로그인

How can we compare the energy that releases from one reaction to that of another reaction? We use a measurement of free energy to quantitate these energy transfers. Scientists call this free energy Gibbs free energy (abbreviated with the letter G) after Josiah Willard Gibbs, the scientist who developed the measurement. According to the second law of thermodynamics, all energy transfers involve losing some energy in an unusable form such as heat, resulting in entropy. Gibbs free energy specifically refers to the energy of a chemical reaction that is available after we account for entropy. In other words, Gibbs free energy is usable energy, or energy that is available to do work.

Every chemical reaction involves a change in free energy, called delta G (∆G). We can calculate the change in free energy for any system that undergoes such a change, such as a chemical reaction. To calculate ∆G, subtract the amount of energy lost to entropy (denoted as ∆S) from the system's total energy change. The total energy in the system is enthalpy and we denote it as ∆H. The formula for calculating ∆G is as follows, where the symbol T refers to the absolute temperature in Kelvin (degrees Celsius + 273):

ΔG = ΔH TΔS

We express a chemical reaction's standard free energy change as an amount of energy per mole of the reaction product (either in kilojoules or kilocalories, kJ/mol or kcal/mol; 1 kJ = 0.239 kcal) under standard pH, temperature, and pressure conditions. We generally calculate standard pH, temperature, and pressure conditions at pH 7.0 in biological systems, 25 degrees Celsius, and 100 kilopascals (1 atm pressure), respectively. Note that cellular conditions vary considerably from these standard conditions, and so standard calculated ∆G values for biological reactions will be different inside the cell.

This text is adapted from Openstax, Biology 2e, Section 6.2: Potential, Kinetic, Free, and Activation Energy and Openstax, Chemistry 2e, Section 16.4: Free Energy.

Tags

Free EnergyGibbs Free EnergyEnergy TransferEntropyEnthalpyChemical ReactionDelta GStandard Free Energy ChangePHTemperaturePressure

장에서 3:

article

Now Playing

3.5 : An Introduction to Free Energy

Energy and Catalysis

8.0K Views

article

3.1 : 열역학 제1법칙

Energy and Catalysis

5.3K Views

article

3.2 : 열역학 제2법칙

Energy and Catalysis

4.9K Views

article

3.3 : 세포 내 엔탈피

Energy and Catalysis

5.7K Views

article

3.4 : 세포 내의 엔트로피

Energy and Catalysis

10.2K Views

article

3.6 : 세포 내에서의 엔더곤 및 엑세르고닉 반응

Energy and Catalysis

14.2K Views

article

3.7 : 평형 결합 상수와 결합 강도

Energy and Catalysis

8.9K Views

article

3.8 : 자유 에너지와 평형

Energy and Catalysis

6.0K Views

article

3.9 : 세포의 비평형

Energy and Catalysis

4.1K Views

article

3.10 : 유기 분자의 산화 및 환원

Energy and Catalysis

5.8K Views

article

3.11 : 효소 소개

Energy and Catalysis

16.7K Views

article

3.12 : 효소와 활성화 에너지

Energy and Catalysis

11.4K Views

article

3.13 : Introduction to Enzyme Kinetics(효소 반응속도학 소개)

Energy and Catalysis

19.4K Views

article

3.14 : Turnover Number and Catalytic Efficiency(회전율 수치와 촉매 효율)

Energy and Catalysis

9.7K Views

article

3.15 : 촉매적으로 완벽한 효소

Energy and Catalysis

3.8K Views

See More

JoVE Logo

개인 정보 보호

이용 약관

정책

연구

교육

JoVE 소개

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. 판권 소유