Lecture 13 PDF
Lecture 13 PDF
d U T d S P dV d N d H T d S V dP d N
Today we’ll introduce the other two thermodynamic potentials: the Helmhotz free
energy F and Gibbs free energy G. Depending on the type of a process, one of
these four thermodynamic potentials provides the most convenient description (and
is tabulated). All four functions have units of energy.
S U
T - the chemical
S N U ,V N S ,V potential
In equilibrium, TA TB A B PA PB
NA
Sign “-”: out of equilibrium, the system with the larger
S/N will get more particles. In other words, particles
UA will flow from from a high /T to a low /T.
S U
Chemical Potential of an Ideal gas T
N U ,V N S ,V
has units of energy: it’s an amount of energy we need to (usually) remove
from the system after adding one particle in order to keep its total energy fixed.
4 m
3/ 2
5
Monatomic ideal gas: S ( N ,V ,U ) N k B ln V U ln N 5/ 2
2
3h 2
S V 2 m
3/ 2
h3 P
T k BT ln 2 k BT k BT ln
5/ 2
N U ,V N h 2m k BT
3/ 2
At normal T and P, for an ideal gas is negative (e.g., for He, ~ - 5·10-20 J ~ - 0.3 eV).
Sign “-”: by adding particles to this system, we increase its entropy. To keep
dS = 0, we need to subtract some energy, thus U is negative.
The chemical potential increases with with its pressure. Thus, the 0
molecules will flow from regions of high density to regions of lower when P
density or from regions of high pressure to those of low pressure . increases
Note that in this case is negative because S increases with n. This is not always the
case. For example, for a system of fermions at T0, the entropy is zero (all the lowest
states are occupied), but adding one fermion to the system costs some energy (the Fermi
energy). Thus,
T 0 EF 0
The Quantum Concentration
V 2 m
3/ 2
h 2
3/ 2
n
k BT ln 2 k BT k BT ln n
k BT ln
N h 2 mkBT n
Q
where n=N/V is the concentration of particles
When n << nQ (In the limit of low densities), the gas is in the classical regime, and <0.
When n nQ, 0
2 m
3/ 2
- the so-called quantum concentration (one particle per
nQ 2 k BT cube of side equal to the thermal de Broglie wavelength).
h
3/ 2
h h 1 mkBT
dB nQ
p mkBT dB3 h2
At T=300K, P=105 Pa , n << nQ. When n nQ, the quantum statistics comes into play.
Isolated Systems, independent variables S and V
Advantages of U : it is conserved for an isolated system (it also has a simple physical
meaning – the sum of all the kin. and pot. energies of all the particles).
In particular, for an isolated system Q=0, and dU = W.
dU S ,V , N T dS PdV dN
The combination of parameters on the right side is equal to the exact differential of U
. This implies that the natural variables of U are S, V, N,
Considering S, V, and N U U U
as independent variables: dU ( S ,V , N ) dS dV dN
S V , N V S ,N N S ,V
Again, this shows that among several macroscopic variables that characterize the
system (P, V, T, , N, etc.), only three are independent, the other variables can be
found by taking partial derivatives of the TP with respect to its natural variables.
Isolated Systems, independent variables S and V (cont.)
U S ,V U S ,V PV
dH d U PV dU PdV VdP
dH TdS VdP dH S , P, N T dS VdP dN
dU T dS PdV
H (the enthalpy) is also a thermodynamic potential, with its natural variables S, P, and N.
- the internal energy of a system plus the work needed to make room for it at
P=const.
H H H
The total differential of H in terms dH S , P, N dS dP dN
of its independent variables : S P , N P S , N N S , P
H H H
Comparison yields the relations: T V
S P , N P S , N N S , P
Let’s consider the P = const processes with purely “expansion” work (Wother = 0),
dH P,Wother 0
Q
For such processes, the change of enthalpy is equal to the thermal energy (“heat”)
received by a system.
Example: the evaporation of liquid from an open vessel is such a process, because
no effective work is done. The heat of vaporization is the enthalpy difference
between the vapor phase and the liquid phase.
