Spontaneity, Entropy, and Free Energy
A ball rolls spontaneously down a hill but not up….
Spontaneous
A reaction that will occur without outside intervention; product favored
- Most reactants are converted to products
- Says nothing about the rate of the reaction- KINETICS
- Thermodynamics (tells us the direction in which a reaction will occur)
- Kinetics describes the pathway
Thermodynamics
1st law- Energy of the universe is constant: keeps track of how much energy is involved in the change
Why do certain processes occur in 1 direction and not the other???
Early idea: exothermicity
Conclusion: the characteristic common to all spontaneous reactions and the driving force is an increase in entropy
Entropy- (S) is the disorder or randomness; natural tendency to go from order to disorder thus from a lower to higher entropy
2nd law- The entropy of the universe increases
- Defined in terms of probability
- Substances take the arrangement that is most likely which is the most RANDOM
- See overhead for possible arrangements for a system
S solid < S liquid < S gas
- More ways for molecules to be arranged as a liquid than a solid; gases have even more ways
- Solutions form b/c there are many more possible arrangements of dissolved pieces than if they stay separate
- In a gas, if the products have a smaller number of molecules, then the entropy has decreased
Examples 1-10
Second Law of Thermodynamics
ΔSuniverse = ΔSsystem + ΔSsurroundings
- If ΔSuniverse is positive, the process is spontaneous
- If ΔSuniverse is negative, the process is spontaneous in the opposite direction
- If ΔSuniverse is zero, the process is at equilibrium
Entropy in the surroundings is primarily controlled by enthalpy
Recall: If ΔH is negative, heat is released into surroundings SO
ΔSsurroundings is positive ( more disorder due to faster movement)
If ΔH is positive, heat is absorbed from the surroundings SO
ΔSsurroundings is negative ( less disorder due to slower movement)
BUT WHAT HAPPENS WHEN..
H2O(l) H2O(g)
ΔSsys = positiveΔSsurr = negative
Which one controls it? ΔSuniv will be dependent on temperature
Temperature and Spontaneity
- An exothermic process is favored because by giving up heat, the entropy of the surroundings increases
- The sign of ΔSsurr depends on tenperature : at constant temp/pressure
ΔSsurr = - ΔH/ T
Units: J/K
ΔSsys / ΔSsurr / ΔSuniv / Spontaneous?+ / + / + / Yes
- / - / - / No, reverse
+ / - / ? / At high temp
- / + / ? / At low temp
*****From now on no subscript next to the delta sign refers to the system*****
Example 13
Third law of Thermodynamics
- Entropy of a pure crystal at 0K is zero. All others must be > zero.
- Standard entropy S˚ at 298 K and 1 atm of substances- see appendix for values
- It is a state function
- Can use Σ ΔS products – Σ ΔS reactants
Example 11 and 12