ToolJoltTools

Equilibrium Constant K — dissolution

Calculate the equilibrium constant K for dissolution from the standard free-energy change. K = exp(−ΔG°/RT).

K = exp(−ΔG°/RT)
3,203.4
Equilibrium constant K
-20 kJ/mol
ΔG°
  1. 1
    K = exp(−ΔG°/RT)
    K = exp(−-20000/(8.314462618×298)) = 3.203e+3
K > 1 favours products; K < 1 favours reactants.

🔒 100% client-side — your data is computed in the browser and never uploaded.

Cite this toolToolJolt. Equilibrium Constant K — dissolution. ToolJolt Chemistry & Lab Tools; 2026. https://tooljolt.com

A no-nonsense equilibrium constant k — dissolution built for chemical thermodynamics and kinetics. It shows the substituted formula, not just the answer, so you can check the working.

About Equilibrium Constant K — dissolution

Calculate the equilibrium constant K for dissolution from the standard free-energy change. K = exp(−ΔG°/RT). The calculation uses K = exp(−ΔG°/RT). Why accuracy here pays off: Whether a reaction is spontaneous, how fast it goes, and how its equilibrium shifts with temperature all flow from a handful of equations. Sign and unit errors here are notoriously easy to make. K > 1 favours products; K < 1 favours reactants. Mistakes that trip people up: confusing rate constant with equilibrium constant; mixing J and kJ for ΔH vs ΔS; using °C instead of K. No account, no upload, no tracking of your inputs — the result is generated on your machine, which makes it reproducible, private and citable in published work.

How to use Equilibrium Constant K — dissolution

  1. 1Enter your values: ΔG°, Temperature.
  2. 2Read the headline result and the supporting figures, which recompute as you type.
  3. 3Open “Worked example with your numbers” to see the substituted formula step by step.
  4. 4Copy the result, or use the cite-this-tool snippet for your methods section.

Why use Equilibrium Constant K — dissolution?

  • Designed for physical chemists, students and process scientists who need a trustworthy answer fast
  • Instant, client-side result — works offline once loaded and keeps your data private
  • Shows the worked example step by step with your own numbers, not just a final figure
  • Pre-filled with sensible, niche-specific defaults so it is useful the second it loads
  • Mobile-friendly and completely free, with no sign-up or usage caps

Frequently asked questions

Any tips specific to this calculation?+

K > 1 favours products; K < 1 favours reactants. Also watch out for: confusing rate constant with equilibrium constant and dropping the minus sign in ΔG = ΔH − TΔS.

Is this equilibrium constant k — dissolution free to use?+

Yes. It is completely free, needs no sign-up, and runs entirely in your browser — there are no usage limits.

What formula does it use?+

It uses K = exp(−ΔG°/RT) The full worked example is shown beneath the result so you can verify each step.

What are the most common mistakes here?+

In chemical thermodynamics and kinetics, watch for: mixing J and kJ for ΔH vs ΔS; using °C instead of K; dropping the minus sign in ΔG = ΔH − TΔS; confusing rate constant with equilibrium constant. This tool shows the working so you can catch these before they cost an experiment.

Does my data leave my device?+

No. All computation happens locally in your browser. Nothing you enter — sequences, concentrations or measurements — is uploaded to any server, so it is safe for confidential work.

Can I cite this tool?+

Yes — use the “Cite this tool” snippet on the page. Many users link these calculators from methods sections, lab SOPs and teaching materials.

Related tools

Related Chemistry tools

Sponsored