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9 December, 03:33

For a particular reaction, ΔH° is 67.7 kJ and ΔS is 126.9 J/K. Assuming these values change very little with temperature, over what temperature range is the reaction spontaneous in the forward direction? For a particular reaction, ΔH° is 67.7 kJ and ΔS is 126.9 J/K. Assuming these values change very little with temperature, over what temperature range is the reaction spontaneous in the forward direction?

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  1. 9 December, 07:08
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    The forward reaction is spontaneous above 533 K.

    Explanation:

    A reaction is spontaneous when the standard Gibbs energy of the reaction (ΔG°) is negative. ΔG° is related to the standard enthalpy of the reaction (ΔH°) and the standard entropy of the reaction (ΔS°) through the following expression.

    ΔG° = ΔH° - T.ΔS°

    where,

    T is the absolute temperature

    When ΔG° < 0,

    ΔH° - T.ΔS° < 0

    ΔH° < T.ΔS°

    T > ΔH° / ΔS° = (67.7 * 10³ J) / (126.9 J/K) = 533 K

    The forward reaction is spontaneous above 533 K.
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