1 / 11

The Three Laws of Thermochemistry

The Three Laws of Thermochemistry. Energy can be changed but not created or destroyed. Entropy increases for a spontaneous reaction; no change in equilibrium. Entropy of a pure crystal at 0 K = 0. 3 LAWS of THERMODYNAMICS.

rune
Download Presentation

The Three Laws of Thermochemistry

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. The Three Laws of Thermochemistry

  2. Energy can be changed but not created or destroyed. • Entropy increases for a spontaneous reaction; no change in equilibrium. • Entropy of a pure crystal at 0 K = 0. 3 LAWS of THERMODYNAMICS

  3. 1) YOU CANNOT WIN! (you can’t get something for nothing bc matter and energy are conserved) • 2) YOU CANNOT BREAK EVEN! (you cannot return to the same energy state bc there is always an increase in entropy) • 3) YOU CANNOT GET OUT OF THE GAME! (bc absolute zero is unattainable) CP Snow’s version

  4. DH is ENTHALPY: heat energy - exothermic DG is GIBBS FREE ENERGY: work energy - spontaneous DS is ENTROPY: system disorder + disordered STATE FUNCTIONS

  5. DH rxn = SHf products - SHf reactants • If -, exothermic • DG rxn = SGproducts - SG reactants • If -, spontaneous • DS rxn = SS products - SS reactants • If +, disordered DH DG DS and Spontaneity

  6. Characterize the chemical reaction using “Thermo” • The combustion of CH4 DH, DS, DG

  7. DH and S do not change much with temperature changes. • DG does vary and determines if a reaction occurs spontaneously at a specific temperature. • DG = DH - T DS {T in Kelvin} Gibbs-Helmholtz equation

  8. DG = 0 at equilibrium—a point where the reaction is neither proceeding forward nor backward. This is the critical temperature for a reaction to occur spontaneously. • 0 = DH - T DS, solve for T • If T is negative, this reaction will never occur! Temperature of Spontaneity

  9. Characterize: CO + 2H2 CH3OH • Calculate DG at 500K (DH, DS don’t change). • Calculate the minimum temperature this reaction will occur. (make DG = 0) DH, DS, DG

  10. DGo = DH - T DS • DGo = -RT lnK{K is equilibrium constant} • DG = DGo + RT lnQ • Q = [products]coefficients [reactants]coefficients Free Energy Relationships

  11. DH = -249 kJ and DS = -278 J/K (units!) • DH = 460 kJ and DS = -275 J/K • DH = 85 kJ and DS = 198 J/K • Were they spontaneous at 25oC? Determine temperature of Spontaneity

More Related