I am learning chemical thermodynamics and one of my resources is this link:
http://rkt.chem.ox.ac.uk/tutorials/equilibrium/entropy_mixGas.htmlYou will see it eventually arrives at the expression ΔG = RT lnK
I think this is wrong and should be ΔG = - RT lnK
Have I made an error in following their maths or have they omitted the negative sign?
I have a second question as follows:
Assuming the correct relationship is ΔG = - RT lnK , then it seems to me clear that any fractional value for K will result in positive ΔG. My understanding of this is that the reaction is therefore not spontaneous (feasible). However if there is a value for K then surely there must have been a reaction to enable K to have a value. It seems contradictory to me that on the one hand a reaction must have taken place (to reach an equilibrium) but on the other hand ΔG is positive so the reaction cannot take place. I am confused about the interpretation of ΔG in this case. I realise that once equilibrium is reached then ΔG = zero but from the initial conditions to reaching equilibrium some reaction has taken place. I am sure I am missing something here but none of my reference resources nor textbooks address this.
I worked out an example 2HI
H
2 + I
2 all in gas phase has K= 0.0218 resulting in ΔG = +3.83 (RT) Under standard conditions ΔH is -26.5 kJ/mol. So we have an exothermic reaction arriving at an equilibrium but with a negative free energy which suggests the reaction is not feasible. I'm very confused.