Title: Thermodynamics: Entropy, Free Energy, and Equilibrium
1Chapter 16
- Thermodynamics Entropy,Free Energy,and
Equilibrium
In this chapter we will determine the direction
of a chemical reaction and calculate equilibrium
constant using thermodynamic values Entropy and
Enthalpy.
2Spontaneous Processes
Spontaneous Process A process that, once
started, proceeds on its own without a continuous
external influence.
3Universe System Surroundings
The system is what you observe surroundings are
everything else.
4Thermodynamics
State functions are properties that are
determined by the state of the system, regardless
of how that condition was achieved.
energy
, pressure, volume, temperature
Potential energy of hiker 1 and hiker 2 is the
same even though they took different paths.
5 Laws of Thermodynamics
- 1) Energy is neither created nor destroyed.
- 2) In any spontaneous process the total Entropy
of a system and its surrounding always
increases. - We will prove later ?G ?Hsys T?Ssys
- ?G lt 0 Reaction is spontaneous in forward
direction - 3) The entropy of a perfect crystalline substance
is zero at the absolute zero ( K0) -
6Enthalpy, Entropy, and Spontaneous Processes
State Function A function or property whose
value depends only on the present state, or
condition, of the system, not on the path used to
arrive at that state. Enthalpy Change (DH) The
heat change in a reaction or process at constant
pressure. Entropy (DS) The amount of Molecular
randomness change in a reaction or process at
constant pressure.
7Enthalpy Change
Exothermic
Endothermic
8Entropy Change
DS Sfinal - Sinitial
9Entropy
10Entropy
11The sign of entropy change, DS, associated with
the boiling of water is _______.
- Positive
- Negative
- Zero
12Correct Answer
- Positive
- Negative
- Zero
Vaporization of a liquid to a gas leads to a
large increase in volume and hence entropy DS
must be positive.
13Entropy and Temperature 02
14Third Law of Thermodynamics
The entropy of a perfect crystalline substance is
zero at the absolute zero ( K0)
Ssolid lt Sliquid lt Sgas
15Entropy Changes in the System (DSsys)
When gases are produced (or consumed)
- If a reaction produces more gas molecules than
it consumes, DS0 gt 0. - If the total number of gas molecules diminishes,
DS0 lt 0. - If there is no net change in the total number of
gas molecules, then DS0 may be positive or
negative .
The total number of gas molecules goes down, DS
is negative.
16Standard Molar Entropies and Standard Entropies
of Reaction
Standard Molar Entropy (S) The entropy of 1
mole of a pure substance at 1 atm pressure and a
specified temperature.
Calculated by using S k ln W , W Accessible
microstates of translational, vibrational and
rotational motions
17 Review of Ch 8
- ?G ?H T?S see page 301 of your book
We will show the proof of this formula later in
this chapter
- Calculating DH for a reaction
- DH DHf (Products) DHf (Reactants)
- For a balanced equation, each heat of formation
must be multiplied by the stoichiometric
coefficient. - aA bB cC dD
- DH cDHf (C) dDHf (D) aDHf (A)
bDHf (B)
See Appendix B, end of your book
18Entropy Changes in the System (DSsys)
S0(CO) 197.6 J/Kmol
S0(CO2) 213.6 J/Kmol
S0(O2) 205.0 J/Kmol
19Calculating ?S for a Reaction
?So ? So (products) - ? So (reactants)
- Consider 2 H2(g) O2(g) ---gt 2 H2O(liq)
- ?So 2 So (H2O) - 2 So (H2) So (O2)
- ?So 2 mol (69.9 J/Kmol) - 2 mol (130.6
J/Kmol) 1 mol (205.0 J/Kmol) - ?So -326.4 J/K
- Note that there is a decrease in Entropy because
3 mol of gas give 2 mol of liquid.
20Calculate DS for the equation below using the
standard entropy data given 2 NO(g) O2(g) ? 2
NO2(g) DS values (J/mol-K) NO2(g) 240, NO(g)
211, O2(g) 205.
- ?147 J/mol
- ?76 J/mol
- 176 J/mol
- 147 J/mol
21Correct Answer
- ?147 J/K
- ?76 J/K
- 176 J/K
- 147 J/K
(
)
(
)
?
?
?
?
D
?
D
?
D
reactants
products
S
S
S
DS 2(240) ? 2(211) 205 DS 480 ? 627
DS ? 147
22Thermite Reaction
23Spontaneous Processesand Entropy 07
- Consider the gas phase reaction of A2 molecules
(red) with B atoms (blue). - (a) Write a balanced equation for the reaction.
