Unit 3: Thermochemistry
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Transcript Unit 3: Thermochemistry
May 11
Unit 3:
Thermochemistry
Chemistry 3202
1
May 11
Unit Outline
Temperature
and Kinetic Energy
Heat/Enthalpy Calculation
Temperature changes (q = mc∆T)
Phase changes (q = n∆H)
Heating and Cooling Curves
Calorimetry (q = C∆T & above
formulas)
2
May 11
Unit Outline
Chemical
Reactions
PE
Diagrams
Thermochemical Equations
Hess’s Law
Bond Energy
STSE:
What Fuels You?
3
May 11
Temperature and Kinetic Energy
Thermochemistry is the study of energy
changes in chemical and physical changes
eg. dissolving
burning
phase changes
4
May 11
Temperature , T, measures the average
kinetic energy of particles in a substance
- a change in temperature means
particles are moving at different speeds
- measured in either Celsius degrees or
degrees Kelvin
Kelvin = Celsius + 273.15
5
May 11
The Celsius scale is based on the
freezing and boiling point of water
The Kelvin scale is based on absolute
zero - the temperature at which
particles in a substance have zero
kinetic energy.
6
May 11
p. 628
7
May 11
K
°C
50.15
48
450.15
-200
8
May 11
300 K
# of particles
500 K
Kinetic Energy
9
May 11
Heat/Enthalpy Calculations
system - the part of the universe being studied
and observed
surroundings - everything else in the universe
open system - a system that can exchange
matter and energy with the surroundings
eg. an open beaker of water
a candle burning
closed system - allows energy transfer but is
closed to the flow of matter.
10
May 11
isolated system – a system completely closed
to the flow of matter and energy
heat - refers to the transfer of kinetic energy
from a system of higher temperature to a
system of lower temperature.
- the symbol for heat is q
WorkSheet: Thermochemistry #1
11
May 12
Part A: Thought Lab (p. 631)
12
May 12
Part B: Thought Lab (p. 631)
13
May 12
Heat/Enthalpy Calculations
specific heat capacity – the energy , in
Joules (J), needed to change the
temperature of one gram (g) of a
substance by one degree Celsius (°C).
The symbol for specific heat capacity is
a lowercase c
14
May 12
A substance with a large value of c can
absorb or release more energy than a
substance with a small value of c.
ie. For two substances, the substance
with the larger c will undergo a smaller
temperature change with the same loss
or gain of heat.
15
May 12
FORMULA
q = mc∆T
q = heat (J)
m = mass (g)
c = specific heat capacity
∆T = temperature change
= T2 – T1
= Tf – Ti
16
May 12
eg. How much heat is needed to raise the
temperature of 500.0 g of water from
20.0 °C to 45.0 °C?
q = m c ∆T
for c, m, ∆T, T2 & T1
p. 634 #’s 1 – 4
p. 636 #’s 5 – 8
WorkSheet: Thermochemistry #2
Solve
17
May 13
heat capacity - the quantity of energy , in
Joules (J), needed to change the
temperature of a substance by one
degree Celsius (°C)
The symbol for heat capacity is
uppercase C
The unit is J/ °C or kJ/ °C
18
May 13
FORMULA
C = mc
q = C ∆T
Your Turn
C = heat capacity
c = specific heat
capacity
m = mass
∆T = T2 – T1
p.637 #’s 11-14
WorkSheet: Thermochemistry #3
19
May 18
Enthalpy Changes
enthalpy change - the difference between the
potential energy of the reactants and the
products during a physical or chemical
change
AKA: Heat of Reaction or ∆H
20
May 18
Endothermic Reaction
Products
PE
∆H
Reactants
Reaction Progress
21
May 18
Endothermic Reaction
Products
PE
Enthalpy
∆H
∆H
Reactants
Reaction Progress
22
May 18
Products
Enthalpy
∆H is +
Reactants
Endothermic
23
May 18
reactants
Enthalpy
∆H is products
Exothermic
24
May 18
Enthalpy Changes in Reactions
All
chemical reactions require bond
breaking in reactants followed by
bond making to form products
Bond breaking requires energy
(endothermic) while bond formation
releases energy (exothermic)
see p. 639
25
May 18
26
May 18
Enthalpy Changes in Reactions
endothermic reaction - the energy
required to break bonds is greater than
the energy released when bonds form.
