To solve this problem, we can use the Van't Hoff equation, which relates the change in temperature to the change in the equilibrium constant:ln K2/K1 = -H/R * 1/T2 - 1/T1 Where:K1 = initial equilibrium constant at T1 300 K K2 = new equilibrium constant at T2 400 K H = enthalpy change of the reaction -91.84 kJ/mol R = gas constant 8.314 J/mol K T1 = initial temperature 300 K T2 = new temperature 400 K First, we need to convert the enthalpy change from kJ/mol to J/mol:H = -91.84 kJ/mol * 1000 J/1 kJ = -91840 J/molNow, we can plug the values into the Van't Hoff equation:ln K2/2.50 x 10^-3 = - -91840 J/mol / 8.314 J/mol K * 1/400 K - 1/300 K Solve for K2:ln K2/2.50 x 10^-3 = 91840 / 8.314 * 1/400 - 1/300 ln K2/2.50 x 10^-3 11.04Now, we can find K2:K2 = 2.50 x 10^-3 * e^11.04 K2 0.075So, the new equilibrium constant Kc for the reaction at 400 K is approximately 0.075.