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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
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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 • Internal energy is a state function – one that is independent of the pathway (altitude- state function, miles traveled is not a state function
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
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
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)
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
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)
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
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
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
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
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.
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
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