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Chapter 20 Thermodynamics: Entropy, Free Energy and Thermodynamics: Entropy, Free Energy, and the Direction of Chemical Reactions the Direction of Chemical Reactions Thermodyamics considers the energetics of a reaction but says nothing about the rate of a chemical reaction (kinetics). Potential Energy 20.1 The Second Law of Thermodynamics: Predicting Spontaneous Change 20.2 Calculating the Change in Entropy of a Reaction 20.3 Entropy, Free Energy, and Work 20.4 Free Energy, Equilibrium, and Reaction Direction Activation Energy Time Spontaneity refers to any chemical process that appears to proceed “naturally” to a final state without outside intervention. In the 1870’s, it was thought that !H determined the “spontaneity of a chemical reaction”. This notion was proved wrong as both exothermic and endothermic reactions are spontaneous. T > 0˚C Examples of spontaneous reactions: CH4 (g) + 2O2 (g) T < 0˚C Freezing and melting of water Our goal in this Chapter is to identify those factors which determine whether a chemical reaction will proceed spontaneously. A H2O (l) H2O (s) !H0 = - 6.01 kJ H2O (s) H2O (l) !H0 = 6.01 kJ NH4NO3 (s) H 2O !Hrnx does not determine whether a reaction is spontaneous! NH4+(aq) + NO3- (aq) !H0 = 25 kJ The rusting of a nail Our goal is to identify those factors that will allow us to predict whether a chemical reaction will proceed spontaneously (no outside intervention). Suppose a chemical reaction: CO2 (g) + 2H2O (l) !H0 = -890.4 kJ Review: The internal energy, E, of a system is a bulk property of matter that describes all energy within a defined system. B Can we develop a parameter or a function that can predict whether A ==>B will occur “spontaneously”? The answer is yes and the details are explained in thermodynamic theory. First, let’s review thermodynamics from Chem 7 (internal energy, formalism, enthalpy) It’s the sum of energies that exists in atoms/ molecules including: • • • • • • • Translational kinetic energy. Molecular rotation. Bond vibrations. Intermolecular attractions. Electrons. Nuclear Electrochemical • Translational kinetic energy. • Rotational energy • Vibrational energy • Electrostatic energy Molecules translate, vibrate, rotate in quantized states. The more atoms there are, the more ways there are a molecule can vibrate or “wiggle” and store energy (degrees of freedom). Molecular Level: Internal energy is distributed over all quantized translational, vibronic and rotational energy states in molecules and atoms. Quantized energy levels are of different energy. Rotational gaps are on the order of the energy of microwave radiation. Vibrational spacing is higher in energy (IR). Energy Spacing Trans Roto Vibro It is the distribution of quanta in these energy levels that is essential to understanding the entropy and the “dispersal of energy” that occurs during a spontaneous chemical reaction. Macroscopic: The internal energy of a system can be changed only by exchanging heat (q) or work (w) with its surroundings. Change in Internal energy Heat Work !ESys = q + w Surroundings +q = heat added +w = work done on the system System with internal energy E Surroundings It’s a state function! “energy is neither created nor destroyed just transformed between the two boundries.” !Esystem + !Esurroundings = 0 -q = heat lost from the system -w = work done by the system We can not measure the “absolute” internal energy only changes in internal energy between two states. It’s a state function! !ESys = q + w = Efinal - Einitial The 1st Law of Thermodynamics says that total energy of a system + surroundings remains constant—i.e. !E is the measure of a change relative to an initial state: State 1: P1, V1, T1 to State 2: P2, V2, T2 !Esystem = -!Esurroundings The 1st Law of Thermodynamics does not tell us anything about the direction of change in the universe! A state function is a special type of mathematical function that has ONE UNIQUE VALUE between an initial and a final state. That value does not depend on the path taken between the two states. h Final State All are state functions! !T = Tfinal - Tinitial Recall our “tallest mountain analogy” to measuring changes in quantities. Elevation is relative to another point that we define as sea level. !E = Efinal - Einitial 1. Mount Everest is king if measured from sea level (8,848 meters) !P = Pfinal - Pinitial 2. Mauna Kea is king when measured from the depths of the Pacific Ocean floor. It rises 10,203 meters. PE = mgh !H = Hfinal - Hinitial !V = Vfinal - Vinitial 0 Initial State The potential energy of hiker 1 and hiker 2 is the same even though they took very different paths to get to the