Transcript Lecture 1
GEOL 295
Physical Chemistry in the Earth
Sciences
Greg Druschel
Delehanty 321
Class times:MWF 9:05 – 9:55 a.m.
Class Structure
• Lecture over the theory and basic equations
governing different processes
• Practicum going over example problems
• 1 homework over each section
– DUE 1 week after assigned
• NO TESTS
• Individual project – oral presentation at end of
class instead of final
• Grading: 60% homework, 10% participation,
30% final project
Systems
• System – the PART of the universe that is
under consideration. It is separated from
the rest of the universe by it’s boundaries
– Open system when matter CAN cross the
boundary
– Closed system when matter CANNOT cross
the boundary
– Isolated Boundary seals matter and heat
from exchange with another system
open
↔
matter
heat
closed
↔ heat
isolated
Equilibrium/ Reversibility
• Anything at equilibrium is theoretically
undergoing equivalent forward and reverse
reactions:
• A+B↔C
– A + B C same degree as C A +B
• Equilibrium has 2 criteria:
– Reaction does not appreciably change in time
– Perturbation of that equilibrium will result in a
return to the equilibrium
STABLE VS. METASTABLE
EQUILIBRIUM
• Stable equilibrium - System is at its lowest
possible energy level.
• Metastable equilibrium - System satisfies above
two criteria, but is not at lowest possible energy.
Defining a system
Energy
• A system at equilibrium has measurable
properties
• If the system changes from one equilibrium
‘state’ to another these changes depend
of the properties changed and not on the
path (or exact process) the change went
along
In thermodynamics,
these 2 reactions
are NOT different
Example: Catalysis
does not affect
thermodynamic
calculations!
Chemical Properties of a System
• We express the composition of materials in
a system in terms of components and
phases
• Component – the chemical constituents by
which all of the phases in a system can be
completely described
• Phase – a uniform, homogeneous,
physically distinct, and mechanically
separable portion of a system
Components and Phases
• A phase can be solid, liquid, or gas
• What should the components be for a
chunk of calcite??
• Can an ion be a phase??
Species
• In the aqueous phase, there are also a
number of species
• These are dissolved ions or molecules (do
not have to be charged) that are NOT
phases unto themselves, but can be
components!
Heat of Reaction, Enthalpy
• Heat of reaction DH0R
DH R0 ni H 0fi ( products) ni H 0fi (reactants)
i
i
• DH0R is positive exothermic
• DH0R is negative endothermic
• Example: 2A + 3B A2B3
• DH0R =H0f(A2B3)-[2H0f(A) + 3H0f(B)]
Heat Capacity
• When heat is added to a phase it’s
temperature increases (No, really…)
• Not all materials behave the same though!
• dq=CdT where C is a constant (heat
capacity for a particular material)
• Or at constant P: dCp=CpdT
• Recall that dqp=dH then: dH=CpdT
• HT-HT0=Cp(T-T0) to determine enthalpy of
formation at temperature
Entropy of reaction
• Just as was done with enthalpies:
• Entropy of reaction S0R:
DS ni S ( products) ni S (reactants)
0
R
0
i
i
0
i
i
• When DS0R is positive entropy increases as a
result of a change in state
• When DS0R is negative entropy decreases as
a result of a change in state
MEANING OF ENTROPY AND THE
SECOND LAW
• Entropy is a measure of the disorder
(randomness) of a system. The higher the
entropy of the system, the more disordered it is.
• The second law states that the universe always
becomes more disordered in any real process.
• The entropy (order) of a system can decrease,
but in order for this to happen, the entropy
(disorder) of the surroundings must increase to
a greater extent, so that the total entropy of the
universe always increases.
J. Willard Gibbs
• Gibbs realized that for a reaction, a certain
amount of energy goes to an increase in
entropy of a system.
