Entropy and The Second Law

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ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

Energy Reservoir

The system consists of the red circles in the blue box.

Energy and entropy flow out of the system. Additional Energy is added to the system, TIME

The system decreases in entropy

by DR. STEPHEN THOMPSON MR. JOE STALEY

The contents of this module were developed under grant award # P116B-001338 from the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE), United States Department of Education. However, those contents do not necessarily represent the policy of FIPSE and the Department of Education, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal government.

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS CONTENTS


2 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Introduction To Entropy Energy Disperses Entropy Enthalpy And Entropy Thermal Entropy Configurational Entropy Configurational Entropy: Cellular Representation Configurational Entropy: Combined Representation Dispersible Energy Diffusion Liquid Crystal Salt Dissolving In Water The Pfeffer Tube The Second Law Of Thermodynamics Gibbs Free Energy Gibbs Free Energy And Temperature Gibbs Free Energy And Temperature How Entropy Can Decrease (In A System) Periodic Entropy Of The Elements

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS INTRODUCTION TO ENTROPY ENERGY DISPERSES

Metal Time

Styrofoam Time

TIME

Time

Time

Time

Time In the picture above the red ink represents energy. As time proceeds there is the same amount of ink (energy) but it spreads out, becomes less concentrated, disperses. Entropy is the measure of this dispersal The second law of thermodynamics says that the opposite change is impossible in an isolated system.

In the experiments pictured above, the blue represents cooling, or loss of thermal energy. Is the evaporation of water exothermic or endothermic.? What is the evidence? If it is endothermic, how can it proceed spontaneously in the isolated system where the petri dish is placed on styrofoam? Spontaneous endothermic reactions do occur and that means that there must be another factor than enthalpy involved. Scientists call this factor entropy.

We have personal experience of entropy when we feel the coolness of evaporation.

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS ENTROPY


Suppose three molecules have a total of three quanta of energy to share between them and that each molecule can occupy one of four energy states requiring zero, one, two or three quanta to occupy. E3 E2 x y z E1 o o o E0 Macrostate 1 has one possibility, that is, one microstate. E3 z E2 y o E1 x o E0 o E3 o E2 E1 y z oo E0
x

o o
x

o o
z

oo

x y

Macrostate 2 has three possibilities, that is, three microstates.

o
x

o o o o Macrostate 3 has six possibilities, six microstates.

o
y

o
y

o
z

In chemistry there are several different means by which energy can be dispersed and thus entropy created. These include: 1. The number of molecules among which the entropy can be shared. The rest of these examples refer to the same number of molecules: 2. The volume of space which the molecules can occupy. 3. The freedom with which the molecules can move about that space, e.g, the difference between a solid and a liquid. This would include the freedom to change location and, in the case of nonspherical molecules, the freedom to change oritentation or rotation. 4. The amount of energy available, which determines the range of energy states which the molecules can occupy. 5. The complexity of the molecules, which determines how many rotational and vibrational states they can have. A modern way to describe entropy is to say that entropy increases with the number of ways energy can be distributed in a system.

Suppose each microstate is as likely to be occupied as any other microstate. What is the most likely macrostate to be occupied? Suppose that the system shifts from one microstate to another at random times, what proportion of the time will the system be in macrostate 1? in macrostate 2? in macrostate 3? Assume the three quanta of energy are distributed among four molecules. How many macrostates will there be and how many microstates will there be for each macrostate? Suggestion: use drawings like the ones above to figure this out. Assume four quanta of energy are distributed among four molecules with four available energy states. How many macrostates will there be and how many microstates to each macrostate?

More Particles Added

More Particles Due to Chemical Reaction

Larger Volume

In each of the above sets of pictures, there is a change between the left hand side and the right hand side. Explain how the change would increse the number of ways energy can be distributed in the system.. We have described several sources of entropy. You describe several conditons that can restrain the growth of entropy or reduce it in a system. 3

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS ENTHALPY AND ENTROPY


Consider this experiment: a drop of water is placed in a clean Petrie dish and the cover is put on. What happens and and what are the causes? The system is the Petri dish and its contents. The surroundings include the table and the air outside of the Petri dish. In the pictures below. each column shows the same state of the system, but from a different perspective. The first column shows just the changes in molecular location. The second column shows changes in energy (temperature) and the third column shows changes in entropy. MOLECULES ENERGY

Temperature Increase

Entropy Increase

Temperature Decrease

Entropy Decrease

ENTROPY

TIME

TIME

Describe what is happening to the molecules. What do you think will happen later?