mountain top. This is the power of all the state functions in thermodynamics---we only need to now the start and the finish bulk parameters. The relevance and power of a state function is that there is one unique value between any two states (which represents a change or a reaction) and this change does not depend on the path between the two states. Internal energy is hard to measure the lab, so chemists define a new lab-friendly function at constant pressure and give it the name: enthalpy, H. !E = qP - P!V mgh2 Final State restrict system to constant pressure (Pinital = Pfinal) Solve for qp and call it enthalpy Arbitray State Initial State !h !H = qP = !E + P!V h=1 Two paths up the mountain, one hard--the other easy. Both height and potential energy are state functions in this scenario, but work required, or calories burned, time, or distance traveled to the top are not state functions! An Exothermic reaction releases heat to the surroundings, !H < 0. 2H2 (g) + O2 (g) H2O (g) 2H2O (l) + heat !H = <0 H2O (l) + heat heat written as a product (given off) An Endothermic reaction absorbs heat from the surroundings into the system, !H > 0. heat + 2HgO (s) heat + H2O (s) units of energy (Joule) Enthalpy is the “heat gained or lost by a system” under conditions of constant pressure”. What determines whether a reaction will occur spontaneously? It was thought that !H determined the “spontaneity of a chemical reaction”. This notion was proved wrong as both exothermic and endothermic reactions are spontaneous . Examples of spontaneous reactions: CH4 (g) + 2O2 (g) CO2 (g) + 2H2O (l) !H0 = -890.4 kJ H2O (l) H2O (s) !H0 = - 6.01 kJ H2O (s) H2O (l) !H0 = 6.01 kJ 2Hg (l) + O2 (g) H2O (l) !H = >0 heat written as a reactant (consumed) NH4NO3 (s) Entropy can be described (incorrectly) as a “positionally messy room” or “disordered cards” or“disorder”. This is not correct in the thermodynamic sense, but it illuminates the statistical nature of entropy. H 2O !Hrnx does not determine whether a reaction is spontaneous! NH4+(aq) + NO3- (aq) !H0 = 25 kJ Boltzmann founded a thermodynamic state function called entropy, S, that is a measure of the “dispersion or spread of energy” that occurs when all spontaneous reactions occur. # of microstates How many ways can you have your room or a deck of cards organized vs disorganized? S = k ln W Entropy Boltzman’s constant 1.38 " 10#23 J/K. !S = k ln Wf - k ln Wi Change in Entropy Boltzmann’s Tomb In Vienna, Austria When Wf > Wi then !S > 0 When Wf < Wi then !S < 0 There is a thermodynamic state function called entropy, S, that is a measure of the energy dispersal that occurs when a change of state occurs. 1. Macroscopic or bulk defintion (it needs no molecules). Represents heat flow. !S = -qsys reversible T Boltzman’s statistical interpretation of entropy (dispersal or spread of energy) is connected to a macroscopic definition of heat flow per unit temperature. 2. Microscopic or Molecular Description Macroscopic and Bulk defintion (it needs no molecules) !S = k (ln Wf - ln Wi) !S = -qsys reversible T Microscopic or Molecular Description !S = k (ln Wf - ln Wi) Change in Entropy Change in Entropy This value quantifies the “level of spreading of energy”. A system can be described by bulk or macroscopic properties that we can observe and measure, and the microscopic or molecular that we can’t see but we can model statistically. Consider 4 labeled molecules A,B,C,D Microstate is particular distribution that corresponds to some macrostate. Multiplicity is the number of microstates that give a specific macrostate. Macrostate is the observed state of the system that represents on a molecular level that microstate with the highest probability or number. 5-observable macrostates The second law of thermodynamics says that all processes that are spontaneous produce an increase in the entropy of the universe. !Suniv = !Ssys + !Ssurr > 0 1. Criteria for Spontaneous change! Microstate Macrostate Left Side Bulk Property Right Multiplicity Probability Side A,B,C,D - 1 1/16 A,B,C A,B,D A,C,D B,C,D D C B A 4 4/16 6 6/16 1 16 1/16 A,B A,C A,D B,C B,D C,D C,D B,D B,C A,D A,C A,B - A,B,C,D While it appears that entropy focuses on the most statistically favored position distribution entropy is more concerned with the fact that energy levels become more closely spaced and more occupied. Reactions tend towards dispersing energy! Note: Entropy is not energy! It is an index or measure of the dispersal of energy that occurs in all spontaneous processes passing from State 1 to State 2. !Suniv = !Ssys + !Ssurr < 0 2. No spontaneous change !Suniv = !Ssys + !Ssurr = 0 3. Equilibrium condition There are many different ways we can Energy