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Answer:
The answer to your question is it is not at equilibrium, it will move to the products.
Explanation:
Data
Keq = 2400
Volume = 1 L
moles of NO = 0.024
moles of N₂ = 2
moles of O₂ = 2.6
Process
1.- Determine the concentration of reactants and products
[NO] = 0.024 / 1 = 0.024
[N₂] = 2/1 = 2
[O₂] = 2.6/ 1= 2.6
2.- Balanced chemical reaction
N₂ + O₂ ⇒ 2NO
3.- Write the equation for the equilibrium of this reaction
Keq = [NO]²/[N₂][O₂]
- Substitution
Keq = [0.024]² / [2][2.6]
-Simplification
Keq = 0.000576 / 5.2
-Result
Keq = 1.11 x 10⁻⁴
Conclusion
It is not at equilibrium, it will move to the products because the experimental Keq was lower than the Keq theoretical-
1.11 x 10⁻⁴ < 2400
When two gases of a chemical reaction are at the same temperature, pressure and molar volume, then the stoichiometric ratio of the gases would be 1 is to 1. Molar volume is the volume of the gas per mole of the gas. Having the same conditions for both gases would mean that they are present with the same number of moles.