- Joined
- Feb 3, 2011
- Messages
- 520
- Reaction score
- 177
I don't know why you would suggest that shaking in a closed system disrupts equilibrium. Le Châtelier's Principle requires that you change something like temperature, pressure or concentration. Shaking does none of this.
Pressure is changing when the bottle is shaken. It is obvious because the walls of the container become harder to move, because there are more molecules of gas in the headspace colliding against the container's walls. I don't see what more evidence you need. Given time, equilibrium will become reestablished and the container will return to the original hardness.
I think that your assumption of a closed system is a false premise. Closing something off in a bottle doesn't shut the system off from the universe, as I can shake it, heat it, pass light through it, make gas come out of solution, etc. As CO2 leaves solution, the concentration has changed, and thus the equilibrium shifts.
Look at the graphs above. See the dip off in pressure? That indicates that at some point in time the pressure was higher than the pressure at equilibrium. That is because initially the yeast were producing CO2 in solution (reactants). This causes the reaction to shift to create more products. After the yeast have ceased making reactants, the reaction shifts back towards creation of the reactants (because of the excess products that were made earlier..indicated by the beginning of the 'dip'), and eventually equilibrium is reached (meaning that the creation of reactants and products is happening at the same rate).