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Lecture 5: Intro to Entropy

Lecture 5: Intro to Entropy. Reading: Zumdahl 10.1, 10.3 Outline: Why enthalpy is not enough Statistical interpretation of entropy Boltzmann’s Formula. Enthalpy and Spontaneous Rxns.

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Lecture 5: Intro to Entropy

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  1. Lecture 5: Intro to Entropy • Reading: Zumdahl 10.1, 10.3 • Outline: • Why enthalpy is not enough • Statistical interpretation of entropy • Boltzmann’s Formula

  2. Enthalpy and Spontaneous Rxns • Early on in the development of thermodynamics, it was believed that if a reaction was exothermic, it was spontaneous. • Consider the following reaction: H2O(s) H2O(l) DH°rxn = +6.02 kJ • Endothermic…..yet spontaneous!

  3. Enthalpy and Spontaneous Rxns • Consider the following problem: Mixing of a gas inside a bulb adiabatically (q = 0). • q = 0, w = 0, DE = 0, and DH = 0 ….but it still happens

  4. Statistical Interpretation of Entropy • Imagine that we have a collection of 3 distinguishable particles who have a total energy of 3e. • Let’s ask the question, “How will this fixed amount of energy distribute itself over the particles?”

  5. Statistics and Entropy (cont.) • Our system consists of three distinguishable particles. • There are three “quanta” of energy (e) available for a total of energy of “3e”

  6. First Arrangement: All on one • The first possible arrangement we consider is one in which all energy resides on one particle There are three ways to do this

  7. Second Arrangement: 2, 1, 0 • Next arrangement: 2e on 1, 1e on another, and the third has 0e Six ways to do this

  8. Third Arrangement • The final possible arrangement is 1e on each particle. Only one way to do this.

  9. Which Arrangement? • Which arrangement is most probable? • Ans: The arrangement which the greatest number of possibilities • In this case: “2, 1, 0”

  10. The Dominant Configuration • Configuration: a type of energy distribution. • Microstate: a specific arrangement of energy corresponding to a configuration. • Which configuration will you see? The one with the largest # of microstates. This is called the dominant configuration.

  11. Determining Weight • Weight (W): the number of microstates associated with a given configuration. • We need to determine W, without having to write down all the microstates. W A = the number of particles in your system. ai is the number of particles with the same amount of energy. ! = factorial, and P means take the product.

  12. Determining Weight (cont.) • Consider 300 students where 3 students have 1e of energy, and the other 297 have none. • A = 300 a1 = 3 a0 = 297 = 4.5 x 106

  13. Weight and Entropy • The connection between weight (W) and entropy (S) is given by Boltzmann’s Formula: S = k lnW k = Boltzmann’s constant = R/Na = 1.38 x 10-23 J/K • The dominant configuration will have the largest W; therefore, S is greatest for this configuration

  14. Example: Crystal of CO • Consider the depiction of crystalline CO. There are two possible arrangements for each CO molecule. • Each arrangement of CO is possible. • For a mole of CO: W = Na!/(Na/2!)2 = 2Na

  15. Example: Crystal of CO • For a mole of CO: W = Na!/(Na/2!)2 = 2Na • Then, S = k ln(W) = k ln (2Na) = Nak ln(2) = R ln(2) = 5.64 J/mol.K

  16. Another Example: Expansion • What is DS for the expansion of an ideal gas from V1 to 2V1? • Focus on an individual particle. After expansion, each particle will have twice the number of positions available.

  17. Expansion (cont.) • Original Weight = W • Final Weight = 2W • Then DS = S2 -S1 = k ln(2W) - kln(W) = k ln(2W/W) = k ln(2)

  18. Expansion (cont.) • Therefore, the DS per particle = k ln (2) • For a mole of particles: DS = k ln (2Na) = Nak ln(2) = R ln(2) = 5.64 J/mol.K

  19. Expansion (cont.) • Note in the previous example that weight was directly proportional to volume. • Generalizing: DS = k ln (Wfinal) - kln(Winitial) = k ln(Wfinal/Winitial) = k ln(Wfinal/Winitial) = Nk ln(Wfinal/Winitial) for N molec. = Nkln(Vfinal/Vinitial)

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