Hello - I've been trying to figure this out for days.
The concept is Gibbs Free energy - I am attempting to understand the equation for it, DG=DG°+RTlnK. D, the change in free energy, is defined as final minus initial. But what exactly is this final and initial for a reaction, what is this change being measured to and from? Since all reactions are driven towards equilibrium, is that “final”?
Holding that assumption, what is then DG° (delta G standard)? Is it the change in free energy from the point where all components of the system are at 1M to the point where all
components are at their equilibrium concentrations? OR, as I’ve read in a definition somewhere, is it the change in free energy as 1M concentrations of all the reactants are driven to 1 M concentrations of the products, with no reactants remaining at the end?
Let’s say you have a reaction of A converting to B. Would DG° be achieved when you take 1M A and convert it completely into B? Could DG° also be determined by measuring the DG of 1 M A (0M B) going to equilibrium, and subtracting the DG resulting from a separate reaction of 1 M B (0M A) going to equilibrium? These make sense, but I can’t see how putting 1 M concentrations of both A and B into solution and having them reach equilibrium will give the same value for DG°.
Now, K can only be put into the equation if you look at the last scenario – the first two give different K’s. Which brings me to – how can you ever have an equation relating a
change in G with a
static point in concentrations? Especially if you look at DG=DG°+RTlnK as a function, and try to see a mathematical relationship… For every ratio of concentrations you have… a change, even though the concentrations don't change? Is it a
potential change of reaching equilibrium? A chemical potential? My first instinct was derivatives, but for those, don’t you need a change in both x and y, while here you only have a change in one?
Maybe what’s confusing me most is this graph I have of G vs. reaction progress (100% A at point 0 going to 100% B somewhere further along the axis). I have a lot of ideas on what might be happening, but I need some feedback on what might actually be true.
Thanks in advance!! Sorry for the huge post.