ie. energy is absorbed
exothermic reaction - the energy
required to break bonds is less than the
energy released when bonds form.
ie. energy is produced
27
May 18
Enthalpy Changes in Reactions
1.
∆H can represent the enthalpy change for
a number of processes
Chemical reactions
∆Hrxn – enthalpy of reaction
∆Hcomb – enthalpy of combustion
(see p. 643)
28
May 18
2.
Formation of compounds from elements
∆Hof – standard enthalpy of formation
The standard molar enthalpy of formation is
the energy released or absorbed when one
mole of a compound is formed directly from
the elements in their standard states. (see
p. 642)
eg.
C(s) + ½ O2(g) → CO(g)
ΔHfo = -110.5 kJ/mol
29
May 18
Use the equation below to determine the ΔHfo
for CH3OH(l)
2 C(s) + 4 H2(g) + O2(g) → 2 CH3OH(l) + 477.2 kJ
1 C(s) + 2 H2(g) + ½ O2(g) → 1 CH3OH(l) + 238.6 kJ
∆H = -238.6 kJ/mol
30
May 18
Use the equation below to determine the ΔHfo
for CaCO3(s)
2 CaCO3(s) + 2413.8kJ → 2 Ca(s) + 2 C(s) + 3 O2(g)
2 Ca(s) + 2 C(s) + 3 O2(g) → 2 CaCO3(s) + 2413.8kJ
1 Ca(s) + 1 C(s) + 1.5 O2(g) → 1 CaCO3(s) + 1206.9 kJ
∆H = -1206.9 kJ/mol
31
May 18
Use the equation below to determine
the ΔHfo for PH3(g)
4 PH3(g) → P4(s) + 6 H2(g) + 21.6 kJ
a) +21.6 kJ/mol
b) -21.6 kJ/mol
c) +5.4 kJ/mol
d) -5.4 kJ/mol
32
May 18
Phase Changes (p.647)
∆Hvap – enthalpy of vaporization (l → g)
3.
∆Hfus – enthalpy of melting (fusion: s → l)
∆Hcond – enthalpy of condensation (g → l)
∆Hfre – enthalpy of freezing (l → s)
eg. H2O(l) H2O(g)
Hg(l) Hg(s)
ΔHvap = +40.7 kJ/mol
ΔHfre = -23.4 kJ/mol
33
May 18
4.
Solution Formation (p.647, 648)
∆Hsoln – enthalpy of solution
eg.
ΔHsoln, of ammonium nitrate is +25.7 kJ/mol.
NH4NO3(s) + 25.7 kJ → NH4NO3(aq)
ΔHsoln, of calcium chloride is −82.8 kJ/mol.
CaCl2(s) → CaCl2(aq) + 82.8 kJ
34
May 18
Three ways to represent an enthalpy change:
1. thermochemical equation - the energy
term written into the equation.
2. enthalpy term is written as a separate
expression beside the equation.
3. enthalpy diagram.
35
May 18
eg. the formation of water from the elements
produces 285.8 kJ of energy.
1. H2(g) + ½ O2(g) → H2O(l) + 285.8 kJ
thermochemical
equation
2. H2(g) + ½ O2(g) → H2O(l) ∆Hf = -285.8 kJ/mol
36
enthalpy
diagram
H2(g) + ½ O2(g)
3.
