So Rate constant and equilibrium constant are different here for
this case.
Can you present an exmaple of this type of raection?
Cambridge was just testing the conceptual understanding of
students, *IF* such a reaction exists.
In practice, for enthalpy change of a chemical reaction to be
zero, is theoretically possible but extremely rare (in contrast,
after taking entropy change into account, for Gibbs free energy
change to be zero, ie. neither endogernic nor exogernic, at a
particular temperature, is extremely common, eg. freezing / melting
of water at 0 degrees C).
One such possible reaction (and in fact the only case within the
A level syllabus), for enthalpy (and in this case, also entropy and
Gibbs free energy) change of reaction to be zero, would be the
conversion of 1 enantiomer to the other, eg. an anion as
nucleophile replacing the same anion as leaving group via SN2, or
via SN1 (which cheats a little by using overall reaction rather
than individual elementary step-wise reactions).
There are other rare examples, but which are beyond A levels and
need not be considered, and will not be asked by Cambridge.