Activity 2
Activity 2
Activity 2
• Concepts Activity
Fugacity
Equilibrium constant
Solid vapor equilibrium
Ellingham diagrams
Sievert’s law
Control of oxygen partial pressure
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Activity/Fugacity
• For ideal gases and mixtures of condensed phases, the “activity” of a
species is equal to its mole fraction. That means that its influence on
the properties of the system is its mole fraction (X) multiplied by the
total system property. For a gas mixture, the partial pressure of A is:
PA = XA P
• In real systems, the influence of one component on the properties of
the system may be different than its mole fraction would suggest.
Activity is given by the ratio of the fugacity of a substance to its
fugacity in a standard state (usually pure substance at 1 atm, same T)
f
a A = Ao
fA
• You may also see this expressed in terms of an activity coefficient an
mole fraction, but the idea is the same. The proportional effect of the
amount of substance A on the whole system property in question is
not simply given by its mole fraction
a A = γ A XA
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Activity/Fugacity
• For real gases, the fugacity is the effective pressure corrected for
non-ideality
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Activity
• For any substance dG A = −SA dT + V A dP
At constant temperature dG A = V A dP
• The difference between the Gibbs’ free energy of a material under any
conditions can be determined by integrating that equation.
o f
∆G = G A − G A = RT ln Ao = RT ln a A
fA XA fA , pure fA
• For a real solution aA = =
fAo fAo
• For an ideal solution aA = XA
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Chemical Equilibrium
• A chemical reaction can be written bB + cC ⇔ dD + eE
• The free energy change can be
δWrev = ∆G = dG D + eG D − bG B − cGC
expressed in terms of the partial
molar free energy for each component
o
• For each component, the partial molar G B = G B + RT ln( a B )
free energy is given in terms of activity
• Substituting
for each term
ad ae
∆G = 0 = ∆G o + RT ln Db cE
• In the case of ∆G = O (equilibrium) a BaC
the ratio of acitivities is the equilibrium
ad ae
constant Ka
WS2002 ∆G o = −RT ln Db cE = −RT ln5K a
a BaC
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Gaseous Equilibrium Example
1
• Consider the equilibrium 2
O2 ⇔ O
• If heat is added, equilibrium will shift the reaction in the direction that
absorbs heat (this reaction is endothermic)
• Equilibrium constant
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Solid-Vapor Equilibrium
• Consider the reaction 4 Cu(s) + O2(g) ⇔ 2 Cu2O(s)
• Below the equilibrium PO2, the metal is stable. Above, the oxide is
stable
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Variation in ∆G° with T
• For a chemical reaction at any temperature T ∆G oT = ∆H oT − T∆SoT
T
• For each component of the reaction
H oT = H o298 + ∫ CpdT
298
T
CP
SoT = S298 ∫
o
+ dT
298
T
• For the reaction T
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Ellingham Diagrams
• Specific for reactions of the form
(2x)M + O2 = 2MxO
(a ) = (1) = 1
2 2
MxO
Ka =
(a ) (a ) (1) (P ) (P )
2x 2x
M O2 O2 O2
1
• So: ∆G o = −RT ln
( )
PO 2
( )
= RT ln PO 2
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Sievert’s Law
• When a diatomic gas dissolves in a metal, it dissociates
H2(g) ⇒ 2H (dissolved in copper)
• We know that a 2H
Ka =
aH2
[H ] = K P
2
a H2
[H ] = K P
1/ 2 1/ 2
a H2
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