Solution
The expression for Qis
Q
[
[
C
Zn
u
2
2
]
]
which is 0.00444/0.0333 0.133. Given that the voltage under standard con-
ditions,E°, is 1.104 V, we have
E1.104 V ln (0.133)
All of the units cancel except for the expression J/C, which equals the unit
volt. Solving:
E1.104 V ( 0.0259 V)
E1.130 V
This is slightly greater than the standard voltage.
The Nernst equation is very useful for estimating the voltage of electro-
chemical cells at nonstandard conditions of concentration or pressure. But
despite the fact that the Nernst equation contains temperature,T, as a variable,
it has limited use at temperatures other than 25°C, the common reference tem-
perature. That’s because E° itself varies with temperature. We can estimate how
E° varies with temperature by considering the following two expressions:
G°
nFE°
G
T
p
S or
(
T
G)
p
S
Combining them, we find that
(
T
G°)
p
nF
E
T
°
p
S°
where we have now included the ° symbol on G,E, and S. Solving for the change
in E° with respect to the change in temperature (that is, E°/ T), we get
E
T
°
p
n
S
F
°
(8.26)
The derivative ( E°/ T)pis called the temperature coefficientof the reaction.
Equation 8.26 can be rearranged and approximated as
E°
n
S
F
°
T (8.27)
where Tis the change in temperature from the reference temperature (usu-
ally 25°C). Keep in mind that this is the change in the EMF of a process, so the
new EMF at the nonreference temperature is
EE°E° (8.28)
These equations are approximations, but fairly good ones. We aren’t even consid-
ering the change in S° as the temperature changes—those can be substantial, as
we saw in previous chapters. But equations 8.26 and 8.27 do provide a rough
(8.314 moJlK)(298 K)
(2 mol e^ )(96,485 moCle^ )
m
m
Zn
°
2
m
m
Cu
°
2
8.5 Nonstandard Potentials and Equilibrium Constants 219