We can think of this reaction as a process in which the atoms
of hydrogen and oxygen move from a state of
high chemical potential (H2 and 02
molecules) to a state of lower chemical
potential (molecules of water vapor). It is reasonable
to think of the free energy per mole of a substance as its
chemical
potential, and to regard a spontaneous chemical
reaction as a rolling of atoms down a chemical potential "slope".
The free energy given off in
a spontaneous process then is
just the change in potential (AG per mole) times the amount
of substance undergoing the change
(number of moles).
In equation
form the reaction may be written as follows
free energy emitted = change
in potential x amount of reaction
For the water-vapor reaction, the free energy change per
mole of water vapor formed is -54.64 kcal mole-1
H2O. This is the chemical potential drop during
the water reaction. If fifty moles of water vapor are produced,
then the total free energy given off is
DG0 = (-54.64 kcal mol-1) (50 moles)
= -2732 kcal
In the language of gravitation, this amounts to rolling 50
balls down a 54.64 kcal hill. The concept of a potential of
some kind to explain why spontaneous processes take place
is a useful one
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