Why are the gas phase molecules warmer than the liquid phase in the intermediate time. Why do they return to equal temperature? 4

In the energy column, the gas phase molecules return to their original temperature. Why doesnt the same hold true for entropy? Is entropy conserved?

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS THERMAL ENTROPY FUEL TO FUMES

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS CONFIGURATIONAL ENTROPY MIXING OF GASES UNLIKE LIKE SOLUTION

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS CONFIGURATIONAL ENTROPY: CELLULAR REPRESENTATION

NUMBER OF MOLECULES

NUMBER OF STATES

= 144

=4

= 144x143

144! 72!

= 144x143x142

MOLECULAR DISSOCIATION

= 144x143

= 144x143x142x141

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS CONFIGURATIONAL ENTROPY: COMBINED REPRESENTATION EXPANDING GAS
Molecule Water Dinitrogen Dioxygen Argon Carbon Dioxide Molecular Weight 18

=1

144! 72!

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS DISPERSIBLE ENERGY


Enthalpy Entropy Universe Surroundings System In this pictorial representation, the system is shown qualitatively with an original enthalpy and entropy. In the surroundings - the rest of the universe - the original state is shown blank, since the actual amount of enthalpy and entropy in the universe is uncalculated and since it is the change which is relevant.

HSurroundings = System

If SSystem = 0, then SUniverse = SSurroundings = (H/T)System

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS DIFFUSION


Enthalpy Entropy Universe Surroundings System

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ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS LIQUID CRYSTAL


EXPERIMENT INTERPRETATION Universe Surroundings System The system is a horizontal rectangle of encapsulated liquid crystal (ELC). To begin with, the ELC is in thermal equilibrium with its surroundings. The surroundings include the surface upon the which ELC rests and the air above and around it. A drop of water is placed upon the surface of the ELC. Assume that the water is originally at the same temperature as the system and surroundings (the water is part of the surroundings). Experiment shows that the ELC cools beneath the drop as the drop evaporates and then that the cool region both spreads and diminishes in intensity. After the drop is completely evaporated the ELC eventually returns to its equilibrium temperature. The cooling is due to a warmer than average fraction of the water molecules escaping from the drop; although they lose energy to the work function of the water surface, they nevertheless retain enough energy to cool the drop. Since the ELC is cooled its entropy is decreased, unless there is an increase in some configurational entropy. The entropy of the water is configurationally increased by evaporation by the energy drawn from the ElC. And since the water is part of the surroundings, the entropy of the surroundings is thereby increased. Also, the thermal energy of the surroundings is increased. Eventually we see, as and/or after the water finishes evaporating, the cool region of the ELC spreads out, diminishing in intensity, and eventually disappears, from which we conclude that the ELC returns to thermal equilibrium with its surroundings. The entropy of the ELC also re-arises to its original level through absorption of heat from the surroundings. The surroundings will correspondingly return to its same energy level but will retain an increase in entropy; consider that the water which was once a liquid drop is now a gas.Lorem quiscip umsan heniametum ipit, Enthalpy Entropy

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ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS SALT DISSOLVING IN WATER

Ionic solvation in water has a dual entropy effect. The entropy is increased by the additonal space occupied by the salt ions, e.g., Na+ and Cl and the entropy is decreased by the orientation of the water molecules about the ions.

