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Name: Grade: 1: 2: 3: 4: /100 /25 /25 /25 /25 Final Exam CHEM 181: Introduction to Chemical Principles December 12, 2012 Key 1. (a) The following diagrams show connectivity, but they are missing lone pairs, double (or triple) bonds, and formal charges. Do the following: • • Fill in all of this missing information—lone pairs, double (or triple) bonds, and formal charges. • If there are resonance structures, draw them and indicate their relative importance. • Indicate the hybridization of every atom except H. i. H H O C C sp3 H sp2 sp2 H N C sp3 H H H O C C H N C H H sp2 H H H minor 1 H ii. sp2 best sp N N N sp sp2 N O sp2 major N N N N O N N N N O N N N N O N N N N O very minor (can omit) iii. H C H C H H C N H all sp2 C C N O best O H H C C C N H major H H C H H O C C C N O minor 2 H H C C C N O H (b) Order the following molecules according to their boiling point: CH3 Cl, CH3 CH3 , CH3 OH, and CH3 SH Write your answer in the form: lowest boiling = A < B < C < D = highest boiling and give a brief explanation that explains this ordering. lowest boiling = CH3 CH3 < CH3 Cl < CH3 SH < CH3 OH = highest boiling −89 ◦ C < −23.8 ◦ C < 5.95 ◦ C < 64.7 ◦ C C2 H6 has no dipole and the smallest London forces; it must be the lowest boiling. Strong hydrogen bonding in CH3 OH will make it the highest boiling. For CH3 Cl and CH3 SH, London forces are comparable. You could guess that because CH3 Cl has a larger dipole moment, it will boil higher than CH3 SH. As it happens, weak hydrogen bonding makes CH3 SH boil higher. Either ordering of CH3 Cl and CH3 SH will be marked as correct, if reasonably explained. (c) Ethanol (C2 H5 OH) boils at 78.4 ◦ C, and chloroform (CHCl3 ) boils at 61.1◦ C. However, a 93/7% solution (by weight) of chloroform and ethanol boils at 59.4 ◦ C. Give an explanation for this in terms of intermolecular interaction strength. Strong hydrogen bonding gives ethanol a relatively high boiling point, while strong London forces and a large molecular dipole moment give CHCl3 a high boiling point. However, ethanol–chloroform intermolecular interactions are weaker, as ethanol cannot hydrogen bond to chloroform, and both dipole-dipole and London forces are weaker for ethanolchloroform than for chloroform-chloroform. 3 (d) The following are illustrations of the four π molecular orbitals in the NO− 3 anion: A B C D i. Indicate whether each one is bonding, non-bonding, or anti-bonding. B is bonding, C and D are nonbonding, and A is antibonding. ii. Arrange them from lowest in energy to highest. (Two are very close in energy; as long as they are next to each other, don’t worry which to put first.) How many electrons are in this π system, and which orbitals are filled? lowest → B < C = D < A ← highest There are 6 electrons, which fill orbitals B, C, and D. iii. What would you predict for N–O bond order, and how does this compare to the answer you get from Lewis electron structures? There is a σ bond between the N and each O, and one π bonding pair (in orbital A) distributed among all three N–O bonds. The bond order is 4/3, which is also what you get from resonance structures. iv. If you use the same MO diagram for the molecule SO3 , what S–O bond order do you get? How does this compare to Lewis electron diagrams for SO3 ? This is still a 24-electron system, and with the same MOs, you still get bond order 4/3. If you draw octet-rule-following Lewis structures, they agree with this result. An expanded-octet Lewis structure gives a bond order of 2 instead (which is yet another reason to think critically about expanding octets.) 