Spacing Trans Roto Vibro Matter being dispersed into a larger number of statistical microstates disperses energy into a larger number of thermal energy levels increasing entropy. Gas expands spontaneously into larger volume Example: two block of different temperatures are brought together. evacuated 0.5 atm Quantum mechancis dictates closer energy level spacing as V increases. Energy level Same amount of energy is dispersed or spread among more energy levels. Energy level Be careful entropy is often illustrated incorrectly as a positionally a messy room or disordered cards and described as “disorder”. This is not correct in the thermodynamic sense! Entropy refers to the degree to which energy is dispersed in a process. The higher the entropy the more energy is dispersed in that system. 1 100˚C 2 10˚C HOT COLD 100˚C 10˚C COMBINED There are many events that result in a higher number of microstates or higher entropy. 1. Increasing temperature !S increases as temperature rises as more energy states are filled 2. Solid to Liquid or Liquid to Gas phase changes !S increases as phase changes to a more dispersed phase. WRONG: Neither case represents thermodynamic entropy because rooms and cards do not exchange heat with its surroundings! This is a fundamental requirement. Qualitative Meaning of Entropy: Thermal energy flows from the higher occupied energy levels in the warmer object into the unoccupied levels of the cooler one until equal numbers of states are occupied. 3. Dissolution of a solid or liquid Dissolving a solid or liquid into a solvent increases entropy. 4. Dissolution of a gas decreases entropy. A gas becomes less dispersed when it dissolves in a liquid or solid. 5. Atomic size or molecular complexity In similar substances, increases in mass relate directly to entropy. In allotropic substances, increases in complexity (e.g., bond flexibility) relate directly to entropy. Phase Change !S > 0 Phase Change Entropy increases when a substance is heated as thermal energy is distributed over more energy states. Phase changes lead to large increases. Low T High T Entropy(S) 1.0 atm Increasing entropy or the dispersal or spread of energy occurs in any spontaneous process. It provides humans with an “arrow of time” as the reverse situation never happens. !S > 0 Dissolution !S > 0 Temperature Increasing T Temp increases populates more energy levels increasing entropy Phase transitions: solid to liquid to gas have very large increases in entropy! When a solid crystalline salt dissociates into a greater number of ions entropy increases as the number of microstates that energy can be dispersed is larger. pure solid When two miscible liquids combine the most probable microstate (the observed macrostate) is a homogeneous mixture. !Ssys > 0 The dispersal of matter leads to the dispersal of energy among more energy states in a mixture just as it does when gases expand. !Ssys > 0 MIX pure liquid Benzene (C6H6) Toluene (C6H5CH3) Impossible Result solution Solution Entropy decreases significantly as a gas is dissolved in a liquid, or as a gas condenses to liquid, or as a liquid freezes to a solid. Other trends in absolute entropies (see text p. 657-660) 1. Substances down a group (increasing mass) have higher absolute entropies. O2 gas !Ssys < 0 2. As the number of atoms increase in a molecule absolute entropy tends to increase (more degrees of freedom => more microstate available) 3. As the number of atoms increase in a molecule absolute entropy tends to increase (more degrees of freedom => more microstate available) O2 dissolved How does the entropy of a system change for each of the following processes? (a) Condensing water vapor to a liquid How does the entropy of a system change for each of the following processes? (a) Condensing water vapor to a liquid dispersal of energy decreases Entropy decreases (!S < 0) (b) Forming sucrose crystals from a supersaturated solution (b) Forming sucrose crystals from a supersaturated solution (c) Heating hydrogen gas from 600C to 800C (d) Subliming dry ice dispersal of energy decreases Entropy decreases (!S < 0) (c) Heating hydrogen gas from 600C to 800C dispersal of energy increases Entropy increases (!S > 0) (d) Subliming dry ice dispersal of energy increases Entropy increases (!S > 0) Choose the member with the higher entropy in each of the following pairs, and justify your choice. Assume constant temperature, except in part (e). Choose the member with the higher entropy in each of the following pairs, and justify your choice. Assume constant temperature, except in part (e). (a) 1 mol of SO2(g) or 1 mol of SO3(g) (b) 1 mol of CO2(s) or 1 mol of CO2(g) (c) 3 mol of oxygen gas (O2) or 2 mol of