Question #b08e1

1 Answer
Jul 10, 2016

Here's what I got.

Explanation:

The reaction given to you

2"A"_ ((g)) + 3"B"_ ((g)) -> 2"C"_ ((g))

for which

DeltaH = "100 kJ mol"^(-1)" " and " " DeltaS = -"200 J mol"^(-1)"K"^(-1)

will never proceed spontaneously in the forward direction, and that regardless of the temperature at which it takes place.

As you know, the spontaneity of a chemical reaction that takes place at constant pressure and constant temperature is given by the change in Gibbs free energy, DeltaG

color(blue)(|bar(ul(color(white)(a/a)DeltaG = DeltaH - T * DeltaScolor(white)(a/a)|)))

Here

DeltaH - the enthalpy change of reaction
DeltaS - the entropy change of reaction
T - the absolute temperature at which the reaction takes place

In order for a process to be spontaneous, you need to have

DeltaG < 0

As you can see by inspecting the values given to you, DeltaG will never be <0 for a positive DeltaH and a negative DeltaS, since

DeltaG = underbrace(overbrace(DeltaH)^(color(blue)(>0)) - overbrace(T * DeltaS)^(color(purple)(<0)))_(color(darkgreen)(>0))

Keep in mind that the absolute temperature, i.e. the temperature expressed in Kelvin, is always positive.

The term -T * DeltaS will always be positive for a negative DeltaS, and so the value of T is not relevant here.

This is why the reaction will never be spontaneous in the forward direction. The forward reaction is endothermic, since DeltaH>0, and it leads to a decrease in the entropy of the system, since DeltaS<0, which is why it won't be spontaneous regardless of the temperature at which it takes place.

Interestingly enough, it will always be spontaneous in the reverse direction

2"C"_ ((g)) -> 2"A"_ ((g)) + 3"B"_ ((g))

That happens because

DeltaH_"reverse" = -DeltaH_"forw"" " and " "DeltaS_"rev" = -DeltaS_"forw"

In this case, you have

DeltaH_"rev" = -"100 kJ mol"^(-1)

DeltaS_"rev" = -(-"200 J mol"^(-1)"K"^(-1)) = +"200 J mol"^(-1)"K"^(-1)

The DeltaG for the reverse reaction will be

DeltaG_"rev" = underbrace(overbrace(DeltaH_ "rev")^(color(blue)(<0)) - overbrace(T * DeltaS_ "rev")^(color(purple)(>0)))_(color(darkgreen)(<0))

This time the term -T * DeltaS_"rev" is always negative, which is why DeltaG_"rev" is always <0, regardless of the temperature at which the reaction takes place.

![http://www.eoht.info/page/Gibbs+free+energy](https://d2jmvrsizmvf4x.cloudfront.net/it1X707pQOWee0CxKc5y_GW290H193)