Enthalpy
(H)
examples:
questions
∆Hf = -285.8 kJ/mol
H2O(l)
May 18
pp. 641-643
p. 643 #’s 15-18
WorkSheet: Thermochemistry #4
37
May 24
Calculating Enthalpy Changes
FORMULA:
q = n∆H
q = heat (kJ)
n = # of moles
m
n
M
∆H = molar enthalpy
(kJ/mol)
38
May 24
eg. How much heat is released when
50.0 g of CH4 forms from C and H ?
(p. 642)
n
50.0 g
16.05 g / mol
3.115 mol
q = nΔH
= (3.115 mol)(-74.6 kJ/mol)
= -232 kJ
39
May 24
eg. How much heat is released when
50.00 g of CH4 undergoes complete
combustion?
(p. 643)
50.0 g
n
16.05 g / mol
3.115 mol
q = nΔH
= (3.115 mol)(-965.1 kJ/mol)
= -3006 kJ
40
May 24
eg. How much energy is needed to change
20.0 g of H2O(l) at 100 °C to steam at 100 °C ?
Mwater = 18.02 g/mol
ΔHvap = +40.7 kJ/mol
20.0 g
n
18.02 g / mol
1.110 mol
q = nΔH
= (1.110 mol)(+40.7 kJ/mol)
= +45.2 kJ
41
May 24
∆Hfre and ∆Hcond have the opposite sign
of the above values.
42
May 24
eg. The molar enthalpy of solution for
ammonium nitrate is +25.7 kJ/mol. How
much energy is absorbed when 40.0 g of
ammonium nitrate dissolves?
40.0 g
n
80.06 g / mol
0.4996 mol
q = nΔH
= (0.4996 mol)(+25.7 kJ/mol)
= +12.8 kJ
43
May 24
What mass of ethane, C2H6, must be burned
to produce 405 kJ of heat?
ΔH = -1250.9 kJ
- 405 kJ
n
q = - 405 kJ
1250.9 kJ
m=?
q = nΔH
q
n
H
n = 0.3238 mol
m= nxM
= (0.3238 mol)(30.08 g/mol)
= 9.74 g
44
Complete:
p. 645; #’s 19 – 23
pp. 648 – 649; #’s 24 – 29
p. 638 #’ 4 – 8
pp. 649, 650 #’s 3 – 8
p. 657, 658 #’s 9 - 18
May 24
WorkSheet: Thermochemistry #5
45
19. (a) -8.468 kJ (b) -7.165 kJ 20. -1.37 x103 kJ
21. (a) -2.896 x 103 kJ (b) -6.81 x104 kJ
21. (c) -1.186 x 106 kJ
22. -0.230 kJ
23. 3.14 x103 g
24. 2.74 kJ
25.(a) 33.4 kJ (b) 33.4 kJ
26.(a) absorbed (b) 0.096 kJ
27.(a) NaCl(s) + 3.9 kJ/mol → NaCl(aq)
(b) 1.69 kJ
(c) cool; heat absorbed from water
28. 819.2 g
29. 3.10 x 104 kJ
46
May 25
Heating and Cooling Curves
Demo: Cooling of p-dichlorobenzene
Time (s) Temperature (°C) Time (s)
Temperature (°C)
47
May 25
Cooling curve for p-dichlorobenzene
Temp. 80
(°C )
50
KE
liquid
PE
freezing
KE
solid
20
Time
48
May 25
Heating curve for p-dichlorobenzene
80
Temp.
(°C )
50
KE
PE
20
KE
Time
49
May 25
What did we learn from this demo??
During
a phase change temperature
remains constant and PE changes
Changes
in temperature during
heating or cooling means the KE of
particles is changing
50
May 25
p. 651
51
May 25
p. 652
q = mc∆T
q = n∆H
52
May 25
p. 656
q = n∆H
q = mc∆T
53
May 25
54
May 25
Heating Curve for H20(s) to H2O(g)
1.
2.
A 40.0 g sample of ice at -40 °C is
heated until it changes to steam and
is heated to 140 °C.
