Under constant temperature and pressure, the change of the Gibbs free energy can be written as
dGsys=dHsys−TdSsys
And in the textbook that I have, when deriving this equation, they use the equation
dSuniv=dSsys−dHsys/T
I can understand to this step but the question occurs. Can't we write dSsys as dHsys/T also? If this T and the T that is used in the equation
dSuniv=dSsys−dHsys/T
are the same, than shouldn't dG always be zero? At which point am I wrong?
Answer
Your textbook's derivation is done under the assumption of constant T, which means Tsys=Tsurr=T. However, this does not mean dGsys is always zero. Let's start with the following:
dSuniv=dSsys+dSsurr=đqrev,sysTsys+đqrev,surrTsurr
Since heat flow always affects the surroundings reversibly (the surroundings are in the limit of being infinitely large, and thus heat flow affects them only infinitesimally), the reversible heat flow into the surrondings equals the actual heat flow, which is the negative of the actual heat flow into the system. And since Tsys=Tsurr=T, we have:
đqrev,surrT=−đqsysT
Which gives:
dSuniv=dSsys+dSsurr=đqrev,sysT+đqrev,surrT=đqrev,sysT−đqsysT
Under the restrictions of constant p, and no non-pV work,
đqsys=dHsys
Hence:
dSuniv=dSsys+dSsurr=đqrev,sysT+đqrev,surrT=đqrev,sysT−đqsysT=đqrev,sysT−dHsysT=dSsys−dHsysT,
which is what your textbook provides.
Note, however, that
dHsysT=đqsysT≠đqrev,sysT=dSsys,
This connects directly to the great beauty of using ΔGsys at constant T and p, when there is no non-pV work. Because, if the system is at constant T*, ΔGsys=ΔHsys−TΔSsys
[*G=H−TS=>dG=dH−d(TS)=dH−TdS−SdT; at const T,dG=dH−TdS; note that a constant-pressure restriction is not required to write this.]
Where we need the additional restrictions of constant p, and no non-pV work, is for the following:
ΔHsys=−TΔSsurr
This in turn gives:
ΔGsys=−TΔSsurr−TΔSsys=−TΔSuniv
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