Systems in Contact with a Thermal Reservoir
When we consider systems in contact with a large thermal reservoir (a “thermal bath,
there are two complications: (a) the energy in the system is no longer fixed (it may
flow between the system and reservoir), and (b) in order to investigate the stability of
an equilibrium, we need to consider the entropy of the combined system (= the
system of interest+the reservoir) – according to the 2nd Law, this total entropy should
be maximized.
What should be the system’s behavior in order to maximize the total entropy?
For the systems in contact with a eat bath, we need to invent a better, more useful
approach. The entropy, along with V and N, determines the system’s energy U =U
(S,V,N). Among the three variable, the entropy is the most difficult to control (the
entropy-meters do not exist!). For an isolated system, we have to work with the
entropy – it cannot be replaced with some other function. And we did not want to do
this so far – after all, our approach to thermodynamics was based on this concept.
However, for systems in thermal contact with a reservoir, we can replace the entropy
with another, more-convenient-to-work-with function. This, of course, does not mean
that we can get rid of entropy. We will be able to work with a different “energy-like”
thermodynamic potential for which entropy is not one of the natural variables.
Helmholtz Free Energy (independ. variables T and V)
Let’s do the trick (Legendre transformation) again, now to exclude S :
F F F
The natural variables for F are T, V, N: dF T ,V , N dT dV dN
T V , N V T , N N T ,V
F F F
Comparison yields the relations: S P
T V , N V T , N N T ,V
F F U S
P can be rewritten as: P T
V T , N V T , N V T , N V T , N
The first term – the “energy” pressure – is dominant in most solids, the second term
– the “entropy” pressure – is dominant in gases. (For an ideal gas, U does not
depend on V, and only the second term survives).
F is the total energy needed to create the system, minus the heat we can get “for
free” from the environment at temperature T. If we annihilate the system, we
can’t recover all its U as work, because we have to dispose its entropy at a non-
zero T by dumping some heat into the environment.
The Minimum Free Energy Principle (V,T = const)
The total energy of the combined system (= the system of interest+the reservoir) is
U = UR+Us, this energy is to be shared between the reservoir and the system (we
assume that V and N for all the systems are fixed). Sharing is controlled by the
S R s U R ,U s S R U U s Ss U s max
maximum entropy principle:
Us
dS R s U ,U s dS s dU s TdSs s
Fs dU s 1 dF
T T T
system
Thus, we can enforce the maximum entropy principle by simply
stable Us minimizing the Helmholtz free energy of the system without
equilibrium having to know anything about the reservoir except that it
maintains a fixed T! Under these conditions (fixed T, V, and N),
the maximum entropy principle of an isolated system is transformed into a minimum
Helmholtz free energy principle for a system in thermal contact with the thermal bath.
Processes at T = const
In general, if we consider processes with “other” work: dF SdT PdV Wother
For the processes at T = const
(in thermal equilibrium with a large reservoir): dF T PdV Wother T
The total work performed on a system at T = const in a reversible process is equal
to the change in the Helmholtz free energy of the system. In other words, for the T =
const processes the Helmholtz free energy gives all the reversible work.
3 3 T V
F U TS RT RT ln RT ln Tf ( N , m)
For one mole of 2 2 T0 V0
monatomic ideal gas: Vaf Vbf
W RT ln RT ln 2.6 103 J
Vai Vbi
Gibbs Free Energy (independent variables T and P)
Let’s do the trick of Legendre transformation again, now to exclude both S and V :
U S ,V U T , P T S PV
G G G
Considering T, P, and N as dGT , P, N dT dP dN
independent variables: T P, N P T , N N T , P
G G G
Comparison yields the relations: S V
T P, N P T , N N T , P
Gibbs Free Energy and Chemical Potential
Combining U T S PV N with G U T S PV G N
- this gives us a new interpretation of the chemical potential: at least for the systems
with only one type of particles, the chemical potential is just the Gibbs free energy
per particle.
