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Grades 9 and 10 - Chemistry - High School - Equilibria
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Avg score: 77% Most missed: “How do we represent a reversible reaction symbolically?”
It is possible to disturb equilibria in reversible reactions by changing the conditions. If you understand rates of reaction, understanding equilibria should be reasonably straightforward for you. In industrial chemistry, getting the balance right is often a compromise between the speed of reaction and the yield, as you will have seen in your studies of the Haber Process. There are quite a number of reversible reactions, for example, the manufacture of ammonia. During a reversible reaction, both the forwards reaction of reactants going to products AND the backwards reaction of products going... Show more
Grades 9 and 10 - Chemistry - High School - Equilibria
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10 Questions

1. At equilibrium, the amount of product(s) and reactant(s) is constant. Which of the following would increase the amount of product in a reaction?
2. What is a reversible reaction?
3. A stable equilibrium can be achieved in a...
4. If a reversible reaction is exothermic in the forward direction, in the reverse direction it will be...
5. At equilibrium, if the rate of the forward reaction increases, the rate of the reverse reaction...
6. What effect will adding a catalyst have to the equilibrium of a system?
7. At the point of equilibrium...
8. One example of a reversible reaction is the Haber process. Pick the correct symbol equation for the reaction between hydrogen and nitrogen to produce ammonia in the Haber process.
9. The Haber process is a reversible reaction. If the reaction were at equilibrium, hydrogen and nitrogen would be being produced as quickly as ammonia gas was being broken down. How is the forward reaction rate increased?
10. How do we represent a reversible reaction symbolically?