Question #23633
1 Answer
You need to know the standard change in entropy as well.
Explanation:
The standard change in Gibbs free energy can be calculated using the equation
color(blue)(ul(color(black)(DeltaG^@ = DeltaH^@ - T * DeltaS^@)))
Here
DeltaG^@ is the standard change in Gibbs free energyDeltaH^@ is the standard change in enthalpyT is the absolute temperature at which the reaction takes placeDeltaS^@ is the standard change in entropy
As you can see, all you have to do here is to plug in the values you have for
DeltaG^@ = "128.4 kJ mol"^(-1) - "298 K" * DeltaS^@
Now, it's important to keep track of the units you have for your values. The standard change in entropy is expressed in joules per mole Kelvin, or
So let's say that you have a standard change in entropy equal to
DeltaG^@ = "128.4 kJ mol"^(-1) - 298 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("K"))) * xcolor(white)(.)"J mol"^(-1)color(red)(cancel(color(black)("K"^(-1))))
This is equivalent to
DeltaG^@ = "128.4 kJ mol"^(-1) - (298 * x)color(white)(.) "J mol"^(-1)
In order to be able to subtract those two values, the units must match. So you will have to convert joules per mole to kilojoules per mole by using the conversion factor
(1 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("J"))))/"1 mole" * "1 kJ"/(10^3color(red)(cancel(color(black)("J")))) = (10^(-3)color(white)(.)"kJ")/"1 mole" = 10^(-3)"kJ mol"^(-1)
This means that you will have
DeltaG^@ = "128.4 kJ mol"^(-1) - (298 * x) * 10^(-3)color(white)(.) "kJ mol"^(-1)
The answer will thus take the form
DeltaG^@ = (128.4 - (298 * x)/1000) color(white)(.)"kJ mol"^(-1)
Where