4 2. (a) The 1 H NMR spectra on this page are all of compounds with the molecular formula C5 H10 O3 : 5 Choose from the compounds below (H atoms not drawn) and assign one structure to each spectrum. Draw the structure (without H atoms is fine) on the matching spectrum. 6 (b) A compound containing only C, H, and O with a molecular weight under 110 amu has the following 13 C NMR spectrum: IR spectrum: 7 and 1 H NMR spectrum: 8 Draw a Lewis structure for the compound. Also mark on each spectrum: i. which protons correspond to which peaks in the 1 H NMR spectrum, and ii. types of motion (type of bond, stretch vs. bend) for peaks in the IR spectrum that can be assigned unambiguously. The compound is ethyl glycolate: H O H O C C O H H C C H H H H Naming each set of protons: B C H O D A H O C C H O H H C C H H H The A protons give a quartet; they are shifted so far because of the C(=O)O nearby. The B protons are tricky; they give a singlet, shifted by both the O and the C=O. The alcohol C proton is unsplit and wide, while the D protons give a triplet with small chemical shift. 9 3. (a) The Ka of nitrous acid (HNO2 ) is 4.0 × 10−4 . What is the pH of a 0.1 M solution of sodium nitrite, NaNO2 ? This is a 0.1 M solution of NO− 2 , which is the conjugate base of HNO2 . We divide Kb NO− 2 = Kw 10−14 = = 2.5 × 10−11 Ka (HNO2 ) 4.0 × 10−4 because we’ll have the reaction NO− 2 (aq) − + H2 O(`) HNO2 (aq) + OH (aq) Kb NO− 2 [HNO2 ][OH− ] = [NO− 2] use an ICE table: [NO− 2] [HNO2 ] [OH− ] 0 x x ≈0 x x I 0.1 −x C E 0.1 − x So Kb NO− 2 = 2.5 × 10−11 = 2.5 × 10−11 ≈ x2 ≈ x ≈ [HNO2 ][OH− ] [NO− 2] 2 x 0.1 − x x2 0.1 2.5 × 10−12 1.58 × 10−6 Given the size of x, our assumption that 0.1 − x ≈ 0.1 is really very good. Autoionization will make the OH− concentration slightly higher, but you can ignore that here. To calculate pH: Kw 10−14 [H ] = = = 6.3 × 10−9 − −6 [OH ] 1.58 × 10 + 10 pH = 8.2 (b) Citric acid (C6 H8 O7 ) is a triprotic acid: + H3 C6 H5 O7 (aq) H2 C6 H5 O− 7 (aq) + H (aq) 2− + H2 C 6 H5 O− 7 (aq) HC6 H5 O7 (aq) + H (aq) 2− 3− HC6 H5 O7 (aq) C6 H5 O7 (aq) + H+ (aq) Ka1 = 8.4 × 10−4 Ka2 = 1.8 × 10−5 Ka3 = 4.0 × 10−6 What is the pH of a 0.05 M solution of citric acid? Give an answer that is accurate to 0.1 units of pH; if you are neglecting any of the above equilibria, explain why you can do so. This is going to need a few ICE tables. Start with the first equilibrium: Ka1 I C E [H+ ][H2 C6 H5 O− 7] = [H3 C6 H5 O7 ] [H3 C6 H5 O7 ] [H2 C6 H5 O− 7] [H+ ] 0.05 −x 0.05 − x 0 x x ≈0 x x x2 0.05 − x x2 x2 + 8.4 × 10−4 x − 4.2 × 10−5 x Move to the next: Ka2 = = 8.4 × 10−4 = 4.2 × 10−5 − 8.4 × 10−4 x = 0 = 6.1 × 10−3 [H+ ][HC6 H5 O2− 7 ] − [H2 C6 H5 O7 ] [H3 C6 H5 O7 ] [H2 C6 H5 O− 7] [H+ ] 0 x x 6.1 × 10−3 x x + 6.1 × 10−3 I 6.1 × 10−3 C −x E 6.1 × 10−3 − x x(x + 6.1 × 10−3 ) 6.1 × 10−3 − x x2 + 6.1 × 10−3 x x2 + 6.12 × 10−3 x − 1.1 × 10−7 x 11 = 1.8 × 10−5 = 1.1 × 10−7 − 1.8 × 10−5 x = 0 = 1.8 × 10−5 So just considering the first ionization, we have pH = − log10 (6.1 × 10−3 = 2.2 and with the second dissociation, we get pH = − log10 (6.12 × 10−3 = 2.2 We will not need to worry about the third dissociation. (c) What