Greetings everyone,
My lecturer told me that Gibbs Free Energy is just a label of convenience to the quantity:
dH - TdS
i.e. we just call the result of this expression the 'Gibbs Free energy'. Whilst I can understand that, why is this particular expression useful for analysing a chemical reaction, and why not, say dH+dS or any other alternative seemingly arbitrary expression.
I notice this question is fairly philosophical, but I'm a reductionist by nature.
Thanks in advance.
I suppose that you mean dH+TdS.
Well, consider a simple mechanical example, think of the expression 1/2 mv
2. This expression appears so often in mechanical equations that we give it a name, which surely you know. Why this expression and not other as 3/5 mc
3/v? Because so far as I know this hypothetical term nowhere appears in the equations of mechanics. Why would you name and use something useless?
Return to thermo. The fundamental expression for internal energy U is a function of composition, entropy, volume... U=U(S,V,N)
Now for typical chemical systems volume is not an adequate variable, and at lab we lack entropymeters, but we have good thermometers. Therefore, we can do a Legendre transformation of variables (S,V)
(T,p) {*}
U
U + pV - TS
or what is the same because H=U+pV
U
H - TS
This new function G(T,p,N) = U + pV - TS is so important in chemistry that we call it «Gibbs energy» and use it very often.
As in the mechanical case of the hypothetical 3/5 mc
3/v, your hypothetical dH+TdS nowhere appears in the fundamental equations of thermodynamics and, therefore, it does not receive any special name, neither is studied.
{*} The Legendre transformation is a way to transform a function in a given set of variables into an equivalent function in other set of variables.