1 / 41

Redox Potentials and Equilibria

Redox Potentials and Equilibria. GLY 4241 - Lecture 12 Fall, 2014. Equilibrium Treatments. Free energy (ΔG = ΔH – TΔS) Using equilibrium constants Use of oxidation-reduction reactions Reactions written in half-cells. Example Half-Cell Reactions. Oxidation: Reduction: Full cell:.

Download Presentation

Redox Potentials and Equilibria

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Redox Potentials and Equilibria GLY 4241 - Lecture 12 Fall, 2014

  2. Equilibrium Treatments • Free energy (ΔG = ΔH – TΔS) • Using equilibrium constants • Use of oxidation-reduction reactions • Reactions written in half-cells

  3. Example Half-Cell Reactions • Oxidation: • Reduction: • Full cell:

  4. Oxidation-Reduction Video

  5. Redox Reactions Video

  6. Complicated Reaction

  7. Balancing Half Reactions

  8. Arbitrary Standard • Measuring the absolute value of the potential for an ion to gain or lose an electron is impossible • Therefore, an arbitrary standard is chosen:

  9. Standard Conditions • This has an arbitrary standard potential (at standard conditions [H2] = 1 atmosphere and 25C) E= 0.00 volts • E denotes standard potential

  10. Half-Cells in Terms of Standard • Once a standard is chosen, all other half-cell reactions can be defined in terms of the standard • Example:

  11. Is a Reaction Favorable? • A table of electrode potentials (these are readily available) can be used to judge which reactions are thermodynamically favorable • A reduced ion will react with any oxidized species less negative than itself

  12. Favorable Reaction • Thus, uranium U3+ will reduce tin Sn2+

  13. Unfavorable Reaction • Uranium cannot reduce magnesium

  14. Combining Half-Cells • A reaction's potential difference can be found by combining two half cell reactions: • Doubling a reaction does not change the potential • Potential is an intensive variable

  15. Potential and Free Energy • where • n = # of electrons transferred, • f = Faraday constant = 23,061 calories/volt, • E is the potential in volts • Faraday constant may also be expressed as 96,420 coulombs if the energies are to be given as volt-coulombs, which equal joules

  16. Standard Free Energy • For the uranium-tin equation, this gives: • If the reaction is at standard conditions the standard potential, E, is used to calculate the standard free energy, ΔG

  17. Calculation of Equilibrium Constant • Relationship of standard potential and the equilibrium constant

  18. Nernst Equation • The preceding equation is a special case of the Nernst Equation

  19. Relationship of Potential and Equilibrium Constant • The relationship of E to Keq can easily be derived:

  20. Redox Potential • Usual method of determining E is to insert two electrodes into the solution of interest • One electrode is platinum, and the other is hydrogen • A hydrogen electrode can be made by allowing hydrogen at one atmosphere to bubble over a platinum electrode • Potential determined in this way is known as the redox potential, Eh

  21. Eh and pH • pH: Measures the ability of a solution to accept or donate hydrogen ion • Eh: Measures the ability of a solution to accept electrons from a reducing agent, or supply electrons to an oxidizing agent

  22. Which Iron Ion is Present? • Consider an acidic solution containing iron, with a measured Eh of 0.48 volts is the iron ferrous or ferric?

  23. Ferrous Ion Dominates • This calculation assumes that no complexes are formed which may not always be true, especially if organic anions are present

  24. Kinetic Barriers • Kinetic barriers may keep a reaction from proceeding quickly to completion • If the reaction is slow, the measured Eh value will be less than the equilibrium values and will usually be too low • Reactions involving oxygen often have this problem

  25. Eh vs. pH Diagram • pH is plotted on the abscissa with 0 on the left and 14 on the right • Eh is plotted on the ordinate, with negative values at the bottom increasing toward positive values at the top • This type of representation is primarily useful for low temperature environments in which water is stable and pH is a useful parameter

  26. Limits in Terrestrial Environments • If an agent, stronger than oxygen, existed in nature, it would react with water to liberate oxygen

  27. Oxygen Concentration • Using a concentration or 0.2 atm for oxygen: • Empirically, 1.22 was found to be too high, and a value of 1.04 was suggested

  28. Reduction Limit • Reducing agents in nature cannot be stronger than hydrogen since they would reduce water and liberate hydrogen

  29. Hydrogen Nernst Equation • Since [H2] cannot exceed one atmosphere near the surface, this equation reduces to:

  30. pH Limits • Often, the pH in natural systems ranges between 4 and 9 but we have seen exceptions to that rule • Using limits of 4 to 9 for the pH allows us to draw a parallelogram in Eh-pH space • The boundaries of this parallelogram are the natural limits of most aqueous systems.

  31. Eh – pH Diagram • Area outlined by the parallelogram shows natural limits applicable to most systems

  32. Activity • Activity is a thermodynamic concept that considers the actual reactivity instead of the concentration • Activity may be thought of as an effective concentration

  33. pe • By analogy with pH, pe = - log ae-

  34. Applying pe

  35. Expressing As pe

  36. Calculating Keq • Keq may be calculated from standard thermodynamic data

  37. Insert Values

  38. Solve of Keq

  39. Generalized Reaction with n Electrons

  40. Eh and pe • Thus, expressing the activity of electrons in solution in units of volts (Eh) or in units of electron activity (as either ae- or pe) is possible • The two quantities may be related:

  41. Natural Limits • At 25 ̊ C, • pe = 16.9 Eh • Eh = 0.059 pe

More Related