if reaction is at equ. then adding product will cause reaction to proceed forward and product will increase and removing product will do the same while removing reactant will cause reactn 2 proced bakward and reactant will increase and adding product wl do the same it is in accordnc wth LeChateliars principle
Generally, the higher the concentrations the faster the reaction. It does not push the reaction further past the equilibrium.
The concentration or activity of the product(s) will increase, and if there is at least one other reactant than the added one that is required for the completion of the reaction, the concentration of such an unadded reactant will decrease. (If there were no available unadded reactant, the reaction would not technically have been in equilibrium at the start, even though it may have reached a steady state that can persist for a long time in the absence of changed conditions.)
Q indicates wether or not a reaction will occur when the value of Q is compared to the equilibrium constant K if Q is larger than K the reaction will occur from product to reactant (decomposition) if Q is smaller than K the reaction will occur from reactant to product
If the added substance is a reactant, the equilibrium shifts toward products. If it is a product, it moves towards reactants.
An equilibrium is a "balance", if something is in equilibrium then it is in balance. To add "static" is an unnecessary tautology except in the case of a mechanical equilibrium with zero linear momentum.
Generally, the higher the concentrations the faster the reaction. It does not push the reaction further past the equilibrium.
Equilibrium is pushed to the reactant side
The concentration or activity of the product(s) will increase, and if there is at least one other reactant than the added one that is required for the completion of the reaction, the concentration of such an unadded reactant will decrease. (If there were no available unadded reactant, the reaction would not technically have been in equilibrium at the start, even though it may have reached a steady state that can persist for a long time in the absence of changed conditions.)
The amount of product is determined by the limiting reactant. Once one reactant is used completely, no more product can be produced.
The reactant was so minimal that it was very hard to notice by the students. Reactant is the change that something goes through.
The equilibrium of the system will be upset.
I don't know how you can differentiate between two same things. However I can tell you what homogeneous equilibrium is-If all the reactant and products are in the same phase then the reaction at equilibrium is in homogeneous equilibria.
In general, adding product to a system at equilibrium will push the reaction toward the reactant side.
That, at equilibrium, the reaction favours a high concentration of product and relatively less reactant.
Q indicates wether or not a reaction will occur when the value of Q is compared to the equilibrium constant K if Q is larger than K the reaction will occur from product to reactant (decomposition) if Q is smaller than K the reaction will occur from reactant to product
If the added substance is a reactant, the equilibrium shifts toward products. If it is a product, it moves towards reactants.
If the added substance is a reactant, the equilibrium shifts toward products. If it is a product, it moves towards reactants.