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ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS THE PFEFFER TUBE

H 2O

Semi-permeable membrane NaCl

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ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS
In Thermochemistry we have seen that reactions are influenced by the comparative enthalpies of reactants and products. Reactions tend to occur which lower the enthalpy. However, this is not the whole story; there is another factor involved, called entropy. Entropy has often been described as disorder, which is only partially correct. Here we will look at some types of entropy which are relevant to chemical reactions. In classical thermodynamics, e.g., before about 1900, entropy, S, was given by the equation S = Q/T where S is the entropy change in a system, Q is heat energy added to or taken from the system, and T is the temperature of the system. The units for entropy are Joules/Kelvin, except in chemistry we work with the quantity of a mole, so in chemistry the units of entropy are Joules/mole-Kelvin. Around 1900 Boltzmann found another basis for entropy as the number of ways a system can be in a given state (actually the logarithm of that number). For example, there are vastly more ways the air molecules in a room can be spread out all over the room than there are ways in which they would all be in one side of the room. Nature just does the most likely thing, when nothing prevents that. This is formally called the Second Law of Thermodynamics and can be stated as follows: For combined system and surroundings, entropy never decreases. Actually, it always increases. This is really what makes things happen. The first law of thermodynamics, that energy is conserved, just ells us what can happen; it is the second law that makes things go. One of the early statements of the Second Law of Thermodynamics is that heat always flows downhill. More exactly, if two bodies are in thermal contact, heat energy will always flow from the warmer to the cooler one. In terms of heat energy, describe what happens when two bodies at the same temperature are brought into thermal contact? Does it depend upon the sizes of the bodies? Explain your answer. Compare and contrast the flow of heat energy according to the Second Law of Thermodynamics with the flow of water on earth. Describe some of the ways the world would be different if heat energy could flow from a cooler to a hotter body. Or what if that always happened? Another statement of the Second Law is that there is a state variable called entropy which never decreases and, in effect, always increases.

Entropy

Time In the box outlined above, the green dot represents the entropy at some starting time. Time passes as we go to the right. Draw a line or curve from the green dot to the right side of the box which represents a possible chart of the amount of entropy.

Suppose you know that over a certain interval of time the entropy of a system decreased by the amount, A. What can you say about the entropy of the surroundings over that same interval of time?

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ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS GIBBS FREE ENERGY


The enthalpy of a system is the energy of the system at constant temperature and pressure. However, not all of that energy is available for the system to do work or contribute to a chemical reaction. There is another factor, which we have introduced as entropy. In order to relate the entropy to the enthalpy we need to multiply the entropy by the temperature (in Kelvin). H 6 Temperature 5 4 3 2 1 Gibbs free energy, G is defined by G = H - TS where H is the enthalpy, T is the temperature (in Kelvins), and S is the entropy. In a chemical reaction, R P (R are reactants and P are products) at a constant temperature we have G = H TS. If G < 0 the reaction may proceed spontaneously to the right. If G = 0 the reaction is in equilibrium. If G > 0 the reaction may proceed spontaneously to the left. The bar graph above shows H and TS for the same chemical reaction at different temperatures. At which temperature is the reaction in equilibrium? Which temperature will maximize the reactants? Which temperature will maximize the products? Since S (entropy) has units of kJ mol1 K1 (kilojoules per mole-Kelvin), when we multiply it by K (temperature in Kelvin) we get units of kJ mol1 (kiloJoules per mole), which are the same units as energy. Entropy times temperature is not actually an energy but it controls the availability of energy to do work, such as making chemical reactions happen. REACTION TYPE TWO TS These four ChemLogs show four possible sign combinations for Gibbs Free Energy: G = H TS REACTION TYPE ONE

0
H TS TS G

+
H

0
TS TS G

REACTION TYPE THREE

0
H TS TS G

REACTION TYPE FOUR

+
H

0
TS TS G

Which of the four reaction types above would be thermodynamically spontaneous? Why? Tell which reaction type each of the following reactions would fit into and explain why. 1. H2(g) + O2(g) H2O(g) 2. H2(g) + O2(g) H2O(l) 3. H2O(l) H2O(g) 15

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS GIBBS FREE ENERGY AND TEMPERATURE
TS vs Temperature for Diatomic Gases
500 kJ mol1 Cl2(g) CO2(g) O2(g) F2(g) N2(g)