- (b) Predict the sign of ?S for the reaction.
24Second Law Of Thermodynamic
In any spontaneous process the total Entropy of
a system and its surrounding always increases.
Entropy Changes in the Surroundings (DSsurr)
Exothermic Process DSsurr gt 0
Endothermic Process DSsurr lt 0
25Entropy and the Second Law of Thermodynamics
Dssurr a ( - DH)
Dssurr a (
)
See example of tossing a rock into a calm waters
vs. rough waters Page 661 of your book
262nd Law of Thermodynamics 01
- The total entropy increases in a spontaneous
process and remains unchanged in an equilibrium
process. - Spontaneous ?Stotal ?Ssys ?Ssur gt 0
- Equilibrium ?Stotal ?Ssys ?Ssur 0
- The system is what you observe surroundings are
everything else.
27Calculate change of entropy of surrounding in the
following reaction
- 2 H2(g) O2(g) ---gt 2 H2O(liq) ?H -571.7 kJ
?Sosurroundings 1917 J/K
28Spontaneous Reactions 01
- The 2nd law tells us a process will be
spontaneous if ?Stotal gt 0 which requires a
knowledge of ?Ssurr.spontaneous ?Stotal
?Ssys ?Ssur gt 0
29Gibbs Free Energy 02
- The expression T?Stotal is equated as Gibbs
free energy change (?G), or simply free energy
change -
-
- ?G ?Hsys T?Ssys
- ?G lt 0 Reaction is spontaneous in forward
direction.?G 0 Reaction is at equilibrium.?G
gt 0 Reaction is spontaneous in reverse direction.
T?Stotal ?G
Driving force of a reaction, Maximum work you
can get from a system.
30Calculate ?Go rxn for the following
- C2H2(g) 5/2 O2(g) --gt 2 CO2(g) H2O(g)
- Use enthalpies of formation to calculate
- ?Horxn -1256 kJ
- Use standard molar entropies to calculate ?Sorxn
( see page 658, appendix A-10) - ?Sorxn -97.4 J/K or -0.0974 kJ/K
- ?Gorxn -1256 kJ - (298 K)(-0.0974 kJ/K)
- -1227 kJ
- Reaction is product-favored in spite of negative
?Sorxn. - Reaction is enthalpy driven
31Calculate DG for the equation below using the
thermodynamic data given N2(g) 3 H2(g) ? 2
NH3(g) DHf (NH3) ?46 kJ S values
(J/mol-K) are NH3 192.5, N2 191.5, H2
130.6.
- 33 kJ
- 66 kJ
- ?66 kJ
- ?33 kJ
32Correct Answer
- 33 kJ
- 66 kJ
- ?66 kJ
- ?33 kJ
DH ?92 kJ DS ?198.3J/mol . K DG DH ?
TDS DG (?92) ? (298)(?0.1983) DG (?92)
(59.2) ?32.9 KJ
33Gibbs Free Energy 03
- Using ?G ?H T?S, we can predict the sign of
?G from the sign of ?H and ?S. - 1) If both ?H and ?S are positive,
- ?G will be negative only when the temperature
value is large. - Therefore, the reaction is spontaneous only at
high temperature. - 2) If ?H is positive and ?S is negative,
- ?G will always be positive.
- Therefore, the reaction is not spontaneous
-
34Gibbs Free Energy 04
?G ?H T?S
- 3) If ?H is negative and ?S is positive,
- ?G will always be negative.
- Therefore, the reaction is spontaneous
- 4) If both ?H and ?S are negative,
- ?G will be negative only when the temperature
value is small. - Therefore, the reaction is spontaneous only at
Low temperatures.
35Gibbs Free Energy 04
36Gibbs Free Energy 06
- What are the signs (, , or 0) of ?H, ?S, and ?G
for the following spontaneous reaction of A atoms
(red) and B atoms (blue)?
37Gibbs Free Energy 02
- The expression T?Stotal is equated as Gibbs
free energy change (?G), or simply free energy
change -
-
- ?G ?Hsys T?Ssys
- ?G lt 0 Reaction is spontaneous in forward
direction.?G 0 Reaction is at equilibrium.?G
gt 0 Reaction is spontaneous in reverse direction.
T?Stotal ?G
Driving force of a reaction, Maximum work you
can get from a system.
