(i) The initial effect on the vapour pressure of increasing the volume of the container will be that the vapour pressure is lowered. This is because the same amount of vapours now occupy large space.
(ii) Due to a sudden increase in volume, the pressure inside the sealed container suddenly decreases. According to Le-Chatelier’s principle for the equilibrium,
A decrease in pressure will shift the equilibrium in the forward direction. Thus the rate of evaporation will increase initially. The rate of condensation decreases initially because vapour pressure per unit volume decreases. However, due to increase in the rate of evaporation, the amount of vapour begins to increase and so the rate of condensation also begins to increase.
(iii) When the equilibrium is again reached, the rate of evaporation becomes equal to the rate of condensation. The final vapour pressure will remain the same as vapour pressure before increasing the volume of the container. This is because the vapour pressure of a liquid does not depend on upon the amount of the liquid or the space above it but depends on only upon temperature.