reactants and products.

Now let's talk about the Le Chatelier's Principle:-

It is necessarily stating that if a system experiences some sort of disturbance, be it temperature wise , concentration or pressure wise, it will respond to restore a new equilibrium state.

Le Chatelier’s principle can be used in practice to understand reaction conditions that will favor increased product formation.

According to Le Chatelier’s principle, adding additional reactant to a system will shift the equilibrium to the right, towards the side of the products. By the same logic, reducing the concentration of any product will also shift equilibrium to the right.

Suppose we were to increase the concentration of CO in the system. By Le Chatelier’s principle, we can predict that the amount of methanol will increase, thereby decreasing the total change in CO. If we add a species to the overall reaction, the reaction will favor the side opposing the addition of the species. Likewise, the subtraction of a species would cause the reaction to fill the “gap” and favor the side where the species was reduced.

Answered by AARINSAHAI
0

Answer:

YES SURE

Explanation:

IN THIS LE CHATELIER'S IS NOTHING YOU DON'T WANT TO STUDY ABOUT IT

Similar questions