ozone gas (O3) (a) 1 mol of SO2(g) or 1 mol of SO3(g) (b) 1 mol of CO2(s) or 1 mol of CO2(g) (c) 3 mol of oxygen gas (O2) or 2 mol of ozone gas (O3) (d) 1 mol of KBr(s) or 1 mol of KBr(aq) (e) seawater in mid-winter at 2 oC or in mid-summer at 23 oC (d) 1 mol of KBr(s) or 1 mol of KBr(aq) (e) seawater in mid-winter at 2 oC or in mid-summer at 23 oC (f) 1 mol of CF4(g) or 1 mol of CCl4(g) SOLUTION: (d) 1 mol of KBr(aq) - solution (a) 1 mol of SO3(g) - more atoms > solid (f) 1 mol of CF4(g) or 1 mol of CCl4(g) (b) 1 mol of CO2(g) - gas > solid (c) 3 mol of O2(g) - larger # mols Boltzman’s statistical interpretation of entropy (dispersal or spread of energy) is connected to a macroscopic definition of heat flow per unit temperature. Macroscopic and Bulk defintion (it needs no molecules) !S = -qsys reversible T (e) 23 oC - higher temperature (f) CCl4 - larger mass Bulk or macroscopic measurement of entropy is harder to see. Molecules not required. !S = -qsys reversible T Microscopic or Molecular Description Change pressure by infinitesimal amounts we get a reversible change where work is maximized. The heat q/T is the entropy or “measure of energy dispersion”. !S = k (ln Wf - ln Wi) Change in Entropy This value quantifies the “level of spreading of energy”. 3rd Law of Thermodynamics: The entropy, S of a perfect crystal is zero at the 0 Kelvin. The reference point for entropy is called the “zero point energy” at 0K. The entropy of a perfect solid crystal is 0 (say KBr or NaCl perfect has 0 entropy). A Mountain Peak S>0 Increasing Temp Height > 0 T = 298K S>0 T = 100K T = 0K S=0 Perfect crystal with 1 microstate T>0K S>0 A “perfectly” ordered crystal at 0K gives way to a less-structured liquid with more available microstates for internal energy to be dispersed. T = 0K S=0 Height = 0 Sea-level A “standard state” is a defined set of experimental conditions T, P, [x], phase, pH denoted symbolically by a superscript degree sign above the thermodynamic functions: !H˚, !G˚, !S˚ Thermodynammics is concerned primarily with calculating !H˚rxn and !G˚rxn measured thermodynamic data under standard state conditions. 2-Ways or Problem Types For Hess Law Enthalpy Calculations Standand State Reaction Conditions Standard state !Ho rxn o !G rxn Non-standard State ∆Hf◦ = 0 1M concentration !Hrxn !Grxn not standard state conditions! • Hess’s Law: The enthalpy change for any reaction is equal to the sum of the enthalpy changes for any individual step in the reaction. Multiple Thermochemical Equations To Rearrange-Use Rules! !H3 = CH4 (g) + 2O2 ∆H1 = - 607 kJ ∆H3 = ? CO(g) + 2H2O + 1/2 O2(g) ∆H2 = - 283 kJ 2-Ways or Problem Types For Hess Law Enthalpy Calculations The Standard Enthalpy of Formation, !Hf°, is the enthalpy change associated with the formation of 1 mole of product from its naturally occurring elements under standard state conditions. Note: 1 mol product complete conversion H2(g) + O2(g) #$ H2O(l ) !Hf° = -285.8 kJ/mol 3C(s) + 4H2(g) #$ C3H8(g) !Hf° = -103.85 kJ/mol Ag(s) + 1/2Cl2(g) #$ 2 1 Multiple Thermochemical Equations To Rearrange-Use Rules! Use !H˚f data 1) standard state 2) formation equation 3) Calculation of !H°rxn !H°rxn = " ni !Hif°(products) - " mi !Hjf°(reactants) CO2 + 2H2O •Examples: 1) standard state 2) formation equation 3) Calculation of !H°rxn Thermochemistry is concerned primarily with calculating !Hrxn (the heat of reaction). ? kJ Because enthalpy is a state function, its value only depends on the final and initial state and not the path. This gives us a powerful way to predict enthalpy of many chemical reactions. Use !H˚f data !H°rxn = " ni !Hif°(products) - " mi !Hjf°(reactants) CH4 (g) + 2O2 ==> CO + 2H2O + 1/2 O2 !H1 = - 607 kJ CO(g) + 2H2O + 1/2 O2(g) ==> CO2 + 2H2O !H2 = - 283 kJ CH4 (g) + 2O2 ==> CO2 + 2H2O 2 1 AgCl(s) !Hf° = -127.0 kJ/mol Note: fractional •Are familar molecular gases as O2, N2, F2, H2 etc as at 25 °C •Elemental Carbon exists as solid graphite C(graph) at 25 °C. •Elemental Sulfur exits as S8 as a solid at 25˚C •Water is H2O(l ) in its standard state (not ice or water vapor). METHOD 2: The enthalpy of any reaction, !H°rxn can be obtained by using !H°f and the following equation: Calculate the heat of decomposition for the following process using standard enthalpies of formation found in Appendix. What kind of reaction is this? Is energy given off or needed to make this reaction proceed? !H°rxn = " ni !Hif°(products) - " mi !Hjf°(reactants) CaCO3 (s) where " means “the sum of” CaO (s) + CO2 (g) !H0rxn = ? ni is the respective stoich coefficient for ith product mi is the respective stoich coefficient for each ith reactant !H°rxn = " ni !Hif°(products) - " mi !Hif°(reactants) !H0rxn = Example: