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For some non-spontaneous reactions, you can change the temperature. For other non-spontaneous reactions, there is nothing you can do to make it spontaneous. Nature favors reactions that increase a system's entropy (disorder) and nature favors reactions that are exothermic (they release enthalpy). Any reaction that does both of these things is spontaneous at all temperatures. Any reaction that does neither of these things is never spontaneous. As far as this question is concerned, the interesting reactions are endothermic reactions that increase entropy and exothermic reactions that decrease entropy. Whether these reactions are spontaneous depends on the temperature. The first variety (endothermic, increase entropy) will be spontaneous at high temperatures; the second (exothermic, decrease entropy) will be spontaneous at low temperatures. To find the temperature at which a reaction becomes spontaneous, one may apply the Gibbs equation: DG = DH - TDS where capital Ds stand for the Greek capital delta.
Yes, it is correct.
The change in Gibbs Free Energy (∆Gº) predicts if a reaction is spontaneous or not. The equation for this is ∆G = ∆H - T∆S where ∆H is the change in enthalpy, T is temperature in Kelvin, and ∆S in change in entropy.
Use the following equation: delta G = delta H - T*deltaS. A reaction is spontaneous if delta G is negative. A reaction will always be spontaneous (under any temperature) only if the change in enthalpy (delta H) is negative and the change in entropy (delta S) is positive. If this is not the case, the reaction will only be spontaneous (negative delta G) for a range of temperatures (or could be always non-spontaneous)
If the sign of ΔH is _______ and the sign of ΔS is _______ , then the magnitude of TΔS must be ________ than the magnitude of ΔH for the reaction to be spontaneous. The Gibbs free energy equation is ΔG = ΔH - TΔS. negative; negative; less
when h and s are both positive
The reaction is spontaneous below 743 K.
For some non-spontaneous reactions, you can change the temperature. For other non-spontaneous reactions, there is nothing you can do to make it spontaneous. Nature favors reactions that increase a system's entropy (disorder) and nature favors reactions that are exothermic (they release enthalpy). Any reaction that does both of these things is spontaneous at all temperatures. Any reaction that does neither of these things is never spontaneous. As far as this question is concerned, the interesting reactions are endothermic reactions that increase entropy and exothermic reactions that decrease entropy. Whether these reactions are spontaneous depends on the temperature. The first variety (endothermic, increase entropy) will be spontaneous at high temperatures; the second (exothermic, decrease entropy) will be spontaneous at low temperatures. To find the temperature at which a reaction becomes spontaneous, one may apply the Gibbs equation: DG = DH - TDS where capital Ds stand for the Greek capital delta.
The reaction is spontaneous below 554.8/0.1975 K.
The reaction is spontaneous above 371 K.
-51 - -50.5
97.6 - 98
All nuclear decay is spontaneous.
when H is negative and S is positive
Temperature and activation energy
Temperature and activation energy - apex
Yes, it is correct.