Physical Chemistry Third Edition

(C. Jardin) #1

178 4 The Thermodynamics of Real Systems


b.For carbon dioxide at 323.15 K,B 2 −103 cm^3 mol−^1. Find the value of the fugacity of
carbon dioxide gas at 5.000 atm and 323.15 K.
c.Find the value of the fugacity of carbon dioxide gas at 15.000 atm and 323.15 K.

The Gibbs Energy of Solids and Liquids


The value of the isothermal compressibility of a typical solid or liquid is roughly
equal to 10−^9 Pa−^1 so that a change in pressure of 10 atm (roughly 10^6 Pa) changes
the volume by only a tenth of a percent. We assume the volume to be approximately
constant in the integrand of Eq. (4.4-2), giving

G(T,P 2 ,n)−G(T,P 1 ,n)≈V(P 2 −P 1 ) (4.4-13)

Thestandard stateof a substance in a condensed phase (liquid or solid) is the actual
pure substance at the standard pressureP◦and whatever temperature is of interest.
Equation (4.4-13) implies that

Gm(T,P)G◦m(T)+Vm(P−P◦) (4.4-14)

EXAMPLE4.15

CalculateGm−G◦mfor liquid water at 298.15 K and 10.00 bar.
Solution

Gm−G◦m(18. 0 × 10 −^6 m^3 mol−^1 )(9.00 bar)

(
105 Nm−^2
1 bar

)

 16 .2 J mol−^1  0 .0162 kJ mol−^1

This difference can be neglected for many purposes.

Exercise 4.12
a.FindGm−G◦mfor solid copper at 293.15 K and 1.100 bar.
b.FindGm−G◦mfor solid copper at 293.15 K and 10.00 bar.

The Temperature Dependence of the Gibbs Energy


From Eq. (4.2-19), if the pressure is constant and the system is closed,

dG−SdT (closed system,Pconstant) (4.4-15)

Integration of this equation at constant pressure would give a relation for∆Gfor a
constant-pressure temperature change.

G(T 2 ,P)−G(T 1 ,P)−

∫T 2

T 1

S(T,P)dT (equationnotusable) (4.4-16)
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