The Cause of Chemical Change. Spontaneous Reactions: A reaction is said to be spontaneous if, after being given the necessary energy to begin the reaction.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Entropy, S By C Hughes. From the specification: understand that ∆H, whilst important, is not sufficient to explain spontaneous change (e.g. spontaneous.
Advertisements

Entropy and Free Energy Chapter 19. Laws of Thermodynamics First Law – Energy is conserved in chemical processes neither created nor destroyed converted.
Thermodynamics:Entropy, Free Energy, and Equilibrium
Spontaneity & Entropy Unit 3 - Thermodynamics. Spontaneity In chemical terms, a spontaneous reaction is a reaction that occurs on its own. Speed is not.
Chapter 19 Chemical Thermodynamics. Introduction 1 st Law of Thermodynamics: Energy can be neither created nor destroyed. Energy of the Universe is constant.
CAUSES OF CHANGE Order and Spontaneity. Enthalpy and Reactions Some reactions happen easily, but some others do not. Sodium and chlorine readily react.
A spontaneous reaction (or favourable change) is a change that has a natural tendency to happen under certain conditions. Eg. The oxidation of iron (rust)
Thermodynamics Chapter 19 Liquid benzene Production of quicklime Solid benzene ⇅ CaCO 3 (s) ⇌ CaO + CO 2.
Thermodynamics: Spontaneity, Entropy and Free Energy.
Chemical Thermodynamics: Entropy, Free Energy and Equilibrium Chapter
Chapter 17 THERMODYNAMICS. What is Thermodynamics? Thermodynamics is the study of energy changes that accompany physical and chemical processes. Word.
Chemical Thermodynamics Chapter 19 (except 19.7!).
Chemical Thermodynamics. Spontaneous Processes First Law of Thermodynamics Energy is Conserved – ΔE = q + w Need value other than ΔE to determine if a.
Thermodynamics Chapter st Law of Thermodynamics Energy is conserved.  E = q + w.
Energy Chapter 16.
CHM 112 Summer 2007 M. Prushan Chapter 17 Thermodynamics: Entropy, Free Energy, and Equilibrium.
Chapter 19 Chemical Thermodynamics John D. Bookstaver St. Charles Community College St. Peters, MO 2006, Prentice Hall, Inc. Modified by S.A. Green, 2006.
Ch. 19: Chemical Thermodynamics (Thermochemistry II) Chemical thermodynamics is concerned with energy relationships in chemical reactions. - We consider.
First Law of Thermodynamics-The total amount of energy in the universe is constant. Second Law of Thermodynamics- All real processes occur spontaneously.
THERMODYNAMICS Internal Energy Enthalpy Entropy Free Energy Chapter 17 (McM) Chapter 20 Silberberg.
Chapter 20: Thermodynamics
A.P. Chemistry Spontaneity, Entropy, and Free Energy.
Chapter 19 Notes Chemical Thermodynamics- Entropy and The Laws of Thermodynamics.
THERMODYNAMICS: ENTROPY, FREE ENERGY, AND EQUILIBRIUM Chapter 17.
Topic 15 Energetics (HL) 15.1 Standard enthalpy changes of reaction
6.04.  A spontaneous change is a change in a system that proceeds without a net input of energy from an outside source.  Needs some activation energy.
Aim: What is entropy?.
Gibbs and the Law of Entropy
Chapter 19: Chemical Thermodynamics Spontaneous processes… …happen without outside help …are “product favored”
Spontaneous Reactions Proceed forward on their own without outside or external cause. Proceed forward on their own without outside or external cause. Certain.
What is a spontaneous reaction? One, that given the necessary activation energy, proceeds without continuous outside assistance.
Entropy, Free Energy, and Equilibrium Chapter 18 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Entropy, Free Energy, and Equilibrium Chapter 19 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Thermodynamics REACTION SPONTANEITY “stuff happens”
Entropy. Spontaneous Processes Spontaneous processes are those that can proceed without any outside intervention. The gas in vessel B will spontaneously.
Chemistry 100 Chapter 19 Spontaneity of Chemical and Physical Processes: Thermodynamics.
Chapter 18 – Rates of Reactions and Equilibrium Every biological and non-biological chemical reaction in nature eventually reaches a state called equilibrium.
The Driving Forces of Reactions. In chemistry we are concerned with whether a reaction will occur spontaneously, and under what conditions will it occur.
Thermochemistry Gibbs Free Energy, Entropy, and Spontaneity.
Unit 1: Energy Changes in Chemical Reactions
Bond Enthalpies How does a chemical reaction have energy?
Thermodynamics. study of energy changes that accompany physical and chemical processes. Thermochemistry is one component of thermodynamics which focuses.
THERMODYNAMICS spontaneous reactions. Why do reactions occur? 14 KMnO C 3 H 5 (OH) 3 7 K 2 CO Mn 2 O CO H 2 O.
A science that includes the study of energy transformations and the relationships among the physical properties of substances which are affected by.
Unit 11 Thermodynamics Chapter 16. Thermodynamics Definition Definition A study of heat transfer that accompanies chemical changes A study of heat transfer.
ENTROPY. Spontaneous reactions Many spontaneous chemical reaction are exothermic e.g. burning methane to produce carbon dioxide and water Some endothermic.
Entropy, Free Energy, and Equilibrium
Spontaneity. Spontaneous Processes P/C change that occurs with no outside intervention exothermic chemical rxns are spontaneous energy still must be supplied.
Week 24 © Pearson Education Ltd 2009 This document may have been altered from the original Explain that entropy is a measure of the disorder of a system,
* Studying energy flow in chemical changes allows us to predict what is possible and what is not. * 1 st Law of Thermodynamics PE tends only to decrease.
Topic: Reaction Spontaneity Do Now:. Spontaneous Processes no outside intervention =physical or chemical change that occurs with no outside intervention.
Spontaneous Reactions. In the context of a chemical reaction, “spontaneous” describes a reaction that can “proceed of its own accord without outside or.
Topic: Reaction Spontaneity Do Now:. Spontaneous Processes no outside intervention =physical or chemical change that occurs with no outside intervention.
 State Function (°)  Property with a specific value only influenced by a system’s present condition  Only dependent on the initial and final states,
18.5 Free Energy and Entropy > 1 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc., or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 18 Reaction Rates and Equilibrium.
Entropy and Free Energy. Learning Objectives  Use the Gibbs free-energy equation to determine whether a reaction is spontaneous or not.  Understand.
A science that includes the study of energy transformations and the relationships among the physical properties of substances which are affected by.
Chapter 19, Part III Spontaneous vs. Non-spontaneous Entropy vs. enthalpy.
Entropy, Free Energy, and Equilibrium Chapter 18 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Entropy, Free Energy, and Equilibrium Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Reaction Spontaneity. 1. Spontaneous Process First Law of Thermodynamics- “Conservation of Energy” – Energy can change form but it cannot be created or.
A science that includes the study of energy transformations and the relationships among the physical properties of substances which are affected by.
 Spontaneous reactions are reactions, that once started, continues by itself without further input of energy from the outside.  If a reaction is spontaneous.
Chemical Thermodynamics The concept of chemical thermodynamics deals with how the enthalpy change and entropy change of a chemical reaction are related.
Thermodynamics Chapter 19. Important vocabulary to review: Heat Temperature Energy State function/property System Surroundings Work Driving force.
Entropy, Enthalpy, & Gibbs Free Energy
The Cause of Chemical Change
Entropy Chapter 16-5.
Thermodynamics Lecture 3
1.3.1 Entropy.
Presentation transcript:

The Cause of Chemical Change

Spontaneous Reactions: A reaction is said to be spontaneous if, after being given the necessary energy to begin the reaction (activation energy), it occurs without continuous outside assistance In other words, if reactants react then the reaction is spontaneous

Examples of spontaneous reactions Melting ice Spontaneous under right conditions

Dissolving sodium chloride NaCl (s)  Na + (aq) + Cl - (aq) + heat

Burning a candle Needs an initial spark to get started

Spontaneous reactions can be very rapid or very slow Silver tarnishing Cesium in water

Examples of non-spontaneous reactions Decomposition of water – needs a continuous supply of energy or the reaction will stop

Building a brick wall Needs the builder to keep working or the wall will stop being made

Non-spontaneous reactions occur at the expense of a previous spontaneous reaction The reaction creating the electricity is spontaneous but the decomposition of water is not The energy the brick layer is using is spontaneous but the building of the wall is not

Spontaneous reactions tend to be exothermic. (i.e. they involve a loss in energy) Products are more stable than reactants – this is why the reaction occurs

Why do endothermic reactions occur (i.e. melting ice) if products are less stable than the reactants?

More than enthalpy change must be responsible for the spontaneity of a reaction Spontaneous reactions depend on : Enthalpy Entropy

Entropy (S) is a measure of the randomness or disorder of a system Every chemical and physical change involves a change in the randomness or entropy of the system.

Throwing a new deck of cards in the air Low entropy High entropy

Dissolving sodium chloride in water Solid NaCl low entropy Aqueous NaCl high entropy

Spontaneous reactions and entropy Spontaneous reactions tend to have an increase in entropy i.e. S i 0

Entropy increases when: 1)The volume of a gaseous system increases

2) The temperature of a system increases

3) The physical state of the system changes

4) When the n product > n reactant 2NH 3(g)  N 2(g) + 3H 2(g)

5) A solid dissolves

6) solid reactants become liquid or gaseous products (or liquids become gases) 2NaHCO 3(s)  Na 2 O (s) + H 2 O (l) + 2CO 2(g)

Predict whether there is an increase in entropy (ΔS > 0) or a decrease in entropy (ΔS < 0): 1) steam condenses to water 2) solid CO 2 sublimes 3) N 2 O 4(g)  2NO 2(g) 4) C 3 H 8(g) + 5O 2(g)  3CO 2(g) + 4H 2 O (l) 5) H 2(g) + ½ O 2(g)  H 2 O (l)

Second Law of Thermodynamics: All changes either directly or indirectly increase the entropy of the universe.

Third Law of Thermodynamics: The entropy of a perfectly ordered crystal is zero at 0 K.

Standard Entropy S o : the entropy change between 0 K and 298 K (i.e.25 o C) H 2 O (l) H 2 O (g) O 2(g) 1) All elements possess entropy 2) Units are in J/mol∙K 3) Entropy is temperature dependent (Enthalpy is not) 4) Unlike ΔH f, entropy values listed are not the change in entropy for a formation reaction but simply what the substance possesses

Standard Entropy Change: ΔS o ΔS o = Σn S o P - Σn S o R C 3 H 8(g) + 5O 2(g)  3CO 2(g) + 4H 2 O (l)