Sketch the heating curve for this
change.
Calculate the total energy required for
this transition.
55
May 25
q = mc∆T
140
100
q = n∆H
q = mc∆T
Temp.
(°C )
q = n∆H
0
q = mc∆T
-40
Time
56
May 25
Data:
cice = 2.01 J/g.°C
cwater = 4.184 J/g.°C
csteam = 2.01 J/g.°C
ΔHfus = +6.02 kJ/mol
ΔHvap = +40.7 kJ/mol
57
warming ice: (from -40 ºC to 0 ºC)
q = mc∆T
= (40.0)(2.01)(0 - -40)
= 3216 J
May 26
warming water: (from 0 ºC to 100 ºC)
q = mc∆T
= (40.0)(4.184)(100 – 0)
= 16736 J
58
May 26
warming steam: (from 100 ºC to 140
ºC)
q = mc∆T
= (40.0)(2.01)(140 -100)
= 3216 J
moles of water:
n = 40.0 g
18.02 g/mol
= 2.22 mol
59
melting ice: (fusion)
q = n∆H
= (2.22 mol)(6.02 kJ/mol)
= 13.364 kJ
May 26
boiling water: (vaporization)
q = n∆H
= (2.22 mol)(40.7 kJ/mol)
= 90.354 kJ
60
May 27
Total Energy
90.354 kJ
13.364 kJ
3216 J
3216 J
16736 J
127 kJ
61
May 27
Practice
p. 655: #’s 30 – 34
WorkSheet:
pp. 656: #’s 1 - 9
Thermochemistry #6
p. 657 #’s 2, 9
p. 658 #’s 10, 16 – 20
30.(b) 3.73 x103 kJ
31.(b) 279 kJ
32.(b) -1.84 x10-3 kJ
33.(b) -19.7 kJ -48.77 kJ
34. -606 kJ
62
May 30
Law of Conservation of Energy (p. 627)
The total energy of the universe is constant
∆Euniverse = 0
First Law of Thermodynamics
Universe = system + surroundings
∆Euniverse = ∆Esystem + ∆Esurroundings
∆Euniverse = ∆Esystem + ∆Esurroundings = 0
OR
OR
∆Esystem = -∆Esurroundings
qsystem = -qsurroundings
63
May 30
Calorimetry (p. 661)
calorimetry - the measurement of heat
changes during chemical or physical
processes
calorimeter - a device used to measure
changes in energy
2 types of calorimeters
1. constant pressure or simple
calorimeter (coffee-cup calorimeter)
2. constant volume or bomb calorimeter.
64
May 30
Simple
Calorimeter
p.661
65
May 30
a
simple calorimeter consists of an
insulated container, a thermometer, and
a known amount of water
simple calorimeters are used to measure
heat changes associated with heating,
cooling, phase changes, solution
formation, and chemical reactions that
occur in aqueous solution
66
May 30
to
calculate heat lost or gained by a
chemical or physical change we apply the
first law of thermodynamics:
qsystem = -qcalorimeter
Assumptions:
- the system is isolated
- c (specific heat capacity) for water is not
affected by solutes
- heat exchange with calorimeter can be
ignored
67
May 30
eg.
A simple calorimeter contains 150.0 g of
water. A 5.20 g piece of aluminum alloy at
525 °C is dropped into the calorimeter
causing the temperature of the calorimeter
water to increase from 19.30°C to
22.68°C.
Calculate the specific heat capacity of the
alloy.
68
May 31
aluminum alloy
m = 5.20 g
T1 = 525 ºC
T2 = 22.68 ºC
FIND c for Al
water
m = 150.0 g
T1 = 19.30 ºC
T2 = 22.68 ºC
c = 4.184 J/g.ºC
qsys = - qcal
mcΔT = - mc ΔT
(5.20)(c)(22.68 - 525 ) = -(150.0)(4.184)(22.68 – 19.30)
-2612 c = -2121
c = 0.812 J/g.°C
69
May 31
eg.