400 kJ mol1

300 kJ mol1

TS

H2(g) 200 kJ mol1

100 kJ mol1

>

>

>

>

>

0K

400 K

800 K

1200 K

1600 K

2000 K

T (temperature) Using the chart above, describe the relationship, if any, between entropy and molecular weights. EVAPORATION OF WATER H2O(l) H2O(g) Hf= 44 kJ/K mol at 298.15K S = 119 J/K mol at 298.15 K Gf = Hfo TS If we make the reasonable approximation that H and S do not (significantly) vary between T = 273 K and T = 373 K, then we can produce the following chart:
15 J K1 mol1

11.5 J K1 mol1

0 J K1 mol1 273 K

298 K

373 K

>

0 kJ mol1

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ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS GIBBS FREE ENERGY AND TEMPERATURE
We know that when G < 0 a reaction is spontaneous and when G > 0 a reaction is nonspontaneous. However, G is composed of two terms, an enthalpy term and an entropy term. When both terms pull G in the same direction, then situation is clear, but what can we say ingeneral about situations where the enthalpy and entropy terms are of opposite effect? Because the entropy term, TS, is the entropy multiplied by the temperature, we would expect temperature to be an important contributing factor and we are right. The Effect of Temperature on Spontaneity 1. At high temperatures the entropy factor, TS, predominates 2. At low temperatures the enthalpy factor, H, predominates. The chart below shows the separate terms, H and TS, which combine to give Gibbs free energy. Reactions below the dashed line are spontaneous, those above it are nonspontaneous.
2400 J mol-1 > 1600 > 800 400 > > 0 400 800 > > 1600 > 2400 J mol-1 2800 kJ mol1 > 2400 2000 1600 1200 A B > DD

Reactions at 298.15 K

H2(g) + 12O2(g) H2O(g) 4Fe(s) + 3O2(g) 2Fe2O3(s)

C C6H12O6(s) + 6O2(g) 6CO2(g) + 6H2O(g) D Si(s) Si(g)

G > 0
D

800 400 0 AA AA

Reactions at 1000 K
A H2(g) + 12O2(g) H2O(g) B 4Fe(s) + 3O2(g) 2Fe2O3(s) C C6H12O6(s) + 6O2(g) 6CO2(g) + 6H2O(g) D Si(s) Si(g)

G < 0

400 800 1200

1600 2000 2400 C C

Reaction at 4000K
D Si(s) Si(g)

2800 kJ mol-1

TS You can see that the transition from solid silicon to gaseous silicon (reaction D) moves to the right on the table as the temperature increases. For what values of S will this be true? 17 The reaction Br2(l) Br2(g) has = 3 kJ mol1 and S = 93 J K1 mol1. Mark its location on the graph.

ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS HOW ENTROPY CAN DECREASE (IN A SYSTEM)
One way of stating the second law of thermodynamics is to say that in any (nonreversible, i.e., real) process the entropy of the system plus the entropy of the surroundings must always increase. If energy disperses and entropy increases how is it possible that some systems, such as living beings, can maintain their energy and not be quickly disolved by entropy? There are even systems in which entropy decreases; for example, water can be frozen into ice. This can happen if energy flows out of the system, carrying entropy with it. The system consists of the red circles in the blue box.

Energy Reservoir

Energy and entropy flow out of the system. Additional Energy is added to the system, TIME

The system decreases in entropy

Name some systems and processes where entropy decreases in the system. Carefully distinguish between the system and the surroundings and describe the energy and entropy changes which occur when entropy decreses in the system.

As the universe expands its temperature decreses. It is now about 2.7 K. And yet the second law of thermodynamics says that the entropy of the universe always increases. How can these facts be reconciled?

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ENTROPY AND THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS PERIODIC ENTROPY OF THE ELEMENTS
ENTROPY OF THE ELEMENTS
ENTROPY

K1 mol1

ATOMIC NUMBER In the ENTROPY OF THE ELEMENTS CHART you can see that several of the elements have much higher entropy than the rest. Using the atomic numbers, determine and list what elments these are. Describe what they have in common which results in their high entropies.

ENTROPY INCREASING EVENTS The following events either always or ordinarily involve an increase in entropy, either in the system or the surroundings or both. Heating any substance. Phase change from sold to liquid and from liquid to gas. Any reaction that increases the number of moles of gas molecules. Mixing two different liquids or two different gases. Dissolving solids in liquids.

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