Equilibrium Constant Calculator (Kp) from Partial Pressure of Product
Use measured partial pressure data to calculate the equilibrium constant for gas-phase reactions. Enter product pressure, reactant pressures, stoichiometric coefficients, and pressure unit.
How to Calculate the Equilibrium Constant Given Partial Pressure of the Product
If you are working with gas-phase chemical equilibrium, one of the most useful constants is Kp, the equilibrium constant expressed in terms of partial pressure. In many practical situations, the easiest value to measure is the partial pressure of a product gas, especially in reactor monitoring and analytical systems. From there, you combine stoichiometry and the measured pressures of reactants to determine the equilibrium constant.
For a general gas reaction:
aA(g) + bB(g) ⇌ cC(g)
the pressure-based equilibrium expression is:
Kp = (PCc) / (PAaPBb)
When you are specifically “given the partial pressure of the product,” that value is your numerator term. You still need all denominator pressure terms (or a stoichiometric relation to derive them) for a complete, physically correct Kp value. This is why disciplined data entry and unit consistency matter.
Why Product Partial Pressure Is So Important
- Product pressure is often the easiest real-time process signal in industrial reactors.
- Spectroscopic and chromatographic methods frequently report product concentration first.
- Kp sensitivity is high because pressures are raised to stoichiometric powers.
- Small pressure errors can create large Kp uncertainty when exponents are greater than 1.
For that reason, a robust calculator should accept stoichiometric coefficients directly and evaluate each pressure term exactly as the equilibrium expression requires.
Step-by-Step Method
- Write the balanced gas reaction and identify stoichiometric coefficients.
- Write the Kp expression with products in the numerator and reactants in the denominator.
- Insert equilibrium partial pressures in consistent units (atm, bar, or kPa).
- Raise each pressure to its stoichiometric coefficient.
- Divide numerator by denominator to obtain Kp.
- Interpret Kp magnitude:
- Kp >> 1: product-favored at that temperature.
- Kp ≈ 1: significant amounts of both reactants and products.
- Kp << 1: reactant-favored at that temperature.
Worked Example Using a Product Pressure Input
Suppose your reaction model is:
CO(g) + 2H2(g) ⇌ CH3OH(g)
Assume measured equilibrium pressures are:
- PCH3OH = 0.80 atm
- PCO = 0.50 atm
- PH2 = 1.20 atm
Kp expression:
Kp = PCH3OH / (PCO · PH22)
Kp = 0.80 / (0.50 × 1.202) = 0.80 / (0.50 × 1.44) = 0.80 / 0.72 = 1.11
Interpretation: at this temperature, the system is moderately product-favored, but not overwhelmingly so.
Comparison Data: How Kp Changes with Temperature
Kp is temperature-dependent. If you keep using a pressure at a different temperature, you cannot re-use the same Kp blindly. The table below summarizes representative published trends for ammonia synthesis, where the forward reaction is exothermic:
| Reaction | Temperature (K) | Representative Kp | Observed Trend |
|---|---|---|---|
| N2 + 3H2 ⇌ 2NH3 | 673 | 1.5 × 10-5 | Higher Kp at lower T |
| N2 + 3H2 ⇌ 2NH3 | 723 | 2.6 × 10-6 | Forward reaction less favored |
| N2 + 3H2 ⇌ 2NH3 | 773 | 4.8 × 10-7 | Strong decline in Kp |
These values illustrate a key engineering reality: even with accurate product pressure measurement, Kp must be interpreted at the correct temperature.
Second Data Set: Dimerization Equilibrium Behavior
Another classic pressure-equilibrium system is:
N2O4(g) ⇌ 2NO2(g)
Representative literature values show strong temperature sensitivity:
| Temperature (K) | Kp for N2O4 ⇌ 2NO2 | Visual Observation |
|---|---|---|
| 298 | 0.15 | More colorless N2O4 present |
| 320 | 0.64 | Increased brown NO2 |
| 340 | 1.8 | Noticeably stronger NO2 fraction |
| 360 | 4.2 | Forward dissociation strongly favored |
The practical takeaway is straightforward: a product pressure measured at one temperature cannot be transplanted to another temperature without thermodynamic correction.
Common Mistakes When Using Product Partial Pressure
- Using unbalanced coefficients: coefficients are exponents in Kp and must match the balanced equation.
- Mixing pressure units: use one unit system consistently throughout the expression.
- Forgetting reactant terms: product pressure alone is not enough unless other terms are derived.
- Using non-equilibrium data: transient process values produce meaningless Kp.
- Ignoring sensor uncertainty: pressure measurement error propagates nonlinearly through exponents.
Advanced Note: Relation Between Kp and Kc
Sometimes you have concentration data instead of pressure data. Then Kc may be used, with conversion:
Kp = Kc(RT)Δn
where Δn is moles of gaseous products minus moles of gaseous reactants. This is especially important in gas systems with significant mole-number changes, because pressure sensitivity can become substantial at high temperatures.
How to Validate Your Calculated Kp
- Check equation balancing first.
- Confirm each pressure is the equilibrium value, not initial or instantaneous startup data.
- Re-calculate with significant figures preserved through intermediate steps.
- Compare your value with reference ranges from trusted databases.
- Verify temperature consistency with the source literature.
For professional or academic reporting, include uncertainty bounds and experimental method details (sensor type, calibration date, gas purity, and pressure control regime).
Authoritative References for Deeper Study
For validated thermodynamic and equilibrium data, review:
- NIST Chemistry WebBook (U.S. Government)
- University of Colorado Chemical Equilibrium Resource
- University of Wisconsin Equilibrium Module
These sources are useful for checking equilibrium definitions, deriving expressions correctly, and confirming data trends before design or exam submission.
Bottom Line
To calculate the equilibrium constant given partial pressure of the product, start with a balanced reaction, apply the full Kp expression, and insert equilibrium pressures with correct exponents. Product pressure is a powerful input, but it is only one piece of the full equilibrium ratio. Done correctly, Kp becomes a precise indicator of reaction direction preference and a practical control metric for gas-phase process optimization.