1 / 15

Thermodynamics

Thermodynamics. Chapter 19 Brown-LeMay. I. Review of Concepts. Thermodynamics – area dealing with energy and relationships First Law of Thermo – law of conservation of energy - U = q + w the change in internal energy of a system equals q + w

susane
Download Presentation

Thermodynamics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Thermodynamics Chapter 19 Brown-LeMay

  2. I. Review of Concepts • Thermodynamics – area dealing with energy and relationships • First Law of Thermo – law of conservation of energy - U = q + w the change in internal energy of a system equals q + w • Internal energy is a state function – one that is independent of the pathway (altitude- state function, miles traveled is not a state function

  3. Concept review • Heat (q) is the energy that moves into or out of a system because of temperature differences between the system and the surroundings • Work (w) – energy exchange that results when a force (f) moves an object through a distance (d) w = f x d • Work done to the system is positive work done by the system is negative

  4. Concept review • Work in a chemical system can de described by the pressure and change in volume of a system • W = -p v u = qp + w cons. pressure u = qp – p v • H is the reaction q at constant pressure H = qp

  5. Delta H • More precisely H is the quantity u + pv • H = u + pv H = u + pv H = qp – pv + pv • H = qp • All U,P,V are state functions so H is also a state function • H = n H0f(products) - n H0f (reactants)

  6. II. Entropy and the Second Law • Spontaneous reactions – are a physical or chemical change that occurs by themselves • When delta H is neg – exothermic the reaction tend to be spontaneous • Spontaneous reactions are non-reversible • When delta H is positive – endothermic the reaction may or may not be spontaneous

  7. II. Entropy and the Second Law • Endothermic reactions are/not spontaneous because of the naturally tendency to ether move towards or away from a random state • Entropy S or S- is a measure of randomness or disorder of a system (J/K) state function (influenced by temp and pressure)

  8. The Second Law • The entropy of a system and its surrounds always increases in a spontaneous process • s = s (final) – s (initial) • s+ = increase in disorder • s- = decrease in disorder • different from energy because it can be created

  9. Second Law • Delta S = entropy created + q/T • Delta S > q/T spontaneous • Delta S = q/T equilibrium • For a process to be spontaneous at a given temperature, the change in entropy of the system is greater than the heat of they system divided by the absolute temperature

  10. Second Law (spontaneous rxn) • Delta s > qp/T = Delta H/T = Delta H/T – Delta S < 0 H – T S <0 spontaneous H – T S >0 non-spontaneous H – T S =0 Equilibrium You can often look up Delta H and Delta S values form tables and determine if a reaction is spontaneous as written under certain conditions

  11. The Third Law & Predicting Entropy Change • Third Law – a substance that is perfectly crystalline at 0 Kelvin has an entropy of zero – as the temp of a substance is raised disorder increases as it absorbs heat

  12. Changes in Entropy • In general Entropy increases as * Liquids or solutions are formed from solids * Gases are formed from either solids or liquids * The number of molecules of gas increases during a chemical reaction * the temperature of a substance in increased.

  13. Ludwig Boltzmann – developed a method to calculate entropies of substances based on the number of possible arrangements of the particles of a system • Standard Entropy – So – the entropy value for the standard state of the species (indicated by the subscript sign) • Gas – pure sub at 1 atm tempt 250C or 298 k – Solutions are one molar. • Calc So = Sum n So products - Sum n So reactants

  14. Free Energy and Spontaneity • The Gibbs free energy of a substance combines its enthalpy and entropy into a single quantity that describes the total amount of energy available for use. • G = H – TS • At const temp G = H – T S • If G is neg(-) the rxn is spontaneous • If G is pos(+) the rxn non-spontaneous • If G is zero the rxn is at equilibrium

More Related