Thermodynamics: Spontaneity and Chemical Equilibrium
Thermodynamics provides the framework for predicting whether a chemical reaction will occur spontaneously and where the equilibrium will lie.
The Three Laws of Thermodynamics
First Law (Energy Conservation) Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred. For a chemical system: ΔU = q + w
Second Law (Entropy) The total entropy of an isolated system always increases for spontaneous processes: ΔS_universe = ΔS_system + ΔS_surroundings > 0
Third Law The entropy of a perfect crystal at absolute zero is zero.
Gibbs Free Energy
The Gibbs free energy combines enthalpy and entropy into a single criterion for spontaneity at constant T and P:
ΔG = ΔH - TΔS
- ΔG < 0: Spontaneous (exergonic)
- ΔG = 0: At equilibrium
- ΔG > 0: Non-spontaneous (endergonic)
Temperature Dependence
The effect of temperature on spontaneity depends on the signs of ΔH and ΔS:
| ΔH | ΔS | Spontaneous at | |----|----|----| | - | + | All temperatures | | - | - | Low temperatures | | + | + | High temperatures | | + | - | No temperature |
Relationship to Equilibrium
The standard free energy change relates to the equilibrium constant: ΔG° = -RT ln(K)
This powerful equation connects thermodynamics to equilibrium: - K > 1: ΔG° < 0, products favored - K < 1: ΔG° > 0, reactants favored - K = 1: ΔG° = 0
Practical Applications
Understanding these principles is essential for: - Predicting reaction feasibility - Optimizing industrial processes (e.g., Haber process) - Understanding biochemical pathways - Designing electrochemical cells
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