Equilibrium Class 11 Notes | CBSE Chemistry Chapter 6

Equilibrium is Chapter 6 of CBSE Class 11 Chemistry — and one of the highest-scoring, highest-yield chapters of the entire year. It explains why reversible reactions seem to “stop” even when reactants are still present, and gives you the tools (Kc, Kp, Q, Le Chatelier’s principle, pH, Ksp) to predict and control them. This single chapter unlocks ionic equilibrium, and is a direct prerequisite for Class 12 Electrochemistry.

By the end of these notes you will be able to write equilibrium constant expressions, relate Kc and Kp, use the reaction quotient Q to predict the direction of a reaction, apply Le Chatelier’s principle to shift equilibria, calculate pH of acids and bases, design a buffer, and solve solubility-product numericals. This is a high-weightage chapter carrying roughly 6–8 marks in boards and a heavy share of NEET/JEE Physical Chemistry.


Table of Contents


Key Concepts

1. Equilibrium — Physical and Chemical

Equilibrium is the state of a reversible process at which the rate of the forward process equals the rate of the backward process, so the observable properties become constant with time.

It is dynamic, not static — both processes keep happening, just at equal rates. Equilibrium is possible only in a closed system at constant temperature.

Physical Equilibrium

  • Solid ⇌ Liquid (melting/freezing at the melting point): rate of melting = rate of freezing.
  • Liquid ⇌ Vapour (in a closed vessel): vapour pressure becomes constant.
  • Solid/Gas ⇌ Solution (dissolution of sugar or CO₂ in a sealed bottle): concentration stops changing.

Chemical Equilibrium

In a reversible reaction such as H₂(g) + I₂(g) ⇌ 2HI(g), reactant and product concentrations become constant once the forward and backward rates are equal.


2. Law of Chemical Equilibrium and Equilibrium Constant

The law of mass action states that the rate of a reaction is proportional to the product of the molar concentrations of the reactants, each raised to the power of its stoichiometric coefficient.

For a general reaction aA + bB ⇌ cC + dD, the equilibrium constant in terms of concentration is:

Kc = [C]ᶜ[D]ᵈ / [A]ᵃ[B]ᵇ

  • Kc is constant at a given temperature.
  • A large Kc (much greater than 1) means products are favoured; a small Kc (much less than 1) means reactants are favoured.
  • Pure solids and pure liquids are not included (their activity = 1).

3. Equilibrium Constant in Gaseous Systems (Kp) and the Kc–Kp Relation

For gaseous reactions it is convenient to express the equilibrium constant in terms of partial pressures. For aA + bB ⇌ cC + dD:

Kp = (p_C)ᶜ(p_D)ᵈ / (p_A)ᵃ(p_B)ᵇ

Using the ideal gas equation, Kp and Kc are related by:

Kp = Kc (RT)^Δn

  • Δn = (moles of gaseous products) − (moles of gaseous reactants)
  • If Δn = 0, then Kp = Kc (e.g. H₂ + I₂ ⇌ 2HI).
  • If Δn is positive, Kp is greater than Kc; if Δn is negative, Kp is less than Kc.
  • R = 0.0821 L·atm·K⁻¹·mol⁻¹ when pressures are in atm.

4. Characteristics of the Equilibrium Constant

  • For the reverse reaction, K’ = 1/K.
  • If a reaction is multiplied by n, the new constant is Kⁿ.
  • If two reactions are added, K = K₁ × K₂.
  • K depends only on temperature — not on the initial concentrations, pressure, or a catalyst.
  • A catalyst speeds up forward and backward rates equally, so it only reaches equilibrium faster — it does not change K.

5. Reaction Quotient (Q) and Predicting Direction

The reaction quotient Q has the same form as Kc but uses concentrations at any instant, not just at equilibrium. Comparing Q with K tells you which way the reaction will move.

  • Q less than K: too many reactants → reaction proceeds forward (towards products).
  • Q = K: system is at equilibrium.
  • Q greater than K: too many products → reaction proceeds backward (towards reactants).

Link to thermodynamics: ΔG = ΔG° + RT ln Q, and at equilibrium ΔG = 0, giving ΔG° = −RT ln K.


6. Le Chatelier’s Principle and Factors Affecting Equilibrium

Le Chatelier’s principle: if a system at equilibrium is disturbed by a change in concentration, pressure, or temperature, the equilibrium shifts in the direction that tends to undo the change.

Effect of Each Factor

ChangeEquilibrium shiftsExample (N₂ + 3H₂ ⇌ 2NH₃, exothermic)
Add reactant / remove productForward (towards products)Adding N₂ or H₂ makes more NH₃
Increase pressure (decrease volume)Towards fewer gas molesShifts forward (4 mol → 2 mol)
Increase temperatureTowards endothermic directionShifts backward (less NH₃)
Add catalystNo shiftEquilibrium reached faster only
Add inert gas at constant volumeNo shiftPartial pressures unchanged

Industrial use: the Haber process (NH₃) uses high pressure and moderate temperature; the Contact process (SO₃) uses similar reasoning.


