World Journal of Chemical Education. 2014, 2(4), 54-58
DOI: 10.12691/WJCE-2-4-2
Original Research

Extent of Reaction Balances: A Convenient Tool to Study Chemical Equilibria

Juan José Baeza-Baeza1, and María Celia García-Alvarez-Coque1

1Departamento de Química Analítica, Universitat de València, c/Dr. Moliner 50, 46100 Burjassot (Spain)

Pub. Date: December 14, 2014

Cite this paper

Juan José Baeza-Baeza and María Celia García-Alvarez-Coque. Extent of Reaction Balances: A Convenient Tool to Study Chemical Equilibria. World Journal of Chemical Education. 2014; 2(4):54-58. doi: 10.12691/WJCE-2-4-2

Abstract

The extent of a chemical reaction has received little attention in the early stages of Chemistry teaching, despite allowing a general way to work with chemical reactions and equilibria. In this article, the concepts of extent of reaction and extent of reaction balances are revised and several applications to study the change in the concentrations of the species involved in chemical reactions are described for both single and multiple systems. Extent of reaction balances allow a general treatment that can be applied to problems of diverse complexity involving different types of equilibria, either in the gas phase or in solution (acid-base, complexation, precipitation and redox reactions). This treatment depends exclusively on the reactions stoichiometry and can be taught at several levels, for single or coupled equilibria. Several examples are given, from basic problems adequate for High School Chemistry to problems for College Chemistry.

Keywords

high school chemistry, first- and second-year undergraduate, chemical education research / applications of chemistry, problem solving, aqueous solution chemistry / equilibrium

Copyright

Creative CommonsThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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