• G = H –TS or
DG0R = DH0R – TDS0R
• Gibbs Free Energy (G) is a state variable,
measured in KJ/mol and is a measure of all
non-PV work:
DG ni G ( products) ni G (reactants )
0
R
0
i
i
0
i
i
• Tabulated values of DG0R are in Appendix B
Free Energy
• Gibbs Free energy describes the potential
chemical energy possible between potential
reactants
• In battery for instance, the fact that there is x
driving force when anode and cathode are in
contact provides a certain amount of power
determined by G
• Any reaction out-of-equilibrium with the
potential to go there can supply energy to
organisms
G is a measure of driving force
• DG0R = DH0R – TDS0R
• When DG0R is negative forward reaction
has excess energy and will occur
spontaneously
• When DG0R is positive there is not
enough energy in the forward direction, and
the BACKWARD reaction will occur
• When DG0R is ZERO reaction is AT
equilibrium
Free Energy Examples
DG0R = DH0R – TDS0R
DGR0 ni Gi0 ( products) ni Gi0 (reactants )
i
i
• Al2Si2O5(OH)4 + 6H+ = 5H2O + 2Al3+ + 2SiO2(aq)
kaolinite
• FeOOH + 2H+ = 1.5 H2O + Fe2+ + ¼ O2(aq)
goethite
• 1/8 S8 + H2O + 1.5 O2(aq) = 2 H+ + SO42-
Chemical Potential
• Enthalpy (H), entropy (S), and Gibbs Free Energy (G)
are molal (moles/kg) quantities
• Chemical potential, m, is the Gibbs free energy per
molal unit:
G
i
n i
• In other words, the "chemical potential m" is a measure
of how much the free energy of a system changes (by
dGi) if you add or remove a number dni particles of the
particle species i while keeping the number of the other
particles (and the temperature T and the pressure p)
constant:
Law of Mass Action
• Getting ‘out’ of the standard state:
products
RT ln
reactants
n
DGr DG
0
r
n
• Bear in mind the difference between the standard
state G0 and 0 vs. the molal property G and
(not at standard state 25 C, 1 bar, a mole)
Equilibrium Constant
•
For a reaction of ideal gases, P becomes:
PCc PDd
for
aA
+
bB
cC
+
dD
RT ln Q
RT ln
P a Pb
A B
•
•
Restate the equation as:
DGR – DG0R = RT ln K
AT equilibrium, DGR=0, therefore:
DG0R = -RT ln K
where K is the equilibrium constant
K a.k.a Keq
[ products]
K
[reactants]
n
i
n
i
If DGR – DG0R = RT ln K, and for equilibrium
DG0R = 0, then:
At Equilibrium define DGR from the expression
RT ln K, the product of the activities for
products over reactants
Equilibrium constants
DG0R = RT ln K
Rearrange:
ln K = DG0R / RT
K e
DGR0
RT
Find K from
thermodynamic data
for any reaction
• Q is also found from the
activities of the specific
minerals, gases, and
species involved in a
reaction (in turn affected
by the solution they are
in)
[ products]
Q
[reactants]
n
i
i
n
Log K
DG0
R
= -RT ln K
K e
DGR0
RT
[ products]
Q
[reactants]
n
i
i
For any reaction, log K an indication of the
equilibrium conditions
Log K’s are additive:
• CaCO3 = Ca2+ + CO32-8.48
• CO32- + H+ = HCO310.329
• CaCO3 + H+ = Ca2+ + HCO3=1.849
n
DH R0 ni H 0fi ( products) ni H 0fi (reactants)
i
i
DS ni S ( products) ni S (reactants)
0
R
0
i
0
i
i
i
DG0R = DH0R – TDS0R
DG0R = -RT ln K
DGR = DHR – TDSR
K e
DGR0
RT
Q
n
[
products
]
i
n
[
reactants
]
i
DGR0 ni Gi0 ( products) ni Gi0 (reactants )
i
i
products
RT ln
reactants
n
DGr DG
0
r
n
Mixtures
• Henry’s and Raoult’s laws describe how
components mix together
• Mixing mechanical mixing, but
components interact
• Ideal mixing (Raoult’s law followed for all):
•
•
•
•
Enthalpy does not change
DS0mix=-R(N1lnN1+N2lnN2+…)
DG0mix=-R(N1lnN1+N2lnN2+…)
Gss = N1G10 + N2G10 + … + DG0mix
Non ideal mixing
• When components interact, need to interact
a term to account, ω, called the excess free
energy of mixing DG0mix(excess)
Gases
• Measure gases in partial pressures: ai=NiPi
– While most gases behave ideally, do need to
account for water vapor: Pi=Xgas(PT-PH2O)
– Here Ni and Xgas are both the mole fraction…
• Equilibrium partitioning between a gas and
the dissolved fraction of that gas described
by Henry’s Law Constants, KH
• KH=[O2(aq)]/PO2 larger KH, more soluble…