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Physics, Astronomy & Cosmology / Re: Gibbs Free Energy ÄG °
« on: 28/04/2005 14:24:19 »
Hm, I think it's the Gibb's Free Energy at standard temperature and pressure.
As the Gibb's energy can also be written (delta)G=(delta)H-T(delta)S Clearly temperature is important so you need to be specific about what temperature you're talking about.
Hope that helps.
I'm not sure if it's accessible, remotely but the (excellent) notes for the second year thermodynamics course at Cambridge are under "teaching materials" at http://www-teach.ch.cam.ac.uk/
Hope that helps.
As the Gibb's energy can also be written (delta)G=(delta)H-T(delta)S Clearly temperature is important so you need to be specific about what temperature you're talking about.
Hope that helps.
I'm not sure if it's accessible, remotely but the (excellent) notes for the second year thermodynamics course at Cambridge are under "teaching materials" at http://www-teach.ch.cam.ac.uk/
Hope that helps.