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Chapter 18 Entropy, Free Energy and Equilibrium

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1 Chapter 18 Entropy, Free Energy and Equilibrium
Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

2 18.1 Spontaneous Processes
Spontaneous: process that does occur under a specific set of conditions Nonspontaneous: process that does not occur under a specific set of conditions Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

3 Spontaneous Processes
Often spontaneous processes are exothermic, but not always…. Methane gas burns spontaneously and is exothermic Ice melts spontaneously but this is an endothermic process… There is another quantity! Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

4 Spontaneous vs Nonspontaneous
Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

5 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
18.2 Entropy Entropy (S): Can be thought of as a measure of the disorder of a system In general, greater disorder means greater entropy Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

6 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Probability- what is the chance that the order of the cards can be restored by reshuffling? Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

7 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Entropy is a state function just as enthalpy S = Sfinal  Sinitial Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

8 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Standard Entropy Standard entropy: absolute entropy of a substance at 1 atm (typically at 25C) Complete list in Appendix 2 of text What do you notice about entropy values for elements and compounds? Units: J/K·mol Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

9 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Entropies Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

10 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Trends in Entropy Entropy for gas phase is greater than that of liquid or solid of same substance I2 (g) has greater entropy than I2 (s) More complex structures have greater entropy C2H6 (g) has greater entropy than CH4 (g) Allotropes - more ordered forms have lower entropy Diamond has lower entropy than graphite Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

11 Entropy Changes in a System Qualitative
Ssolid < Sliquid Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

12 Entropy Changes in a System Qualitative
Sliquid < Svapor Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

13 Entropy Changes in a System Qualitative
Spure < Saqueous Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

14 Entropy Changes in a System Qualitative
Slower temp < Shigher temp Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

15 Entropy Changes in a System Qualitative
Sfewer moles < Smore moles Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

16 Entropy Changes in a System Qualitative
Determine the sign of S for the following (qualitatively) 1. Liquid nitrogen evaporates 2. Two clear liquids are mixed and a solid yellow precipitate forms 3. Liquid water is heated from 22.5 C to 55.8 C Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

17 18.3 The Second and Third Laws of Thermodynamics
System: the reaction Surroundings: everything else Both undergo changes in entropy during physical and chemical processes Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

18 Second Law of Thermodynamics
Entropy of the universe increases in a spontaneous process and remains unchanged in an equilibrium process. Equilibrium process: caused to occur by adding or removing energy from a system that is at equilibrium Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

19 Second Law of Thermodynamics
Mathematically speaking: Spontaneous process: Suniverse = Ssystem + Ssurroundings > 0 Equilibrium process: Suniverse = Ssystem + Ssurroundings = 0 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

20 Entropy Changes in the System
Entropy can be calculated from the table of standard values just as enthalpy change was calculated. Srxn = nS products  mS reactants Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

21 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Standard Entropy Calculate the standard entropy change for the following using the table of standard values. (first, predict the sign for S qualitatively) 2NH3(g)  N2(g) + 3H2(g) Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

22 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Standard Entropy 2NH3(g)  N2(g) + 3H2(g) Srxn = nS products  mS reactants = [(1)(191.5 J/K · mol) + (3)(131.0 J/K · mol)] - [(2)(193.0 J/K · mol)] = J/K · mol J/K · mol Srxn = J/K · mol (Entropy increases) (2 mol gas  4 mol gas) Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

23 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Your Turn! Calculate the standard entropy change for the following using the table of standard values. (first, predict the sign for S qualitatively) 2H2(g) + O2(g)  2H2O (g) Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

24 Third Law of Thermodynamics
Entropy of a perfect crystalline substance is zero at absolute zero. Importance of this law: it allows us to calculate absolute entropies for substances Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

25 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
18.4 Gibbs Free Energy G = H – T S The Gibbs free energy, expressed in terms of enthalpy and entropy, refers only to the system, yet can be used to predict spontaneity. Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

26 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Gibbs Free Energy If G < 0,negative, the forward reaction is spontaneous. If G = 0, the reaction is at equilibrium. If G > 0, positive, the forward reaction is nonspontaneous Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

27 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Predicting Sign of G Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

28 Predicting Temperature from Gibbs Equation
Set G = 0 (equilibrium condition) 0 = H – T S Rearrange equation to solve for T- watch for units! This equation will also be useful to calculate temperature of a phase change. Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