G
The chemical potential
N T , P
If we add one particle to a system, holding T and P fixed, the Gibbs free energy of
the system will increase by . By adding more particles, we do not change the value
of since we do not change the density: (N).
Note that U, H, and F, whose differentials also have the term dN, depend on N non-
linearly, because in the processes with the independent variables (S,V,N), (S,P,N),
and (V,T,N), = (N) might vary with N.
Example:
Pr.5.9. Sketch a qualitatively accurate graph of G vs. T for a pure substance as it
changes from solid to liquid to gas at fixed pressure.
solid
liquid gas
G
S G ST
T P
T
S - these equations allow computing Gibbs
free energies at “non-standard” T (if G is
tabulated at a “standard” T)
solid
gas
liquid
T
The Minimum Free Energy Principle (P,T = const)
The total energy of the combined system (=the system of interest+the reservoir) is
U = UR+Us, this energy is to be shared between the reservoir and the system (we
assume that P and N for all the systems are fixed). Sharing is controlled by the
maximum entropy principle:
S R s U R ,U s S R U U s Ss U s max
In other words, the Gibbs free energy gives all the reversible work except the PV work.
If the mechanical work is the only kind of work performed by a system, the Gibbs free
energy is conserved: dG = 0.
2
1
The sum of the above steps: H 2O H 2 O2
2
The electrical work required
to decompose 1 mole of water: Wother G G H 2
1
GO2 GH 2O
(neglect the Joule heating of electrolyte) 2
In the Table (p. 404), the Gibbs free energy G represents the change in G upon
forming 1 mole of the material starting with elements in their most stable pure
GH2 0 GO2 0 GH2O 237 kJ/mole
states:
TS 300 K 130.7 J/K 0.5 205.1 J/K - 69.9 J/K 49 kJ
U: ???? – not in the Table...
Well, we got H in the Table - H(H2) =
0, H(O2) = 0, H(H2O)= - 285.8 kJ (H
upon forming 1 mol of the material
starting with elements in their most stable
pure states).
G H - TS
286 kJ - 49 kJ 237 kJ
Electrolysis of Water (cont.)
The process must provide the energy for the dissociation plus the energy to expand
the produced gases. Both of those are included in H. Since the enthalpy H = U+PV,
the change in internal energy U is then:
The entropy of the gases decreases by 49 kJ/mol since the number of water molecules
is less than the number of H2 and O2 molecules combining. Since the total entropy
cannot decrease in the reaction, the excess entropy must be expelled to the
environment as heat.
Fuel Cell at High T
Fuel cells operate at elevated temperatures (from ~700C to ~6000C). Our estimate
ignored this fact – the values of G in the Table are given at room temperature.
Pr. 5.11, which requires an estimate of the maximum electric work done by the cell
operating at 750C, shows how one can estimate G at different T by using partial
derivatives of G.
G
S G ST
T P Substance G(1bar, 298K) S(1bar, 298K)
- these equations allow computing Gibbs kJ/mol J/K mol
free energies at non-standard T and P: H2 0 130
At 750C (348K): O2 0 205
GH2 0 130 J/K 50 K 6.5 kJ H2O -237 70
GO2 0 205 J/K 50 K 10.25 kJ
GH2O 237 kJ 70 J/K 50 K 240.5 kJ
G GH 2O GH 2 GO2 240.5 kJ 6.5 kJ 5.1 kJ -228.9 kJ
1
2
Thus, the maximum electrical work done by the cell is 229 kJ, about 3.5% less than
the room-temperature value of 237 kJ. Why the difference? The reacting gases
have more entropy at higher temperatures, and we must get rid of it by dumping
waste heat into the environment.
Conclusion:
Potential Variables dU S ,V , N T dS PdV dN
U (S,V,N) S, V, N
H (S,P,N) S, P, N
dH S , P, N T dS VdP dN
F (T,V,N) V, T, N dF T ,V , N S dT PdV dN
G (T,P,N) P, T, N
dGT , P, N S dT VdP dN