What is the total entropy change for the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide.
2H2O2(l) ---> 2H2O(l) + O2(g)
Given
H2O2(l)
(J/mol x K) = 109.6
(kJ/mol) = -187.8
H2O(l)
(J/mol x K) = 69.9
(kJ/mol) = -285.8
O2(g)
(J/mol x K) = 205.0
(kJ/mol) = 0
At 298K as a standard temperature:
S°(O2, g) = 205.0 J mol−1 K−1
S°(H2O, l) = 69.9 J mol−1 K−1
S°(H2O2, l) = 109.6 J mol−1 K−1
Solution:
The entropy change in a chemical reaction is given by the sum of the entropies of the products minus the sum of the entropies of the reactants.
ΔS° =∑nS°(products) − ∑mS°(reactants)
Balanced chemical equation:
2H2O2(l) → 2H2O(l) + O2(g)
From the balanced equation we can write the equation for ΔS° (the change in the standard molar entropy for the reaction):
ΔS° = S°(O2, g) + 2×S°(H2O, l) − 2×S°(H2O2, l)
ΔS° = 205.0 + 2×69.9 − 2×109.6 = 125.6 (J mol−1 K−1)
ΔS° = 125.6 J mol−1 K−1
Answer: The total entropy change for the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide is 125.6 J mol−1 K−1
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