Simultaneous Equilibria -- part of MCAT?

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cclawfjj

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and if so,

can anyone help me answer this question:

What would happen if 1.5 moles of y were added to a system containing 1.0 mole each of A, B, F and m?
What would be the number of moles of A, B, F and m at equilibrium?
 

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I haven't been here long, but I'm pretty sure this is the wrong forum for that question.
 
Its just a bunch of algebra. If you solve the four equations simultaneously you can solve for everything.
You also need to know a volume. Equilibria deal with molars and pressures.. not just moles.

And no, I really don't think that ANY of this is on the MCAT. The math, although easy, is too tedious.
 
are you assuming that A, B, F and m are all at equilibrium at 1.0 mol before Y is added or no?
 
Its just a bunch of algebra. If you solve the four equations simultaneously you can solve for everything.
You also need to know a volume. Equilibria deal with molars and pressures.. not just moles.

And no, I really don't think that ANY of this is on the MCAT. The math, although easy, is too tedious.

um no. Firstly he never said it was gas-phase. Secondly, in the gas phase, you can choose to write equlibrium tables in terms of partial pressure OR moles. The extent of reaction variable is the same either way.
 
This is a really simple, if tricky question. Reaction 4 is irreversible, therefore it will go as far to completion as possible.

1 mole A + 1 mole B => 1 mole C + 1 mole D
1 mole C + 1 mole F => 1 mole G + 1 mole H
1 mole H + 1 mole m => 1 mole X
1 mole X + 1 mole y ---> 1 mole z

So at the end, you have


A: 0 moles
B: 0 moles
C: 0 moles
D: 1 mole
F: 0 moles
G: 1 mole
H: 0 moles
m: 0 moles
X: 0 moles
y: 0.5 moles
z: 1 mole

Once you realize the last reaction is irreversible and you have a surplus of y, it's trivial to solve.
 
yeah you're right, but you have to assume that all of the rxns are at equilibrium to do what you did. Since he wrote out "K1, K2, K3" i was under the impression that they were not.
 
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