The temperature in a simple calorimeter
with a heat capacity of 1.05 kJ/°C changes
from 25.0 °C to 23.94 °C when a very cold
12.8 g piece of copper was added to it.
Calculate the initial temperature of the
copper. (c for Cu = 0.385 J/g.°C)
70
copper
m = 12.8 g
T2 = 23.94 ºC
c = 0.385 J/g.°C
May 31
calorimeter
C = 1.05 kJ/°C
T1 = 25.00 ºC
T2 = 23.94 ºC
FIND T1 for Cu
qsys = - qcal
mcT = - CT
(12.8)(0.385)(23.94 – T1) = -(1050)(23.94 – 25.0)
4.928 (23.94 – T1) = 1113
23.94 – T1= 1113/4.928
23.94 – T1= 225.9
T1= -202 ºC
71
May 31
Homework
p. 664, 665 #’s 1b), 2b), 3 & 4
p. 667, #’s 5 - 7
72
p. 665 # 4.b)
(60.4)(0.444)(T2 – 98.0) = -(125.2)(4.184)(T2 – 22.3)
26.818(T2 – 98.0) = -523.84(T2 – 22.3)
26.818T2 - 2628.2 = -523.84T2 + 11681
550.66T2 = 14309.2
T2 = 26.0 °C
73
6. System (Mg)
m = 0.50 g
= 0.02057 mol
Find ΔH
Calorimeter
v = 100 ml
so m = 100 g
c = 4.184
T2 = 40.7
qMg = -qcal
T1 = 20.4
nΔH = -mcΔT
7. System
ΔH = -53.4 kJ/mol
n = CV
= (0.0550L)(1.30 mol/L)
= 0.0715 mol
Calorimeter
v = 110 ml
so m = 110 g
c = 4.184
T1 = 21.4
Find T2
74
June 1
Bomb
Calorimeter
75
Bomb Calorimeter
used to accurately measure enthalpy
changes in combustion reactions
the inner metal chamber or bomb contains
the sample and pure oxygen
an electric coil ignites the sample
temperature changes in the water
surrounding the inner “bomb” are used to
calculate ΔH
76
to
accurately measure ΔH you need to
know the heat capacity (kJ/°C) of the
calorimeter.
must account for all parts of the
calorimeter that absorb heat
Ctotal = Cwater + Cthermom.+ Cstirrer + Ccontainer
NOTE: C is provided for all bomb
calorimetry calculations
77
eg. A technician burned 11.0 g of octane in a
steel bomb calorimeter. The heat capacity of
the calorimeter was calibrated at 28.0 kJ/°C.
During the experiment, the temperature of the
calorimeter rose from 20.0 °C to 39.6 °C.
What is the enthalpy of combustion for octane?
78
May 31
system (octane)
m = 11.0 g
Find ΔHcomb
n = 11.0 g
114.26 g/mol
= 0.09627 mol
calorimeter
C = 28.0 kJ/ºC
T2 = 39.6 ºC
T1 = 20.0 ºC
qsys = - qcal
n ΔH = -CΔT
(0.09627) ΔH = - (28.0)(39.6 – 20.0)
ΔH = -5700 kJ/mol
79
May 31
eg.