29 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Example For a reaction in which H = 125 kJ/mol and S = 325 J/Kmol, determine the temperature in Celsius above which the reaction is spontaneous. 385 K  273 = 112C Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

30 Standard Free Energy Changes
Free energy can be calculated from the table of standard values just as enthalpy and entropy changes. Grxn = nG products  mG reactants Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

31 Standard Free Energy Changes
Calculate the standard free-energy change for the following reaction. 2KClO3(s)  2KCl(s) + 3O2(g) Grxn = nG products  mG reactants = [2(408.3 kJ/mol) + 3(0)]  [2(289.9 kJ/mol)] = 816.6  (579.8) = 236.8 kJ/mol (spont) Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

32 18.5 Free Energy and Chemical Equilibrium
Reactions are almost always in something other than their standard states. Free energy is needed to determine if a reaction is spontaneous or not. How does free energy change with changes in concentration? Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

33 Free Energy and Equilibrium
G = G° + RT ln Q G = non-standard free energy G° = standard free energy (from tables) R = J/K·mole T = temp in K Q = reaction quotient Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

34 Free Energy and Equilibrium
Consider the reaction, H2(g) + Cl2(g)  2 HCl(g) How does the value of G change when the pressures of the gases are altered as follows at 25 C? H2 = 0.25 atm; Cl2 = 0.45 atm; HCl = 0.30 atm Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

35 Free Energy and Equilibrium
First, calculate standard free energy: H2(g) + Cl2(g)  2 HCl(g) G° = [2(95.27 kJ/mol)]  [0 + 0] =  kJ/mol Second, find Q: Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

36 Free Energy and Equilibrium
Solve: G = G° + RT ln Q G = 190,540 J/mol + (8.314J/K·mol)(298 K) ln (0.80) G =  kJ/mol (the reaction becomes more spontaneous - free energy is more negative) Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

37 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Your Turn! Consider the reaction, O2(g) + 2CO(g)  2CO2(g) How does the value of G change when the pressures of the gases are altered as follows at 25 C? O2 = 0.50 atm; CO = 0.30 atm; CO2 = 0.45 atm Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

38 Relationship Between G° and K
At equilibrium, G = 0 and Q = K The equation becomes: 0 = G° + RT ln K or G° = – RT ln K Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

39 Relationship Between G° and K
Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

40 Relationship Between G° and K
Using the table of standard free energies, calculate the equilibrium constant, KP, for the following reaction at 25 C. 2HCl(g) H2(g) Cl2(g) Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

41 Relationship Between G° and K
First, calculate the G°: = [0 + 0]  [2(95.27 kJ/mol)] = kJ/mol (non-spontaneous) Substitute into equation: kJ/mol =  (8.314 x 103 kJ/K·mol)(298 K) ln KP 76.90 = ln KP = 3.98 x 1034 K < 1 reactants are favored Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

42 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Your Turn! Calculate the value of the equilibrium constant, KP, for the following reaction at 25 C. 2NO2(g) N2O4(g) Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

43 18.6 Thermodynamics in Living Systems
Coupled reactions Thermodynamically favorable reactions drives an unfavorable one Enzymes facilitate many nonspontaneous reactions Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

44 Thermodynamics in Living Systems
Examples: C6H12O6 oxidation: G° = 2880 kJ/mol ADP  ATP G° = 31 kJ/mol Synthesis of proteins: (first step) alanine + glycine  alanylglycine G° = 29 kJ/mol Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

45 Thermodynamics in Living Systems
Consider the coupling of two reactions: ATP + H2O + alanine + glycine  ADP + H3PO4 + alanylglycine Overall free energy change: G° = 31 kJ/mol + 29 kJ/mol = 2 kJ/mol Protein synthesis is now favored. Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

46 ATP-ADP Interconversions
Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

47 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Key Points Spontaneous vs nonspontaneous Relate enthalpy, entropy and free energy Entropy Predict qualitatively Calculate from table of standard values Calculate entropy for universe Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009

48 Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009
Key Points Free energy Calculate from table of standard values Calculate from Gibbs equation Calculate non-standard conditions Calculate in relationship to equilibrium constant Copyright McGraw-Hill 2009


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