For the following reaction run at 800 K, a mixture at equlibrium contains P_(N_2)=0.0040 atm, P_(H_2)=0.063 atm, and P_(NH_3)=0.48 atm. Calculate \DeltaG^o at 800 K?
What I have so far: Q=\frac{(P_(NH_3))^2}{P_(N_2)*(P_(H_2))^3} from the reaction below
N_2+3H_2\rightleftharpoons2NH_3
My Q is \approx230000 (actual value: 230,356.6929)
However, I do not know how to calculate for \DeltaG^o . Should I be using the formula \DeltaG^o=-nFE_(cell)^o or \DeltaG^o=-RTlnk ? I have Q, but this is not a battery so...
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What I have so far:
My
However, I do not know how to calculate for
(the top question in this picture)
1 Answer
Based on the determined equilibrium constant,
You don't need to calculate
K_P = (P_(NH_3)^2)/(P_(N_2)P_(H_2)^3)
= ("0.48 atm"//"1 atm")^2/(("0.0040 atm"//"1 atm")("0.063 atm"//"1 atm")^3)
= 2.304 xx 10^5 (FYI, this equilibrium constant makes no physical sense, because this reaction requires excess reactants in the industry to push it forward and it becomes LESS favorable at higher temperatures.
K_P = 5.38 xx 10^(-6) at"823.15 K" . Thus,K_P ~~ 10^(-5) at"800 K" .)
For now we'll go with this one... In general,
DeltaG = DeltaG^@ + RTlnQ where
Q is the reaction quotient, i.e. the NOT-YET-equilibrium constant.DeltaG is the change in Gibbs' free energy, and@ indicates standard conditions ("1 M" concentrations,"1 atm" surroundings, at a certain temperature).
At equilibrium, recall that
DeltaG^@ = -RTlnK
For gas-phase reactions, we define
DeltaG^@ ("gas-phase") = -RTlnK_P
Therefore,
color(red)(DeltaG^@) = -("0.008314 kJ/mol"cdot"K")("800 K")ln(2.304 xx 10^5)
= color(red)(-"82.13 kJ/mol")
In reality, for this reaction at