1.26 g of benzoic acid, C6H5COOH(s), is burned in
a bomb calorimeter. The temperature of the
calorimeter and contents increases from 23.62 °C
to 27.14 °C. Calculate the heat capacity of the
calorimeter. (∆Hcomb = -3225 kJ/mol)
benzoic acid
m = 1.26 g
ΔHcomb = -3225 kJ/mol
calorimeter
T1 = 23.62 ºC
T2 = 27.14 ºC
Find C
80
May 31
n = 1.26 g
122.13 g/mol
= 0.01032 mol
qsys = - qcal
n ΔH = -CΔT
(0.01032) ΔH = - (C)(27.14 – 23.62)
C = 9.45 kJ/ ºC
Homework
p. 675 #’s 8 – 10
WorkSheet: Thermochemistry #7
81
June 2
Hess’s Law of Heat Summation
the
enthalpy change (∆H) of a physical or
chemical process depends only on the
beginning conditions (reactants) and the
end conditions (products)
∆H is independent of the pathway and/or
the number of steps in the process
∆H is the sum of the enthalpy changes of
all the steps in the process
82
June 2
eg. production of carbon dioxide
Pathway #1:
2-step mechanism
C(s) + ½ O2(g) → CO(g)
∆H = -110.5 kJ
CO(g) + ½ O2(g) → CO2(g)
∆H = -283.0 kJ
C(s) + O2(g) → CO2(g)
∆H = -393.5 kJ
83
June 2
eg. production of carbon dioxide
Pathway #2: formation from the elements
C(s) + O2(g) → CO2(g)
∆H = -393.5 kJ
84
Using Hess’s Law
June 2
We
can manipulate equations with
known ΔH to determine an unknown
enthalpy change.
NOTE:
Reversing an equation changes the sign
of ΔH.
If we multiply the coefficients we must
also multiply the ΔH value.
85
June 2
multiply ?
reverse ?
eg.
Determine the ΔH value for:
H2O(g) + C(s) → CO(g) + H2(g)
using the equations below.
C(s) + ½ O2(g) → CO(g)
ΔH = -110.5 kJ
H2(g) + ½ O2(g) → H2O(g)
ΔH = -241.8 kJ
86
June 2
eg.
Determine the ΔH value for:
4 C(s) + 5 H2(g) → C4H10(g)
using the equations below.
Switch
ΔH (kJ)
C4H10(g) + 6½ O2(g) → 4 CO2(g) + 5 H2O(g)
-110.5
H2(g) + ½ O2(g) → H2O(g)
-241.8
C(s) + O2(g) → CO2(g)
Multiply
by 4
Multiply
by 5
-393.5
87
June 2
4 CO2(g) + 5 H2O(g) → C4H10(g) + 6½ O2(g)
+110.5
5(H2(g) + ½ O2(g) → H2O(g)
4(C(s) + O2(g) → CO2(g)
-241.8)
4 CO2(g) + 5 H2O(g) → C4H10(g) + 6½ O2(g)
5 H2(g) + 2½ O2(g) → 5 H2O(g)
4C(s) + 4 O2(g) → 4 CO2(g)
+110.5
-1209.0
-1574.0
-393.5)
Ans: -2672.5 kJ
88
June 2
Practice
pg. 681 #’s 11-14
WorkSheet:
Thermochemistry #8
89
Review
June 3
∆Hof (p. 642, 684, & 848)
The standard molar enthalpy of formation is
the energy released or absorbed when one
mole of a substance is formed directly from
the elements in their standard states.
∆Hof = 0 kJ/mol
for elements in the standard state
The more negative the ∆Hof , the more
stable the compound
90
Using Hess’s Law and ΔHf
June 3
Use the formation equations below to determine
the ΔH value for:
C4H10(g) + 6½ O2(g) → 4 CO2(g) + 5 H2O(g)
4 C(s) + 5 H2(g) → C4H10(g)
H2(g) + ½ O2(g) → H2O(g)
C(s) + O2(g) → CO2(g)
ΔHf (kJ/mol)
-2672.5
-241.8
-393.5
91
June 3
Using Hess’s Law and ΔHf
ΔHrxn = ∑ΔHf (products) - ∑ΔHf (reactants)
eg. Use ΔHf , to calculate the enthalpy of
reaction for the combustion of glucose.