Suppose aA + bB cC + dD !H°rx = ? Reaction is decomposition and endothermic. Energy must be absorbed to proceed. !H°rx = [c!H°f (C) + d!H°f (D)] – [a!H°f (A) + b!H°f (B)] We do the same for Standard Molar Entropy, S°rxn: The standard molar entropy !S°rxn of a chemical is determined from the standard molar entropies of reactants and products found in tables in Handbooks. aA + bB cC + dD !S0rxn = ? #Ssys° = $ni Si°(products) – $niSi°(reactants) !S0rxn = [ cS˚(C) + dS˚(D) ] - [ aS˚(A) + bS˚(B)] !Hf0 (CO2) ] - [ !H0f (CaCO3)] !H0rxn = [ -635.6 + -393.5 ] – [ -1206.9 ] = 179 kJ !H°rx = !H°f (Products) – !H°f (Reactants) • [ !H0f (CaO) + • Standard molar entropies of compounds are tabulated just like "H˚ • standard conditions are 1 atm pressure, 1M and at 25°C (298K). • Standard entropies tend to increase with increasing molar mass as solids==>liquids==> gases. S° for each component is found in a table. Also note that S° = 0 for elements (unlike H). Calculate !Sorxn for the combustion of 1 mol of propane at 25 oC. C3H8(g) + 5O2(g) SOLUTION: 3CO2(g) + 4H2O(l) Find standard entropy values in an appropriate table. Calculate !Sorxn for the combustion of 1 mol of propane at 25 oC. C3H8(g) + 5O2(g) SOLUTION: 3CO2(g) + 4H2O(l) Find standard entropy values in an appropriate table. #Ssys° = $ni Si°(products) – $niSi°(reactants) !Sorxn = [(3 mol)(So CO2) + (4 mol)(So H2O)] - [(1 mol)(So C3H8) + (5 mol)(So O2)] !Sorxn = [(3 mol)(213.7 J/mol.K) + (4 mol)(69.9 J/mol.K)] - [(1 mol)(269.9 J/mol.K) + (5 mol)(205.0 J/mol.K)] !Sorxn = - 374 J/K Calculating the standard entropy of reaction, !Sorxn Calculating the standard entropy of reaction, !Sorxn What is the standard entropy change for the following reaction at 250C? 2CO (g) + O2 (g) 2CO2 (g) What is the standard entropy change for the following reaction at 250C? 2CO (g) + O2 (g) 2CO2 (g) From a table of standard entropies we find: S0(CO) = 197.9 J/K•mol S0(O2) S0(CO2) = 213.6 J/K•mol = 205.0 J/K•mol #Ssys° = $ni Si°(products) – $niSi°(reactants) !S0rxn = 2 x S0(CO2) – [2 x S0(CO) + S0 (O2)] !S0rxn = 427.2 – [395.8 + 205.0] = -173.6 J The second law of thermodynamics says that all “spontaneous processes” are accompanied by an increase in the entropy of the universe, In a reversible process, the surroundings can add heat to the system, or it can accept it from the system. !Suniv > 0 !Suniv = !Ssys + !Ssurr > 0 + 1. Criteria for Spontaneous change! +qsurr -qp -qsurr +qp Entropy is a measure of the dispersal of energy that occurs as a system passes from State 1 to State 2. !Suniv = !Ssys + !Ssurr < 0 2. No spontaneous change !Suniv = !Ssys + !Ssurr = 0 3. Equilibrium condition Substituting -!Hsys/T for !Ssurr we get an intermediate expression that is not so useful. !Suniv = !Ssys + !Ssurr > 0 Calculate from Standard Entropies of compounds from a table !Sosys = " miSofi(products) - " niSofi(reactants) This is related to heat lost by system _ ! Ssurr = ! q sur T = %! q sys T = %! H sys T It is very difficult to measure !Suniv, !Ssys and !Ssurr so we recast the 2nd Law equation into something more useful called the Gibb’s Free Energy, !G. !Suniv = !Ssys + !Ssurr 1. substitute !Ssurr = -qsys/T = -!Hsys/T !Suniv = !Ssys - !Hsys/T 2. multiply by (-T) -T!Suniv = - T!Ssys + !Hsys %! Hsys !Ssurr = -qsys = T T !Suniv = !Ssys + -!Hsys/T > 0 For an endothermic process: qsys > 0, qsurr < 0, !Ssurr < 0 For an exothermic process: qsys < 0, qsurr > 0, !Ssurr > 0 3. Define !Guniverse = -T!Suniv !Guniverse = !Hsys - T!Ssys !Grxn = !Hsys - T!Ssys Watch the notation both are used! The Gibb’s Free Energy, !Guniverse is the function that indicates whether a reaction will occur spontaneously. The sign of !G determines the reaction direction, the magnitude determines the maximum amount of work the system can do (if negative). Temperature in Kelvin There are 3 Cases for the Sign of !Gsys: 1. !Gsys < 0 a spontaneous process (!Suniv > 0) 2. !Gsys > 0 a non-spontaneous process (!Suniv < 0) 3. !Gsys = 0 a process at equilibrium (!Suniv = 0) !Guniverse = !Hsys - T !Ssys Gibb’s Free Energy Change Useless or dispersed energy Enthalpy term !Guniverse = !Hsys - T !Ssys } !Gsys = !Hsys - T !Ssys !Grxn = !Hrxn - T !Srxn Don’t be confused by symbols. These all mean the same thing and pertain to the system! Using Hess’s Law and thermodynamic data, we can compute !Gorxn under standard state conditions. 