Choosing Reaction Conditions (AQA GCSE Chemistry): Revision Notes
📚 Revision Notes
10.4.3 Choosing Reaction Conditions
Temperature
- Lowering Temperature: Since the forwards reaction is exothermic, lowering the temperature shifts the equilibrium towards the production of more ammonia, increasing yield.
- Compromise Temperature: However, too low a temperature reduces the reaction rate, decreasing the overall yield. Thus, a compromise temperature of around 450°C is used to balance the rate and yield of ammonia production.
Pressure
- Increasing Pressure: The equilibrium shifts towards the side with fewer moles of gas, which is the side producing ammonia (2 moles versus 4 moles). Therefore, increasing pressure favours ammonia production.
- Compromise Pressure: High pressures can be expensive to maintain, so a compromise pressure of around 200 atm is used. This pressure provides a good yield while keeping costs manageable.
infoNote
These optimised conditions—450°C and 200°C—are chosen to maximise ammonia production efficiently and economically.