C6H12O6(s) + 6 O2(g) → 6 CO2(g) + 6 H2O(g)
92
June 3
ΔHrxn = ∑ΔHf (products) - ∑ΔHf (reactants)
CO2(g)
H2O(g)
C6H12O6(s)
ΔHf
-393.5 kJ/mol
-241.8 kJ/mol
-1274.5 kJ/mol
C6H12O6(s) + 6 O2(g) → 6 CO2(g) + 6 H2O(g)
ΔHrxn = [6(-393.5) + 6(-241.8)] – [1(-1274.5)+ 6(0)]
= [-2361 + -1450.8] - [-1274.5 + 0]
= - 2537.3 kJ
93
June 3
Use the molar enthalpy of formation to calculate
ΔH for this reaction:
Fe2O3(s) + 3 CO(g) → 3 CO2(g) + 2 Fe(s)
−824.2 kJ/mol
−110.5 kJ/mol
−393.5 kJ/mol
ΔHrxn = [3(-393.5) + 2(0) ] – [3(-110.5)+ 1(-824.2)]
= [-1180.5 + 0] - [-331.5 + -824.20]
= - 24.8 kJ
94
June 7
Eg.
The combustion of phenol is represented by
the equation below:
−393.5 kJ/mol
C6H5OH(s) + 7 O2(g) → 6 CO2(g) + 3 H2O(g)
−241.8 kJ/mol
If ΔHcomb = -3059 kJ/mol, calculate the heat of
formation for phenol.
ΔHcomb = -27.4 kJ/mol
95
Bond Energy Calculations (p. 688)
The
energy required to break a bond
is known as the bond energy.
Each type of bond has a specific
bond energy (BE).
(table p. 847)
Bond
Energies may be used to
estimate the enthalpy of a reaction.
96
Bond Energy Calculations (p. 688)
ΔHrxn = ∑BE(reactants) - ∑BE (products)
eg. Estimate the enthalpy of reaction for the
combustion of ethane using BE.
2 C2H6(g) + 7 O2(g) → 4 CO2(g) + 6 H2O(g)
Hint: Drawing the structural formulas for all
reactants and products will be useful here.
97
C-C = 347
C-H = 338
O=O = 498
2
C
C
C=O = 745
H-O = 460
+ 7O=O
→ 4 O=C=O + 6 H-O-H
[2(347) + 2(6)(338) + 7(498)] - [4(2)(745) + 6(2)(460)]
8236 - 11480
= -3244 kJ
p. 690 #’s 23,24,& 26
p. 691 #’s 3, 4, 5, & 7
98
Energy Comparisons
Phase
changes involve the least amount
of energy with vaporization usually
requiring more energy than melting.
Chemical changes involve more energy
than phase changes but much less than
nuclear changes.
Nuclear reactions produce the largest ΔH
eg.
nuclear power, reactions in the sun
99
STSE
What fuels you? (Handout)
100
aluminum alloy
m = 5.20 g
T1 = 525 ºC
T2 =
ºC
FIND c for Al
water
m = 150.0 g
T1 = 19.30 ºC
T2 = 22.68 ºC
c = 4.184 J/g.ºC
qsys = - qcal
mcT = - mc T
(5.20)(c)(22.68 - 525 ) = -(150.0)(4.184)(22.68 – 19.30)
-2612 c = -2121
c = 0.812 J/g.°C
101
copper
m = 12.8 g
T2 =
ºC
c = 0.385 J/g.°C
calorimeter
C = 1.05 kJ/°C
T1 = 25.00 ºC
T2 = 23.94 ºC
FIND T1 for Cu
qsys = - qcal
mcT = - CT
(12.8)(0.385)(23.94 – T1) = -(1050)(23.94 – 25.0)
4.928 (23.94 – T1) = 1113
23.94 – T1= 1113/4.928
23.94 – T1= 225.9
T1= -202 ºC
102
q
heat
J or kJ
c
Specific heat
capacity
Heat capacity
J/g.ºC
C
ΔH
Molar heat or
molar enthalpy
kJ/ ºC or
J/ ºC
kJ/mol
103