7. Ionic Equilibrium — Strong and Weak Electrolytes

Ionic equilibrium is the equilibrium established between unionised molecules and their ions in solution.

  • Strong electrolytes (NaCl, HCl, NaOH) ionise almost completely — no real equilibrium.
  • Weak electrolytes (CH₃COOH, NH₄OH) ionise only partially, setting up a genuine ionic equilibrium.

Ostwald’s dilution law (for a weak electrolyte, degree of dissociation α): Ka = Cα²/(1 − α), which is approximately Cα² when α is small, so α = √(Ka/C). Dilution increases α.


8. Acids and Bases — Three Concepts

ConceptAcidBase
ArrheniusGives H⁺ in waterGives OH⁻ in water
Brønsted–LowryProton (H⁺) donorProton (H⁺) acceptor
LewisElectron-pair acceptorElectron-pair donor

In the Brønsted–Lowry view, every acid has a conjugate base (formed by losing H⁺) and every base has a conjugate acid. Example: in HCl + H₂O ⇌ H₃O⁺ + Cl⁻, the pairs HCl/Cl⁻ and H₂O/H₃O⁺ are conjugate pairs. A strong acid has a weak conjugate base.


9. Ionization of Water, pH Scale and Kw

Water self-ionises: H₂O ⇌ H⁺ + OH⁻. The ionic product of water is:

Kw = [H⁺][OH⁻] = 1.0 × 10⁻¹⁴ at 298 K

The pH measures acidity: pH = −log[H⁺], and similarly pOH = −log[OH⁻].

  • pH + pOH = 14 at 298 K.
  • Neutral: pH = 7; Acidic: pH below 7; Basic: pH above 7.
  • For a strong acid, [H⁺] = its molarity; for a strong base, [OH⁻] = its molarity.

10. Ionization Constants of Weak Acids and Bases (Ka, Kb)

For a weak acid HA ⇌ H⁺ + A⁻: Ka = [H⁺][A⁻]/[HA]. For a weak base BOH ⇌ B⁺ + OH⁻: Kb = [B⁺][OH⁻]/[BOH].

  • A larger Ka (or Kb) means a stronger acid (or base).
  • pKa = −log Ka; a smaller pKa means a stronger acid.
  • For a conjugate acid–base pair: Ka × Kb = Kw, so pKa + pKb = 14.
  • For a weak acid, [H⁺] = √(Ka·C), so pH = ½(pKa − log C).

11. Common Ion Effect and Buffer Solutions

The common ion effect is the suppression of the ionisation of a weak electrolyte by adding a strong electrolyte that shares a common ion. For example, adding CH₃COONa to CH₃COOH lowers the H⁺ concentration.

A buffer solution resists changes in pH on adding small amounts of acid or base.

  • Acidic buffer: weak acid + its salt (CH₃COOH + CH₃COONa). pH = pKa + log([salt]/[acid]) (Henderson–Hasselbalch equation).
  • Basic buffer: weak base + its salt (NH₄OH + NH₄Cl). pOH = pKb + log([salt]/[base]).

12. Solubility Product (Ksp) and Salt Hydrolysis

For a sparingly soluble salt AₓBᵧ ⇌ xAʸ⁺ + yBˣ⁻, the solubility product is:

Ksp = [Aʸ⁺]ˣ [Bˣ⁻]ʸ

  • For AB type (e.g. AgCl) with solubility s: Ksp = s².
  • For AB₂ type (e.g. CaF₂) with solubility s: Ksp = 4s³.
  • If ionic product is greater than Ksp → precipitation occurs; if less than Ksp → more salt dissolves.

Hydrolysis of Salts

Salt typeExampleNature of solution
Strong acid + strong baseNaClNeutral (pH = 7)
Strong acid + weak baseNH₄ClAcidic (pH below 7)
Weak acid + strong baseCH₃COONaBasic (pH above 7)
Weak acid + weak baseCH₃COONH₄Depends on Ka vs Kb

Weightage in Board & Entrance Exams

ExamTypical WeightageMost-Tested Areas
CBSE Board (Class 11)6–8 marksKc/Kp relation, Le Chatelier, pH, buffers, Ksp
JEE Main / Advanced2–3 questionsQ vs K, ICE-table numericals, Ksp, buffer pH
NEET2–3 questionsLe Chatelier, pH/pOH, common ion effect, salt hydrolysis

[TABLE: Question-type split — VSA (1 mark): definitions, conjugate pairs, pH; SA (2–3 marks): Kp–Kc, Le Chatelier shifts, buffer/Henderson; LA (5 marks): Ksp numericals, ionic-equilibrium derivations, pH calculations.]


