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25.3: Chemical Reactions

  • Page ID
    32740
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    We will now see why studying the free energy of a system is useful in determining its behaviour.

    The free energy change, ΔG, of a chemical reaction is the difference in free energy between the products of the reaction and the reactants. If the free energy of the products is less than the free energy of the reactants there will be a driving force for the reaction to occur.

    For the reaction

    \[A + B \rightarrow C\]

    the free energy change,

    \[\Delta G = G_{C} - G_{A} - G_{B}\]

    \[= \Delta G^{o}+RTln(\frac{\frac{p_{c}}{p^{0}_{c}}} {\frac{p_{A}p_{B}} {p^{0}_{A}p^{0}_{B}} } )\]

    \[\Delta G^{o} + RTln(\frac{p_{c}} {p_{A}p_{B}} )\]

    if the standard states

    \[p^{0}_{A}=p^{0}_{B}=p^{0}_{C}=1 bar\]

    We see that the free energy change of a reaction is determined by the relative quantities of reactants and products.


    This page titled 25.3: Chemical Reactions is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Dissemination of IT for the Promotion of Materials Science (DoITPoMS) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.

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