In Chemistry, the driving force is supposed to be the of he chemical potential,"miuan".
Driving force = -grad. Miuan
2007-10-25 21:22:05
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answer #1
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answered by sb 7
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Driving Force Chemistry
2016-12-26 13:58:34
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answer #2
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answered by parke 4
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Driving Force Definition
2016-09-28 01:50:34
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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RE:
what is a driving force in chemistry?
2015-09-10 01:15:50
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answer #4
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answered by Pierrette 1
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It is something that makes the reaction happen. Often heat is a driving force in reactions. Entropy could also be a driving force for a reaction to take place.
2007-10-25 14:11:28
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answer #5
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answered by chad c 2
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Driving force is a force required for the reaction to take place. It may be heat because it helps the reaction to take place in a fast manner.
2015-11-03 03:02:47
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answer #6
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answered by Hari 1
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Driving force" is identified as a misleading concept in analyzing spontneous change. Driving force wrongly suggests that Newtonian mechanics and determinism control and explain spontaneous processes. The usefulness of the competition of DH versus DS in discussing chemical change is also questioned. Entropy analyses�which consider the contributions to the total change in entropy�are advocated.
2007-10-29 06:44:43
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answer #7
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answered by boyzmadison 3
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Hi - you've chosen an interesting word for this subject, faith. It fits as well as any, as long as we understand one thing: we are speaking of belief in the ability of something to come into existence that does not yet exist; not belief in that which we do not know exists. That is the critical essence of the word faith in this context. The central point is about the imagination, which conceives of an idea (and is driven by the desire to create/invent). Einstein for this reason explained that imagination is more important than knowledge. It is a concept that the mystics consider to be fundamental to manifestation. Simply understood, look at an airplane. At one point in time, it existed only in the imagination of an inventor. Like the smallest of all seeds, it was an infintessmally small collection of neurons in the mind of a person. This seed was nurtured in part by the strong desire mankind has held for centuries to fly. In a sense, it was literally "planted" and destined to grow. It could only grow by the use of reason and application of natural laws...physics, chemistry (fuel), airfoil principles, etc. In addition, right action and activity needed to be applied; work. In this way, from a tiny seed of "faith", the airplane manifested. When the imagination is married to reason, the child created out of the union is what manifests in reality. This is what the mystics teach. It is not an issue of proof of whether something exists. It is an issue of "what a man can conceive or believe, he can achieve". Or she ;-) Everything that has been created, from airplanes to symphonies, from the light bulb to the Mona Lisa, began as the "tiniest seed of all" in the imagination. I think the point of all this is not so much whether this principle is true, because it is readily observable that it is and it is and on an intuitive level we realize that is the truth of how things operate. The real point is watching our imagination. Mankind needs to concentrate on positive thoughts for the future. We are too busy now with doom and gloom concepts and we need to shift our thinking to remembering that everything we need is provided for on this beautiful planet; we need to hold that thought and work with it; make this the beautiful world that is possible. Faith :-)
2016-04-09 06:06:33
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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any reaction caused by mixing chemicals that would form new substances and release energy.
2007-10-25 14:09:09
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answer #9
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answered by Mike 7
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