First Law of Thermodynamics - Second Law of Thermodynamics - Physical Transformations of Pure Substances - Simple Mixtures - Chemical Equilibria
First Law of Thermodynamics - Second Law of Thermodynamics - Physical Transformations of Pure Substances - Simple Mixtures - Chemical Equilibria
First Law of Thermodynamics - Second Law of Thermodynamics - Physical Transformations of Pure Substances - Simple Mixtures - Chemical Equilibria
CO and CLO
CHAPTER 4:
THERMODYNAMICS AND EQUILIBRIA Course outcome (CO)
CO3: Evaluate the concept of redox reaction,
thermochemistry and kinetic reactions in chemical
First Law of Thermodynamics engineering.
Spontaneous Processes
Second Law of
Thermodynamics Thermodynamics is concerned with the question: can a
reaction occur?
First Law of Thermodynamics: energy is conserved.
Any process that occurs without outside intervention is
spontaneous.
(Chapter 19: Chemical Thermodynamics) When two eggs are dropped they spontaneously break.
The reverse reaction is not spontaneous.
We can conclude that a spontaneous process has a
direction.
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Spontaneous Processes
Reversible and Irreversible Processes
When 1 mol of water is frozen at 1 atm at 0C to form 1
mol of ice, q = Hvap of heat is removed.
To reverse the process, q = Hvap must be added to the
1 mol of ice at 0C and 1 atm to form 1 mol of water.
Therefore, converting between 1 mol of ice and 1 mol
of water at 0C is a reversible process.
Allowing 1 mol of ice to warm is an irreversible process.
To get the reverse process to occur, the water
temperature must be lowered to 0C.
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Chemical systems in equilibrium are reversible. Consider an initial state: two flasks connected by a
closed stopcock. One flask is evacuated and the other
In any spontaneous process, the path between contains 1 atm of gas.
reactants and products is irreversible.
The final state: two flasks connected by an open
Thermodynamics gives us the direction of a stopcock. Each flask contains gas at 0.5 atm.
process. It cannot predict the speed at which the The expansion of the gas is isothermal (i.e. constant
process will occur. temperature). Therefore the gas does no work and
heat is not transferred.
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Entropy and the Second Law Entropy and the Second Law
of Thermodynamics of Thermodynamics
Entropy Entropy
Entropy, S, is a measure of the disorder of a system. As ice melts, the intermolecular forces are broken
Spontaneous reactions proceed to lower energy or (requires energy), but the order is interrupted (so
higher entropy. entropy increases).
In ice, the molecules are very well ordered because of Water is more random than ice, so ice spontaneously
the H-bonds. melts at room temperature.
Therefore, ice has a low entropy.
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Entropy and the Second Law Entropy and the Second Law
of Thermodynamics of Thermodynamics
.
Entropy The Second Law of Thermodynamics
Suppose a system changes reversibly between state 1 and The second law of thermodynamics explains why
state 2. Then, the change in entropy is given by spontaneous processes have a direction.
q In any spontaneous process, the entropy of the
Ssys rev (constant T ) universe increases.
T
at constant T where qrev is the amount of heat added Suniv. S syst . S surr.
reversibly to the system. (Example: a phase change the change in entropy of the universe is the sum of the
occurs at constant T with the reversible addition of heat.) change in entropy of the system and the change in
entropy of the surroundings.
Entropy is not conserved: Suniv is increasing
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