1 !G˚sys Use Table of !Hof and !Sof 2 What is Free Energy physically? !G < 0 is the maximum “useful” work that can be produced by a chemical reaction. !G = workmax For !G > 0 (non-spontaneous process) !G is energy that must be added to the system to make the process take place. Recall: The Standard Gibb’s Free Energy of Formation, is the free energy change associated with the formation of 1 mole of compound from its naturally occurring elements under standard state conditions for both. The same rules are followed for !Gf° Note: 1 mol product! Use Table of !Gof Ag(s) + 1/2Cl2(g) #$ !Gorxn = !Horxn - T!Sorxn !Horxn = " mi!Hofi (products) - " ni!Hofi(reactants) !Sorxn = " miSofi (products) - " niSofi(reactants) Elements as they exist in elemental form !Gf° = -110.0 kJ/mol AgCl(s) Note: fractional coefficients allowed •Oxygen exists as O2 gas at 25 °C !Hf° and !Gf° = 0 •Carbon exists as solid graphite (C) at 25 °C. !Hf° = 0 !G˚rxn = [c!G˚f (C) + d!G˚f (D) ] - [a!G˚f (A) + b!G˚f (B) ] The rules of !Gfo of any element are the same as !Hfo !H0f (O2) = 0 !G0f (O2) = 0 !H0f (O3) = 142 kJ/mol !G0f (N2) = 0 !H0f (N2) = 0 !G0f (Na) = 0 !H0f (Na(s) = 0 !H0f (C, graphite) = 0 !H0f (C, diamond) = 1.90 kJ/mol !H0f (S8, rhombic) = 0 kJ/mol Both !Hfo and !Gfo of many compounds are tabulated in handbooks. This gives us predictive capability and is someone useful in the real world. •Sulfur exits as S8 as a solid at 25˚C •Water is H2O(l ) in its standard state (not ice or water vapor). Thermodynamic Tables Substance !H°f !G°f S° !H°f and !G°f have units of kJ/ mol (energy/mol) S° has units of J/mol K Calculating !Gorxn from !Gof values Use !Gof values to calculate !Gorxn for the following reaction: 4KClO (s) ! 3KClO (s) + KCl(s) 3 4 KClO3(s) !Gof -296.3 kJ/mol KClO4(s) + KCl(s) -303.2 kJ/mol -409.2 kJ/mol Calculating !Gorxn from !Gof values Use !Gof values to calculate !Gorxn for the following reaction: ! 4KClO3(s) 3KClO4(s) + KCl(s) PLAN: Use the !Gorxn summation equation and look up the values of products and reactants in a thermodynamic table. 4KClO3(s) ! !Gof -296.3 kJ/mol 3KClO4(s) + -303.2 kJ/mol KCl(s) -409.2 kJ/mol !Gorxn = " mi!Gofi (products) - " ni!Gofi (reactants) !Gorxn = [(3 mol)(-303.2 kJ/mol) + (1 mol)(-409.2 kJ/mol)] - [(4 mol)(-296.3 kJ/mol)] !Gorxn = -134 kJ (reaction is spontaneous as written) Using thermodynamic tables of data we can easily compute !Gorxn under standard state conditions in two different ways. ✓ !G˚sys 1 2 Use Table of !Hof and !Sof done Use Table of !Gof The standard free-energy (!G0rxn ) is the free-energy change for the complete reaction of reactants to products with both reactants and products in their standard-state conditions (1 atm, 1M, 25˚C) !G0 values are a special hypothetical case of 100% conversion. We are usually more interested in real-world non-standard reaction conditions and equilibrium values for !G---which is different than !G°. aA + bB !Gorxn = !Horxn - T!Sorxn !Horxn = " mi!Hofi (products) - " ni!Hofi(reactants) !So rxn = " m So i fi (products) -" n So i fi(reactants) !G˚rxn = [c!G˚f (C) + d!G˚f (D) ] - [a!G˚f (A) + b!G˚f (B) ] Calculating !Go from standard enthalpy and entropy values Potassium chlorate, one of the common oxidizing agents in explosives, fireworks and match heads, undergoes a solidstate redox reaction when heated. In this reaction, the oxidation number of Cl in the reactant is higher in one of the products and lower in the other (a disproportionation reaction). +5 +7 -1 ! 4KClO3(s) 3KClO4(s) + KCl(s) Use !Hof and So values to calculate !Gosys (!Gorxn) at 25 oC for this reaction. PLAN: Obtain appropriate thermodynamic data from a data table; insert them into the Gibbs free energy equation and solve. cC + dD !G°rxn = ? ◦ ◦ ∆G◦rxn = ∆Hrxn − T ∆Srxn ◦ ∆Hrxn = [d∆Hf◦D + c∆Hf◦C ] − [b∆Hf◦B + a∆Hf◦A ] ◦ ∆Srxn = [dSf◦D + cSf◦C ] − [bSf◦B + aSf◦A ] Calculating !Go from standard enthalpy and entropy values Potassium chlorate, one of the common oxidizing agents in explosives, fireworks and match heads, undergoes a solid-state redox reaction when heated. In this reaction, the oxidation number of Cl in the reactant is higher in one of the products and lower in the other (a disproportionation reaction). +5 4KClO3(s) !H°rxn = ! +7 -1 3KClO4(s) + KCl(s) " ni !Hif°(products) - " mi !Hjf°(reactants) !H° = [c!H°f (C) + d!H°f (D)] – [a!H°f (A) + b!H°f (B)] !Horxn = [(3 mol)(-432.8 kJ/mol) + (1 mol)(-436.7 kJ/mol)] - [(4 mol)(-397.7 kJ/mol)] !Horxn = -144 kJ !Sorxn = " miSofi (products) - " niSofi(reactants) = [cS°f (C) + dS°f (D)] – [aS°f (A) + bS°f (B)] !Sorxn = [(3 mol)(151 J/mol.K) + (1 mol)(82.6 J/mol.K)] - [(4 mol)(143.1 J/mol.K)] !Sorxn = -36.8 J/K What is Gibb’s Free Energy physically? !Gorxn = !Horxn - T!Sorxn = -144 kJ - (298 K)(-36.8 J/K)(kJ/103J) = -133 kJ The reaction is spontaneous or the reaction goes to proceeds to the right. Temperature plays an important role in determining the sign of !G--which determines whether a reaction is spontaneous. o o o !G Case !Horxn !Sosys T!So - + 2 + - 3 + + 