∆S will be positive i.e., greater than zero.
Since ∆U = 0, ∆S will be positive and the reaction will be spontaneous.
For an isolated system where there's no change in internal energy \(\Delta U = 0\), the total entropy \(\Delta S\) can either stay the same or increase, but it can't decrease. So, \(\Delta S\) can be zero or positive, but it can't be negative. When the change in internal energy \(\Delta U\) is zero for an isolated system, the change in entropy \(\Delta S\) will be positive \(\Delta S \gt 0\). This means that the total entropy of the system increases, and the process is spontaneous.
What inference do you draw about the behaviour of Ag+ and Cu2+ from these reactions?
Thermodynamics in physics is a branch that deals with heat, work and temperature, and their relation to energy, radiation and physical properties of matter.
A thermodynamic system is a specific portion of matter with a definite boundary on which our attention is focused. The system boundary may be real or imaginary, fixed or deformable.
There are three types of systems:
A system undergoes a thermodynamic process when there is some energetic change within the system that is associated with changes in pressure, volume and internal energy.
There are four types of thermodynamic process that have their unique properties, and they are:
The Zeroth law of thermodynamics states that if two bodies are individually in equilibrium with a separate third body, then the first two bodies are also in thermal equilibrium with each other.
The First law of thermodynamics is a version of the law of conservation of energy, adapted for thermodynamic processes, distinguishing three kinds of transfer of energy, as heat, as thermodynamic work, and as energy associated with matter transfer, and relating them to a function of a body's state, called internal energy.
The Second law of thermodynamics is a physical law of thermodynamics about heat and loss in its conversion.
Third law of thermodynamics states, regarding the properties of closed systems in thermodynamic equilibrium: The entropy of a system approaches a constant value when its temperature approaches absolute zero.