Hi all-
I have a problem in an example, which seems to have a number which isn't right. I was wondering if it was a typo of if I'm missing something. The book is 4th ed. Physical Chemistry by Silbey, Alberty, and Bawendi, section 5.8.
The lesson deals with equilibrium constants in heterogeneous reactions. Their example reaction is:
CaCO3(s)=CaO(s)+CO2(g)
and they go on to say that, for ideal gases, the equilibrium constant expression for this reaction is:
[tex]K=\frac {P_{CO_2}}{P°}[/tex]
Okay, that's fine. There is an example after this:
Example 5.16, Calculation of reaction properties at high temperatures assuming [tex]\Delta_rC^{°}_{P}[/tex] is constant.
Calculate standard Gibbs energy of formation, standard enthalpy of formation, and standard entropy of formation for CaCO3(s)=CaO(s)+CO2(g) at 1000 K using data in the table.
The table has some temperature and PCO2/P° values, where at 1000 K PCO2/P°=3.820. Their solution is:
[tex]\Delta_{r}G^{°}=-RTlnK=-(8.3145 J K^{-1} mol^{-1})(1000 K)(-3.00)=24.9 kJ mol^{-1}[/tex]
My question is: where did the -3.00 come from? If the equilibrium constant is equal to the partial pressure of CO2 over the standard pressure, shouldn't the lnK factor in the equation be ln(3.28), which does not equal -3.00?
Thanks for any guidance.
-TG