4 - - = !H sys enthalpy factor Analyze each term! 1 sys + - + - !Go - T!S sys T and entropy factor spontaneous at all T + not-spontaneous at all T spontaneous at high T; nonspontaneous at low T spontaneous at low T; nonspontaneous at high T SOLUTION: The Given Data:At 298 K, !Go = -141.6 kJ, !Ho = -198.4 kJ, and !So = -187.9 J/K. o o (a) !G = -141.6 kJ since !G rxn < 0 it is spontaneous at 25˚C (298K) which is the standard state. At higher T with S < 0 the reaction will be less spontaneous. Since !Ho is (-) and !So are both (-), !Go will become less negative and therefore the reaction less spontaneous as temperature increases. !Gorxn = !Horxn - T!Sorxn (b) !Go rxn = !Ho rxn - T!So rxn For !G > 0 (non-spontaneous process) !G represents energy that must be added to the system to make the process take place. Determining the effect of temperature on !Go An important reaction in the production of sulfuric acid is the oxidation of SO2(g) to SO3(g): 2SO2(g) + O2(g) 2SO3(g) !Gorxn = -141.6 kJ, !Horxn = -198.4 kJ, and !Sorxn = -187.9 J/K. Process Description + +- For a spontaneous chemical reaction wherein !G < 0, !G represents the maximum “useful” work that can be produced by a chemical reaction. Use values for 1173K !Gorxn = -198.4 kJ - [(1173 K)(-187.9 J/mol.K)(kJ/103J)] = 22 kJ !Gorxn = +22.0 kJ; the reaction will not be spontaneous at 900.oC (a) Is this reaction spontaneous at 25oC, and predict how !Go will change with increasing T. (b) Assuming !Ho and !So are constant with increasing T, is the reaction spontaneous at 900. oC? When !Horxn and !Sorxn have the same sign, then the reaction temperature will determine spontaneity. We can compute the “cross-over temperature” that makes the reaction spontaneous. Cross-over logic: We can set ∆Gosys = 0 to find that temperature where G changes sign. The approach assumes that ∆H and ∆S are constant over temperature. !Gorxn = !Horxn - T!Sorxn 0 = !Horxn - T!Sorxn T= !Horxn !Sorxn At cross-over T !Gorxn = 0 Solve for T Watch your units! ∆S is usually J and ∆H is usually kJ !Grxn (not !G˚rxn) is the free energy for nonstandard thermodynamic reaction conditions. It connects the free energy to the equilibrium reaction quotient, Q. Recall our expressions for Q and equilibrium constants Kc, Kp, Ka, Ksp It can be shown that: Concentrations or partial pressures at point before equilibrium aA(g) + bB(g) Non-standard Free Energy Standard Free Energy Reaction Quotient Concentrations or partial pressures at equilibrium [C]c[D]d Kc = [A]a[B]b R is the gas constant (8.314 J/K•mol) T is the absolute temperature (K) Recall what Q meant in our equilibrium chapter: when compared to Kc it told us the direction of a chemical reaction. aA(g) + bB(g) (Pc)c (Pd)d Q= (Pa)a (Pb)b [C]c[D]d Q = [A]a[B]b #G = #G˚ + RT ln Q cC(g) + dD(g) Kp = (Pc)c (Pd)d (Pa)a (Pb)b "G˚rxn and the Kc are related! • • #Grxn = #G˚rxn + RT ln K cC(g) + dD(g) aA + bB • R = 8.314 J/K mol T in Kelvin [C]c[D]d Kc = [A]a[B]b cC + dD At equilibrium: !G = 0 and Q = Kc 0 = #G˚ + RT ln Kc • Reactant-Favored !Gsys = 0 !Gsys > 0 !Go and Kc at 25 oC are inversely related....big Kc means product favored and !G˚ < 0 , and vis versa. !Go (kJ) K 3 x 10-18 50 2 x 10-9 10 1 2 x 10-2 -1 7 x 10-1 1 1.5 -10 5 x 101 -50 6 x 108 -100 3 x 1017 -200 1 x 1035 Essentially no forward reaction; reverse reaction goes to completion Forward and reverse reactions proceed to the same extent Forward reaction goes to completion; essentially no reverse reaction REVERSE REACTION 9x 100 R = 8.314 J/K mol T in Kelvin Taking antiloge or exp of both sides • • K = exp (-"G˚/RT) R = 8.314 J/K mol T in Kelvin Plots of free energy diagrams for !Go > 0 (left) and !Go < 0 (right). Significance FORWARD REACTION 200 0 10-36 • • • Reactant Favored !Goproduct !Go(rxn) > 0 !Goreactant Q>K Q<K Q=K 100% Equilibrium Reactants Mixture 100%Pro ducts Reaction Progress ===> !Go(rxn) > 0, K<1 Product Favored Total free energy !G !Gsys < 0 Equilibrium Total free energy !G Product-Favored #G˚rxn = - RT ln Kc Q> K Q = Kc Q< K Solving for #G˚rxn !Goreactant Q<K !Go(rxn)< 0 !Goproduct Q=K Pure Reactants Equilibrium Mixture Q>K Pure Products Reaction Progress ===> !Go(rxn)<0, K>1 The equilibrium constant, Kp, for the reaction: N2(g) + 3H2(g) => 2NH3(g) is Kp = 9.4 X 10-5. The equilibrium constant, Kp, for the reaction: N2(g) + 3H2(g) => 2NH3(g) is Kp = 9.4 X 10-5. Calculate the value of G˚ for the reaction under these reaction conditions (standard assume 298K). Calculate the value of G˚ for the reaction under these reaction conditions (standard assume 298K). Remember K is related to the standard Gibb’s free energy !G˚rxn when !G = 0. (!Grxn = !G˚rxn + RT ln K) Remember K is related to the standard Gibb’s free energy !G˚rxn when !G = 0. (!Grxn = !G˚rxn + RT ln K) #G˚rxn = - RT ln Kp #G˚rxn = - (8.314 J/mol K) (298K) (ln (9.4 x 10-5)) - (-22972.58 J/mol) = 22.97 kJ/mol Calculating !G at non-standard conditions The oxidation of SO2 to SO3 is too slow at 298 K to be useful to industry. To overcome this low rate, the process is conducted at an elevated temperature. 