Olfaction Posted February 9 Posted February 9 Hello, could someone please help me with this? Some reactions are spontaneous (with dG < 0) although they are endothermic (dH > 0). My question is: Is it possible to extract work from such a reaction? The process I understand to produce work is to heat something in a contained space and transfer the heat pressure into kinetic energy with a turbine. (Sorry I know this is not very formal). For example, this reaction is a spontaneous endothermic reaction. NH4NO3 (s) –> NH4+ (aq) + NO3- (aq) Is there a way I can get my turbine to work with this reaction? Is the Gibbs Free Energy that comes from the raise in Entropy of any use? And how so, if I get not heat? Thank you for you help. I am quite confused.
Bufofrog Posted February 9 Posted February 9 The reaction requires heat, so the reaction cannot be used to run a turbine. The reaction cools down the the solution.
Olfaction Posted February 9 Author Posted February 9 But why is it called Gibb's free energy, if there is no way to use it? Is there maybe a way to create some gradient and do some diffusion that could be harnessed into work, altough no heat is being produced?
exchemist Posted February 9 Posted February 9 1 hour ago, Olfaction said: But why is it called Gibb's free energy, if there is no way to use it? Is there maybe a way to create some gradient and do some diffusion that could be harnessed into work, altough no heat is being produced? I’m rusty on this but I should have thought you can get work out of a process with -ve change in G. For instance you could have an electrode potential in a suitable electrochemical cell, even if you could not run a heat engine. If you did find a way to extract work, I think the enthalpy change would become even more -ve, to balance the books. But I’m very much open to correction on this.
Olfaction Posted February 9 Author Posted February 9 Oh thanks, that’s the kind of answer I was expecting. That would explain why the Nernst-Equation allows me to convert redox potential into Gibbs Energy and not into Enthalpy… ΔG = -z F ΔE Where G ist the molar Gibbs Free Energy, z the number of exchanged electrons and E ist the standard redox potential…
exchemist Posted February 9 Posted February 9 27 minutes ago, Olfaction said: Oh thanks, that’s the kind of answer I was expecting. That would explain why the Nernst-Equation allows me to convert redox potential into Gibbs Energy and not into Enthalpy… ΔG = -z F ΔE Where G ist the molar Gibbs Free Energy, z the number of exchanged electrons and E ist the standard redox potential… That's what I had in mind. But let's see if someone jumps in and tells me I'm quite wrong.........
Olfaction Posted February 9 Author Posted February 9 Like know you these plastic packs you crack and they get cold? I read that it is often this spontaneous endothermic reaction taking place. NH4NO3 (s) –> NH4+ (aq) + NO3- (aq) So, with well-suited electrochemical chamber, I should be able to create current until the reaction reaches equilibrium? Oh wait, because of ΔG° = ΔH° - TΔS° , this reaction will only be spontaneous at high temperatures. So isn’t it simply, that if we create a cold spot in a warmer environment, there is going to be a flow of molecule to fill the hole and therefore kinetic energy?
KJW Posted February 9 Posted February 9 7 hours ago, Olfaction said: Is there a way I can get my turbine to work with this reaction? Is the Gibbs Free Energy that comes from the raise in Entropy of any use? And how so, if I get not heat? You could use the endothermic reaction as the cold sink of a heat engine, with room temperature being the hot source.
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