Spontaneous change
one that occurs without a continuous input of energy from outside the system (though activation energy may be required to initiate it)
If a change is spontaneous in one direction
it will be non-spontaneous in the reverse direction
how may non-spontaneous reactions and processes be driven?
with continual input of energy
is enthalpy change a predictor of spontaneity?
many exothermic processes are spontaneous (eg combustion reactions)
examples of spontaneous endothermic transformations
all show an increase in the freedom of motion of particles in the system
relationship between freedom of motion and spontaneity
an increase in freedom of motion (dispersal of energy) favours spontaneity
entropy, S
measure of energy dispersal, or freedom of motion, in a system
positive value of ΔS indicates
negative value of ΔS indicates
increased dispersal of energy
decreased dispersal of energy
is entropy a state function?
yes
ΔS = S(final) - S(initial)
units of entropy
J/K
S’
standard molar entropy: entropy of 1 mole of the pure substance in its standard state
entropy trends
effect of physical state
S of solids < S of liquids «_space;S of gas
solids - less energy dispersed, lower entropy
effect of particle numbers
more molecules have higher entropy than fewer molecules
effect of molecular complexity
entropy increases with chemical complexity and flexibility
- this only holds for substances in the same physical state
- the effect of physical state dominates the effect of molecular complexity
effect of temperature
as temperature increases, entropy increases
- higher temperature means more freedom of molecular motion
draw graph for temperature vs entropy
discontinuous jumps at phase changes
entropy change upon dissolution
why does increased entropy favour spontaneous change?
high-entropy configurations can be achieved in more ways than low-entropy configurations. they are therefore more likely to occur
draw a diagram for spontaneous expansion of a gas and explain it
absolute entropies can be calculated from
the number of micro states (W) a system may occupy
2nd law of thermodynamics
spontaneous reactions proceed in the direction that increases the entropy of the universe (system + surroundings)
ΔS(Universe) = ΔS(sys) + ΔS(surr) > 0
thus, any decrease int he entropy of the system must be offset by a larger increase in the entropy of the surroundings for that process to be spontaneous
2nd law has profound implications:
how are temperature, heat flow, and entropy linked?