Another Thermo Question?

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Consider the reaction
C2H2(g) + H2(g) <->C2H4(g). Use the data in
the table above for the following:

A: Estimate Delta G, H and S for the reaction above at 25C, and
use your results to show that the reaction is spontaneous at room
temperature.

B: As the temperature increases, the reaction ceases to be
spontaneous. Use the Gibbs-Helmholtz equation to predict the
temperature at which the reaction is no longer spontaneous for 1 atm
pressure in each gas.

1 Answer
Nov 25, 2016

PART A

Part A is fairly straightforward, and is just asking you to choose the thermodynamic values to use. Let Y be a thermodynamic state function. Then:

If G or H:

DeltaY_"rxn"^@ = sum_P nu_P DeltaY_(f,P)^@ - sum_R nu_R DeltaY_(f,R)^@

If S:

DeltaS_"rxn"^@ = sum_P nu_P S_(P)^@ - sum_R nu_R S_(R)^@

where:

  • DeltaY_f^@ is some thermodynamic function of formation (such as Gibbs energy of formation or enthalpy of formation) for one pure substance.
  • S^@ is the standard molar entropy for one pure substance, and P (or R) stands for products (or reactants). This is defined a little differently because the initial state is at "0 K", and S_("0 K") = 0 from the third law of thermodynamics.
  • nu is the stoichiometric coefficient of the substance in the balanced chemical reaction.

"C"_2"H"_2(g) + "H"_2(g) rightleftharpoons "C"_2"H"_4(g)

We'll choose G first (at "298.15 K" and "1 atm" like usual):

color(blue)(DeltaG_"rxn"^@) = nu_(C_2H_4(g))DeltaG_(f,C_2H_4(g))^@ - [nu_(C_2H_2(g))DeltaG_(f,C_2H_2(g))^@ + nu_(H_2(g))DeltaG_(f,H_2(g))^@]

= (1)("68.11 kJ/mol") - [(1)("209.2 kJ/mol") +(1) ("0 kJ/mol")]

= color(blue)(-"141.1 kJ/mol")

Already we can say that the reaction is spontaneous at room temperature, since bb(DeltaG < 0), which by definition says the reaction is spontaneous, and standard thermodynamic temperature ("298.15 K", or 25^@ "C") is room temperature.

Essentially the same math follows for DeltaH_"rxn"^@:

color(blue)(DeltaH_"rxn"^@) = nu_(C_2H_4(g))DeltaH_(f,C_2H_4(g))^@ - [nu_(C_2H_2(g))DeltaH_(f,C_2H_2(g))^@ + nu_(H_2(g))DeltaH_(f,H_2(g))^@]

= (1)("52.30 kJ/mol") - [(1)("226.7 kJ/mol") +(1) ("0 kJ/mol")]

= color(blue)(-"174.4 kJ/mol")

which says the reaction is exothermic, i.e. it releases energy into the surroundings.

And for DeltaS_"rxn"^@, you have two options. Either follow the same math as above again, which gives you -"111.98 J/mol"cdot"K", or use:

DeltaG_"rxn"^@ = DeltaH_"rxn"^@ - TDeltaS_"rxn"^@

and solve for DeltaS_"rxn"^@ to get:

color(blue)(DeltaS_"rxn"^@) = (DeltaH_"rxn"^@ - DeltaG_"rxn"^@)/T

= color(blue)(-"111.69 J/mol"cdot"K")
(don't forget to convert from "kJ" to "J").

which means the entropy of the system decreases, meaning that the entropy of the surroundings increases.

Either way, there's about a 0.26% (i.e. negligible) difference between the two methods, so either way works fine when determining DeltaS_"rxn"^@.

PART B

I'm surprised you are asked to use the Gibbs-Helmholtz equation... Because this is what I see on Wikipedia:

((del(DeltaG_("rxn")^@"/"T))/(delT))_P = -(DeltaH_("rxn")^@)/T^2

If we want the reaction to no longer be spontaneous, then we must have that DeltaG_"rxn"^@ at some new temperature T_"nonspont." be equal to 0. There's an easy and a hard way to do this...

The easy way

cancel(DeltaG_"rxn"^@)^"assumed 0" = DeltaH_"rxn" - T_"nonspont."DeltaS_"rxn"^@

=> DeltaH_"rxn"^@ = T_"nonspont."DeltaS_"rxn"^@

color(blue)(T_"nonspont.") = (DeltaH_"rxn"^@)/(DeltaS_"rxn"^@)

= (-"174.4 kJ/mol")/(-"0.11169 kJ/mol")

= color(blue)("1561.5 K")

The hard way

From ((del(DeltaG_("rxn")^@"/"T))/(delT))_P = -(DeltaH_("rxn")^@)/T^2:

Let us multiply both sides by dT at constant pressure. Then:

d(DeltaG_"rxn"^@"/"T) = -(DeltaH_"rxn"^@)/T^2dT

Integrating both sides from the initial temperature T^@ to the final temperature T_"nonspont.", we get:

int_(T^@)^(T_"nonspont.") d(DeltaG_"rxn"^@"/"T') = DeltaH_"rxn"^@int_(T^@)^(T_"nonspont.")-1/(T')^2dT'

where we have assumed that DeltaH_"rxn"^@ does not change significantly at a new temperature, but we haven't assumed that for DeltaG_"rxn"^@. We have also substituted T' = T to not confuse the T in the 1/T with the T in the integral bounds.

The integral of a derivative cancels out on the left side, and the right side integrates to give 1/T, so:

|[(DeltaG_"rxn"^@(T'))/(T')]|_(T^@)^(T_"nonspont.") = DeltaH_"rxn"^@|[(1/(T'))]|_(T^@)^(T_"nonspont.")

(DeltaG_"rxn"^@(T_"nonspont."))/T_"nonspont." - (DeltaG_"rxn"^@(T^@))/T^@ = DeltaH_"rxn"^@[1/(T_"nonspont.") - 1/T^@]

Now, if we set T^@ = "298.15 K" and T_"nonspont." to be our new temperature at which DeltaG_"rxn"^@(T_"nonspont.") = 0, then:

cancel((DeltaG_"rxn"^@(T_"nonspont."))/T_"nonspont.")^(0) - (stackrel("Known")overbrace(DeltaG_"rxn"^@(T^@)))/T^@ = stackrel("Known")overbrace(DeltaH_"rxn"^@)[1/T_"nonspont." - 1/T^@]

Now we'd solve for T_"nonspont." to find the temperature at which the reaction is no longer spontaneous (i.e. has now crossed over from being spontaneous to being at equilibrium):

-(DeltaG_"rxn"^@(T^@))/(DeltaH_"rxn"^@T^@) = 1/T_"nonspont." - 1/T^@

1/T^@ - (DeltaG_"rxn"^@(T^@))/(DeltaH_"rxn"^@T^@) = 1/T_"nonspont."

=> color(blue)(T_"nonspont.") = [1/T^@ - (DeltaG_"rxn"^@(T^@))/(DeltaH_"rxn"^@T^@)]^(-1) = (1/T^@)^(-1)[1 - (DeltaG_"rxn"^@(T^@))/(DeltaH_"rxn"^@)]^(-1)

= T^@[1 - (DeltaG_"rxn"^@(T^@))/(DeltaH_"rxn"^@)]^(-1) = ("298.15 K")[1 - (-"141.1 kJ/mol")/(-"174.4 kJ/mol")]^(-1)

= color(blue)("1561.5 K")

and you can see the two approaches essentially give the same result (0% error if you keep all your decimal places in your calculator).