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Topic: Units involved in delta G calculation  (Read 18494 times)

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Offline maakii

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Units involved in delta G calculation
« on: May 15, 2007, 05:09:10 AM »
Hi, I was doing a question on calculating deltaG, using the formula ΔG= -RT ln K, where K is the equilibrium constant.

However, I was wondering why must K have units of (mol dm-3) or bar-1 in order for the calculation to work? Why can't we use normal SI units such as Pa or mol m-3? Thanks in advance!

Offline dailan

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Re: Units involved in delta G calculation
« Reply #1 on: May 15, 2007, 06:21:44 AM »
K is equilibrium constant, so it is dimensionless.
In this case, R=8.314 J.K-1.mol-1
T is measured in Kelvin

Offline Yggdrasil

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Re: Units involved in delta G calculation
« Reply #2 on: May 15, 2007, 04:51:42 PM »
When calculating ΔG using the formula you gave, you are actually calculating the standard change in free energy (ΔGo).  This is the free energy change when all reactants and products are at 1 mol dm-3 concentration or at 1 bar partial pressure.

Recall that ΔG depends on the concentration of the reactants and products.  A more complete equation is as follows:

For the hypothetical reaction A --> C

ΔG = ΔGo + RT ln ( ([C]/[C]o) / ([A]/[A]o) )

where [A]o and [C]o are the reference concentrations with which ΔGo is calculated.  You need to divide the concentrations of A and B by reference concentrations because the argument of a transcendental function (such as a log) has to be dimensionless.

If you define ΔGo in terms of different reference concentrations, then you could plug in different units for the concentrations you plug into K.

I hope that explanation makes sense.

[edit: fixed tags]
« Last Edit: May 17, 2007, 06:15:08 AM by Yggdrasil »

Offline maakii

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Re: Units involved in delta G calculation
« Reply #3 on: May 17, 2007, 04:17:07 AM »
ah silly me, I forgot that ΔGo was under standard conditions..It makes sense now thank you!

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