Important Definitions

TermDefinition
Chemical equilibriumState where forward and backward reaction rates are equal; concentrations stay constant
Equilibrium constant (Kc)Kc = [products]/[reactants], each raised to its coefficient, at a fixed temperature
Kp–Kc relationKp = Kc(RT)^Δn, where Δn = gaseous products − gaseous reactants
Reaction quotient (Q)Same form as Kc but at any instant; predicts direction by comparing with K
Le Chatelier’s principleA disturbed equilibrium shifts to oppose (undo) the change imposed
Brønsted acid/baseAcid = proton donor; base = proton acceptor
Lewis acid/baseAcid = electron-pair acceptor; base = electron-pair donor
pHpH = −log[H⁺]; measures acidity (pH + pOH = 14 at 298 K)
KwIonic product of water: [H⁺][OH⁻] = 1.0 × 10⁻¹⁴ at 298 K
Common ion effectSuppression of a weak electrolyte’s ionisation by adding a common ion
Buffer solutionSolution that resists pH change on adding small amounts of acid/base
Solubility product (Ksp)Product of ionic molar concentrations of a saturated sparingly-soluble salt

Solved Examples

Example 1

For the reaction N₂(g) + 3H₂(g) ⇌ 2NH₃(g), find the relation between Kp and Kc.

Answer: Δn = 2 − (1 + 3) = −2. So Kp = Kc(RT)⁻², i.e. Kp = Kc/(RT)².

Example 2

In the reaction H₂ + I₂ ⇌ 2HI, equilibrium concentrations are [H₂] = 0.5 M, [I₂] = 0.5 M, [HI] = 2 M. Find Kc.

Answer: Kc = [HI]²/([H₂][I₂]) = (2)²/(0.5 × 0.5) = 4/0.25 = 16.

Example 3

Calculate the pH of a 0.001 M HCl solution.

Answer: HCl is a strong acid, so [H⁺] = 0.001 = 10⁻³ M. pH = −log(10⁻³) = 3.

Example 4

The Ka of acetic acid is 1.8 × 10⁻⁵. Find the pH of a 0.1 M solution.

Answer: [H⁺] = √(Ka·C) = √(1.8 × 10⁻⁵ × 0.1) = √(1.8 × 10⁻⁶) = 1.34 × 10⁻³ M. pH = −log(1.34 × 10⁻³), which is approximately 2.87.

Example 5

A buffer is made of 0.2 M CH₃COOH and 0.2 M CH₃COONa (pKa = 4.74). Find its pH.

Answer: pH = pKa + log([salt]/[acid]) = 4.74 + log(0.2/0.2) = 4.74 + 0 = 4.74.

Example 6

The solubility of AgCl is 1.0 × 10⁻⁵ mol/L. Calculate its Ksp.

Answer: AgCl ⇌ Ag⁺ + Cl⁻, so Ksp = s² = (1.0 × 10⁻⁵)² = 1.0 × 10⁻¹⁰.


Important Questions for Board Exams

1-Mark Questions (VSA)

  1. Why is chemical equilibrium called dynamic?
  2. Write the conjugate base of H₂SO₄ and the conjugate acid of NH₃.
  3. What is the value of Kw at 298 K?
  4. What happens to the pH of water as temperature increases? Justify briefly.
  5. Does a catalyst change the value of the equilibrium constant? Explain.

2–3-Mark Questions (SA)

  1. Derive the relation Kp = Kc(RT)^Δn for a gaseous reaction.
  2. State Le Chatelier’s principle and apply it to the Haber process (N₂ + 3H₂ ⇌ 2NH₃) for pressure and temperature.
  3. What is a buffer solution? Derive the Henderson–Hasselbalch equation for an acidic buffer.
  4. Explain the common ion effect with a suitable example and its role in salt analysis.

5-Mark Questions (LA)

  1. Distinguish between Arrhenius, Brønsted–Lowry, and Lewis concepts of acids and bases with examples.
  2. Define solubility product. Derive the relation between Ksp and solubility for AB and AB₂ type salts, and explain precipitation using the ionic product.
  3. Explain salt hydrolysis. Discuss the nature (acidic/basic/neutral) of solutions of NaCl, NH₄Cl, and CH₃COONa with reasons.

Quick Revision Points

  • Equilibrium is dynamic: forward rate = backward rate in a closed system at constant T
  • Kc = [products]/[reactants] (powers = coefficients); pure solids/liquids excluded
  • Kp = Kc(RT)^Δn; Δn = gaseous products − gaseous reactants; if Δn = 0, Kp = Kc
  • Reverse reaction: K’ = 1/K; multiply by n: Kⁿ; add reactions: K = K₁ × K₂
  • Q below K → forward; Q = K → equilibrium; Q above K → backward; ΔG° = −RT ln K
  • Le Chatelier: system shifts to undo the change in concentration/pressure/temperature
  • Acid/base: Arrhenius (H⁺/OH⁻), Brønsted (proton donor/acceptor), Lewis (electron-pair acceptor/donor)
  • pH = −log[H⁺]; pH + pOH = 14; Kw = 10⁻¹⁴ at 298 K
  • Ka × Kb = Kw; pKa + pKb = 14; weak acid [H⁺] = √(Ka·C)
  • Buffer: pH = pKa + log([salt]/[acid]) (Henderson–Hasselbalch)
  • Ksp: AB type = s²; AB₂ type = 4s³; ionic product above Ksp → precipitation
  • Hydrolysis: SA+SB neutral, SA+WB acidic, WA+SB basic

Next Chapter: Chapter 7 — Redox Reactions

Studying this chapter? Track it — saved on this device, no login.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top