A REVERSIBLE REACTION is one where the products can react to form the original reactants again.
Symbol: โ (double-headed arrow indicating the reaction goes in both directions).
Examples:
Ammonium chloride thermal decomposition:
NHโCl(s) โ NHโ(g) + HCl(g)
When heated: NHโCl decomposes to NHโ and HCl (forward reaction).
When cooled: NHโ and HCl recombine to form NHโCl (reverse reaction).
Hydrated copper sulfate:
CuSOโยท5HโO(s) โ CuSOโ(s) + 5HโO(l)
Heating blue crystals โ white anhydrous powder + water (forward reaction).
Adding water to white powder โ blue crystals reform (reverse reaction).
This is used as a TEST FOR WATER โ white powder turns blue in the presence of water.
The DIRECTION of a reversible reaction depends on the conditions (temperature, pressure, concentration).
Dynamic Equilibrium
When a reversible reaction is carried out in a CLOSED SYSTEM (nothing enters or leaves), it reaches EQUILIBRIUM.
At equilibrium:
The FORWARD and REVERSE reactions are still occurring โ the reaction doesn't stop.
The RATES of the forward and reverse reactions are EQUAL.
The CONCENTRATIONS of reactants and products remain CONSTANT (but not necessarily equal).
This is called DYNAMIC EQUILIBRIUM โ 'dynamic' because both reactions are still happening (not static); 'equilibrium' because the concentrations are balanced (not changing).
Important: at equilibrium the reaction is STILL HAPPENING โ it just appears to have stopped because concentrations are constant.
CLOSED SYSTEM requirement:
If products are removed, the reaction shifts to produce more products (restoring equilibrium).
If reactants are removed, the reaction shifts to produce more reactants.
Open systems (like burning fuel in open air) cannot reach equilibrium โ products escape.
Energy Changes in Reversible Reactions
In a reversible reaction:
If the FORWARD reaction is EXOTHERMIC โ the REVERSE reaction is ENDOTHERMIC.
The SAME amount of energy is released in the forward direction as is absorbed in the reverse direction.
Example โ hydrated copper sulfate:
CuSOโยท5HโO โ CuSOโ + 5HโO is ENDOTHERMIC (absorbs heat โ heat applied to dehydrate).
CuSOโ + 5HโO โ CuSOโยท5HโO is EXOTHERMIC (releases heat โ hand gets warm when water added).
Example โ Haber process:
Nโ + 3Hโ โ 2NHโ is EXOTHERMIC.
2NHโ โ Nโ + 3Hโ is ENDOTHERMIC.
Same energy value โ opposite signs.
This principle is important for understanding how changing conditions affects equilibrium position.
โ ๏ธ Common Mistake
At equilibrium, the reaction has NOT stopped โ it is DYNAMIC. Both forward and reverse reactions continue at equal rates. Concentrations are CONSTANT but not necessarily EQUAL. Students often say 'equilibrium means equal concentrations' โ this is wrong. It means equal RATES.
Reversible reaction: โ symbol. Products can reform reactants. Closed system โ dynamic equilibrium: forward and reverse rates equal, concentrations constant (not equal). If forward is exothermic โ reverse is endothermic (same energy magnitude). NHโCl decomposition and CuSOโ hydration are key examples.
Match each term to its correct description. โ drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.
Reversible reaction
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Dynamic equilibrium
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Closed system
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Exothermic forward reaction
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Test for water
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No reactants or products enter or leave โ required for equilibrium
Products can react to re-form original reactants โ shown with โ
Closed system where forward and reverse reaction rates are equal โ concentrations constant
The reverse reaction is endothermic โ same energy magnitude, opposite sign
White anhydrous CuSOโ turns blue in the presence of water โ reversible hydration
โญ Higher Tier Only
Qualitative Le Chatelier's principle: concentration increase shifts equilibrium to use up added species. Temperature increase shifts in endothermic direction. Pressure increase shifts to side with fewer moles of gas. Catalyst speeds up reaching equilibrium but doesn't change the position.
๐ฏ Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. At dynamic equilibrium, which of the following is true?
2. The forward reaction A โ B releases 50 kJ/mol. How much energy does the reverse reaction B โ A involve?
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