It is a simple Delta G naught reaction problem

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The discussion centers on calculating Delta G naught and the equilibrium constant (K) for the reaction involving iron ions and iodide. The initial calculation yielded Delta G as 46.32 kJ/mol, which several participants questioned as being unusually high for this type of reaction. The correct approach involves using the formula involving Faraday's constant and the reaction's voltage to derive Delta G. A more accurate calculation suggested a K value of 9.5E-9 at 300 Kelvin, indicating that the reaction strongly favors products under these conditions. Participants emphasized the importance of careful unit management and verifying calculations to ensure accuracy.
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Homework Statement


Calculate Delta G naught rxn and K for the reaction:

2 Fe 3+ +2I- <--> 2 Fe 2+ +I2

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


I came up with -.24 V for E naught and plugged it into ( -2*96.5*-.24) and got Delta G as 46.32 KJ but I don't know if this is right and I'm not sure if it is delta G naught rather than just delta G.

Then from that answer ( if it is right ) I put Delta G into ( Keq = e^-delta G naught/ RT) and got 8*10^-9

Please let me know if I am doing this right. It is due Monday and I need to make sure I am doing it right for final exam on Tuesday. Thank You
 
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Try asking this in the chemistry section ... I don't have any tables (and you ignore units except for 46 kJ, which should be kJ/mole)
... it's been a long time, but 46 kJ/mol sounds suspiciuosly high for an iron 2 - iron 3 reaction. what the heck is 2*96.5 ?
 
lightgrav said:
Try asking this in the chemistry section ... I don't have any tables (and you ignore units except for 46 kJ, which should be kJ/mole)
... it's been a long time, but 46 kJ/mol sounds suspiciuosly high for an iron 2 - iron 3 reaction. what the heck is 2*96.5 ?
-2*96.5*-.46 is nFE Moles of electrons *Faraday's constant * E rxn and I am prett sure Volts and Moles cancel leaving
KJ.
The Answer however does sound high to me as well though.

Is there a way to move this to chemistry thread ( I am new to this),
or should I just go there and start new?

(Mentor Note: Moved)
 
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ok, a Faraday is a mole of electrons, with charge 6E23e/mol*1.6E-19C/e = 96 kC/mol
... Energy = charge * voltage = 2e/molecule * 96 kC/mol *0.24V = 46 kJ/mole.
the R is 8.3 J/mole*Kelvin, or =0.0083 kJ/mol*K ... so the moles cancel in the exponent, as they should.
I get 9.5E-9 at 300 Kelvin, meaning that the "weak" ¼ volt drives the reaction essentially to completion
(equilibrium is Temperature-dependent, but would not approach 50/50 until 5,500 Kelvin).

I don't know how to move a thread, either. sorry ; best I can do.
 
From my CRC Handbook:
DeltaG0 in kcal/gmol:

Fe3+... -2.52

Fe2+... -20.3

I-..... -12.35

I2..... 4.63

Using these, I did not get your answer.
 
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lightgrav said:
I get 9.5E-9 at 300 Kelvin, meaning that the "weak" ¼ volt drives the reaction essentially to completion
Do you mean completion to the right in the reaction as stated? With Keq = 9.5E-9?
 
State the reaction conditions.
lightgrav said:
46 kJ/mol sounds suspiciuosly high
Deudoronomy said:
sound high to me as well though
Do NOT use intuition.
Deudoronomy said:
Delta G naught rxn and K
Reread the problem statement as frequently as is necessary to avoid sidetracking yourselves.
 
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