2SO2(g) + O2(g) 2SO3(g) SOLUTION: (a) Calculating K !Go298 and !Go973 from at the two temperatures: !Go = -RT ln K thus: At 298 K: !Go/RT = - (-141.6 kJ/mol)(103 J/kJ) (a) Calculate Kp at 298 K and at 973 K. (!Go298 = -141.6 kJ/mol for the reaction as written using !Ho and !So values. At 973 K, !Go973 = -12.12 kJ/mol for the reaction as written.) (b) In experiments to determine the effect of temperature on reaction spontaneity, two sealed containers are filled with 0.500 atm of SO2,0.0100 atm of O2, and 0.100 atm of SO3 and kept at 25 oC and at 700. oC. In which direction, if any, will the reaction proceed to reach equilibrium at each temperature? = e57.2 = 7 x 1024 At 973 K: -!Go/RT = - (-12.12 kJ/mol)(103 J/kJ) (8.314 J/mol.K)(973 K) Q= pSO32 (0.100)2 = 4.00 = 2 (pSO2) (pO2) (0.500)2(0.0100) Since Q is < K at both temperatures the reaction equilibrium will shift right and be product favored; for 298 K there will be a dramatic shift while at 973 K the shift will be slight. (c) The non-standard !G is calculated using: !G = !Go + RT ln Q !G298 = -141.6 kJ/mol + (8.314 J/mol.K)(kJ/103J)(298 K)(ln 4.00) !G298 = -138.2 kJ/mol !G973 = -12.12 kJ/mol + (8.314 J/mol.K)(kJ/103J)(973 K)(ln 4.00) !G298 = -0.9 kJ/mol = 1.50 = e1.50 = 4.5 (c) Calculate !G for the system in part (b) at each temperature. (b) = 57.2 (8.314 J/mol.K)(298 K) Summary of Key Points: 1. !Go tells us the maximum amount of work a spontaneous reaction can do (when negative) !Gosys = !Hosys - T!Sosys 2. Q and !Grxn are linked Q = Kc, !Grxn = 0 and !Suniverse = 0 ====> Equilibrium. Q < Kc, !Grxn < 0 and !Suniverse > 0 ====> Product-Favored Q > Kc, !Grxn > 0 and !Suniverse < 0 ====> Reactant-Favored 3. !Gorxn gives the position of equilibrium and can be calculated three ways: !Gorxn = " mi!Gofi (products) - " ni!Gofi (reactants) !Gorxn = !Horxn - T!Sorxn !Gorxn = -RT ln Kc 4. !Grxn describes the direction in which a non-standard reaction proceeds to reach equilibrium calculated by: !Grxn = !Go + RT ln Q Consider the reaction of copper(I) oxide with carbon with the following thermodynamic data. . kJ/mol !H˚f kJ/mol !G˚f J/mol K S˚ Cu2O(s) + C(s) ===> 2Cu(s) + CO(g) -168.6 0 0 -110.5 -146.0 0 0 -137.2 93.1 5.68 33.1 197.5 1. By inspection only of the chemical equation determine if entropy of the system increases or decreases? 2. Calculate !H˚rxn 3. Calculate !S˚rxn 4. Calculate !G˚rxn, using !G˚rxn = !H˚rxn – T!S˚rxn 5. Caculate !G˚rxn using the thermodynamic !G˚f data, is it the same? 6. Determine if the reaction is (product-favored) spontaneous under standard state conditions (298K, 1M, 1atm)? 7. What impact would temperature have on the spontaneity of the reaction assuming constant enthalpy and entropy vs T? 8. Calculate the “cross-over” temperature which must be exceeded to make this reaction spontaneous. 9. Determine Kp for this reaction. kJ/mol !H˚f kJ/mol !G˚f J/mol K S˚ Cu2O(s) + C(s) ===> 2Cu(s) + CO(g) -168.6 0 0 -110.5 -146.0 0 0 -137.2 93.1 5.68 33.1 197.5 5. !G°rxn = [1!G°f (CO(g)) + 2!G°f (Cu(s))] – [1!G°f (Cu2O(s) ) + 1!G°f (C(s))] = [1(-137.2) + 2(0)] – [1(-146.0) + 1(0)] = 8.8kJ kJ/mol !H˚f kJ/mol !G˚f J/mol K S˚ Cu2O(s) + C(s) ===> 2Cu(s) + CO(g) -168.6 0 0 -110.5 -146.0 0 0 -137.2 93.1 5.68 33.1 197.5 1. The entropy of the system increases (>0) as we move from solid reactants to gaseous products. 2. !H°rxn = [1!H°f (CO(g)) + 2!H°f (Cu(s))] – [1!H°f (Cu2O(s) ) + 1!H°f (C(s))] = [1(-110.5) + 2(0)] – [1(-168.6) + 1(0)] = 58.1 kJ 3. !S°rxn = [1S°f (CO(g)) + 2S°f (Cu(s))] – [1S°f (Cu2O(s) ) + 1S°f (C(s))] = [1(197.5) + 2(33.1)] – [1(93.1) + 1(5.68)] = 164.9 J/K = .1649 kJ/ K 4. !Gorxn = !Horxn - T!S˚rxn = (58.1kJ) - (298K) (0.1649 kJ/K) = +8.9 kJ 8. The “cross-over” temperature that must be exceeded is found by setting !Gorxn = 0. 0 = !Horxn - T!Sorxn !Horxn Watch the units of J/K and kJ! T= !Sorxn T = 58.1 kJ .1649 kJ/K 6. !Gorxn > 0. Therefore the reaction is not spontaneous under standard state conditions at 298K. 7. !Horxn > 0 and !S˚rxn > 0. Analysis of the Gibb’s equation: !Gorxn = !Horxn - T!Sorxn will show that increasing T will increase T!S˚rxn and drive !G˚rxn <0 as !Horxn remains unchanged (which is assumed). > 352.K 9. K298 = exp (-#G˚rxn/RT) This temperature has to exceeded for the reaction to be spontaneous! - 8.8 kJ 1000J/1kJ ) 8.314 J/mol K (298K) = 2.9 x 10-2 = exp (