38Standard Free-Energy Changes for Reactions
Calculate the standard free-energy change at 25
C for the Haber synthesis of ammonia using the
given values for the standard enthalpy and
standard entropy changes
DH -92.2 kJ
DS -198.7 J/K
DG DH - TDS
-92.2 kJ - 298 K
-33.0 kJ
x
x
39Gibbs Free Energy 05
- Iron metal can be produced by reducing iron(III)
oxide with hydrogen - Fe2O3(s) 3 H2(g) ? 2 Fe(s) 3 H2O(g)
- ?H 98.8 kJ ?S 141.5 J/K
- Is this reaction spontaneous at 25C?
- At what temperature will the reaction become
spontaneous?
40- Decomposition of CaCO3 has a ?H 178.3 kJ/mol
and ?S 159 J/mol ? K. At what temperature
does this become spontaneous?
- 121C
- 395C
- 848C
- 1121C
41Correct Answer
- 121C
- 395C
- 848C
- 1121C
T ?H/?S T 178.3 kJ/mol/0.159 kJ/mol ? K T
1121 K T (C) 1121 273 848
42Standard Free Energies of Formation
DG DGf (products) - DGf (reactants)
DG cDGf (C) dDGf (D) - aDGf (A)
bDGf (B)
Reactants
Products
43Standard free energy of formation (DG0f) is the
free-energy change that occurs when1 mole of the
compound is formed from its elements in their
standard ( 1 atm) states.
44--
45Calculate DG for the equation below using the
Gibbs free energy data given 2 SO2(g) O2(g) ?
2 SO3(g) DGf values (kJ) SO2(g) ?300.4,
SO3(g) ?370.4
- 70 kJ
- 140 kJ
- ?140 kJ
- ?70 kJ
46Correct Answer
- 70 kJ
- 140 kJ
- ?140 kJ
- ?70 kJ
(
)
(
)
?
??
?
?
?
reactants
products
G
G
G
?
f
f
DG (2 ? ?370.4) ? (2 ? ?300.4) 0 DG
?740.8 ? ?600.8 ?140
47Gibbs Free Energy 07
48Calculation of Nonstandard ?G
- The sign of ?G tells the direction of
spontaneous reaction when both reactants and
products are present at standard state
conditions. - Under nonstandard( condition where pressure is
not 1atm or concentrations of solutions are not
1M) conditions, ?G becomes ?G. ?G ?G
RT lnQ - The reaction quotient is obtained in the same way
as an equilibrium expression.
49Free Energy Changes and the Reaction Mixture
DG DG RT ln Q
Calculate DG for the formation of ethylene (C2H4)
from carbon and hydrogen at 25 C when the
partial pressures are 100 atm H2 and 0.10 atm
C2H4.
Qp
Calculate ln Qp
50Free Energy Changes and the Reaction Mixture
Calculate DG
DG DG RT ln Q
8.314
68.1 kJ/mol
(298 K)(-11.51)
( see page A-13 of your book, page 667)
DG 39.6 kJ/mol
51Free Energy and ChemicalEquilibrium 05
- At equilibrium ?G 0 and Q K
- ?G ?G RT lnQ
- ?Grxn RT ln K
52Free Energy and Chemical Equilibrium
Calculate Kp at 25 C for the following reaction
Calculate DG
DG DGf (CaO(s)) DGf (CO2(g)) - DGf
(CaCO3(s))
Please see appendix B
(1 mol)(-604.0 kJ/mol) (1 mol)(-394.4
kJ/mol)
- (1 mol)(-1128.8 kJ/mol)
DG 130.4 kJ/mol
53Free Energy and Chemical Equilibrium
Calculate ln K
DG -RT ln K
-130.4 kJ/mol
(298 K)
8.314
ln K -52.63
Calculate K
-52.63
1.4 x 10-23
K e
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56Free Energy and ChemicalEquilibrium 04
?Grxn RT ln K
57Suppose ?G is a large, positive value. What
then will be the value of the equilibrium
constant, K?
- K 0
- K 1
- 0 lt K lt 1
- K gt 1
58Correct Answer
?G ?RTlnK Thus, large positive values of DG
lead to large negative values of lnK. The value
of K itself, then, is very small.
- K 0
- K 1
- 0 lt K lt 1
- K gt 1
59More thermo?
You betcha!
60?Gorxn - RT lnK
- Calculate K for the reaction
- N2O4 ---gt2 NO2 ?Gorxn 4.8 kJ/mole ( see page
A-11) - ?G ?RT lnK
- ?Gorxn 4800 J - (8.31 J/mol.K)(298 K) ln K
K 0.14 When ?Gorxn gt 0, then K lt 1