is the pH of a 0.1 M solution of disodium citrate, Na2 HC6 H5 O7 ? You will need to consider the equilibrium: 2− − 3− HC6 H5 O2− 7 (aq) + HC6 H5 O7 (aq) H2 C6 H5 O7 (aq) + C6 H5 O7 (aq) The equilibrium constant for this reaction is 3− [H2 C6 H5 O− 7 ][C6 H5 O7 ] 2− [HC6 H5 O2− 7 ][HC6 H5 O7 ] [H2 C6 H5 O− [H+ ][C6 H5 O3− 7] 7 ] · 2− 2− [HC6 H5 O7 ] [HC6 H5 O7 ][H+ ] 1 Ka3 · Ka2 4.0 × 10−6 1.8 × 10−5 0.22 K = = = = = I C E [HC6 H5 O2− 7 ] [H2 C6 H5 O− 7] [C6 H5 O3− 7 ] 0.1 −2x 0.1 − 2x 0 x x 0 x x Don’t forget the −2x! x2 (0.1 − 2x)2 x 0.1 − 2x x 1.94x x 12 = 0.22 = 0.47 = 0.047 − 0.94x = 0.047 = 0.0242 So at equilibrium, [H2 C6 H5 O− 7 ] = 0.024 M [HC6 H5 O2− 7 ] = 0.052 M [C6 H5 O3− 7 ] = 0.024 M We get pH from the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation: pH = = = = [A− ] pKa + log10 [HA] [HC6 H5 O2− 7 ] pKa2 + log10 [H2 C6 H5 O− 7] 0.052 4.74 + log10 0.024 5.1 (you can use Ka3 and 0.024/0.052, with the same answer.) (d) The amino acid histidine is shown below: There are three protons with measurable acidities, with pKa1 =1.77, pKa2 =6.10, and pKa3 =9.18. Label each acidic proton with its pKa value. When there are resonance structures stabilizing a conjugate base, draw those resonance structures. H H H H N O C C N H N O C C C H H N N H H H H C C C H H C O H C C N C H H 13 O H H H H N O C C N H N O C C C H H N N H H C C C H H C O H C C N C O H H (plus 3 minor structures with lone pairs on a carbon) 4. (a) Use the following enthalpies of combustion: H2 (g) −241.3 C(s) −393.5 C2 H2 (g) −1256.2 C6 H6 (`) −3135.5 Calculate i. ∆H◦f for C2 H2 We are combusting carbon and hydrogen, and uncombusting CO2 and H2 O, in order to write the formation reaction: + 5 O2 (g) − 5 O2 (g) 2 2 2C(s) + H2 (g) −→ 2CO2 (g) + H2 O(g) −→ C2 H2 (g) This is why we use reactant enthalpy changes minus product enthalpy changes for enthalpies of combustion: ∆H◦f (C2 H2 (g)) = ∆H◦comb (reactants) − ∆H◦comb (products) = (2(−393.5) + (−241.3)) − (−1256.2) = 227.9 kJ mol−1 ii. ∆H◦f for C2 H2 A typo. ∆H◦f for C6 H6 comes from the reaction 6C(s) + 3H2 (g) −→ C6 H6 (`) ∆H◦f (C6 H6 (`)) = ∆H◦comb (reactants) − ∆H◦comb (products) = (6(−393.5) + 3(−241.3)) − (−3135.5) = 50.6 kJ mol−1 14 iii. ∆H◦rxn for the reaction 3C2 H2 (g) −→ C6 H6 (`) We can use either our heats of formation or our heats of combustion here. ∆H◦rxn = ∆H◦comb (reactants) − ∆H◦comb (products) = (3(−1256.2)) − (−3135.5) = −633.1 kJ mol−1 (b) At a temperature of 400 ◦ C, 0.80 atm of N2 (g), 0.89 atm of H2 (g), and 9.5 × 10−3 atm of NH3 (g) are at equilibrium with respect to the reaction N2 (g) + 3H2 (g) 2NH3 (g) The volume is held constant while the temperature is lowered to 200 ◦ C. (Remember that this will decrease all gas pressures according to P V = nRT .) When equilibrium is eventually reestablished, the total pressure inside the container is 0.99 atm. What is ∆H◦f of NH3 ? (Assume ∆Hf does not change with temperature.) The first thing we can do is find KP at 400 ◦ C: P2NH3 (9.5 × 10−3 )2 = = 1.6 × 10−4 KP = 3 3 PN2 PH2 0.80 · 0.89 When the temperature drops, all pressures will come down by a multiplicative factor of T1 473.15 K = = 0.703 T2 673.15 K So our non-equilibrium pressures at 200 ◦ C are PNH3 = 6.7 × 10−3 atm PN2 = 0.56 atm PH2 = 0.63 atm PN2 = 0.56 − x PH2 = 0.63 − 3x Our equilibrium pressures are PNH3 = 6.7 × 10−3 + 2x 15 Using the total pressure: −3 (6.7 × 10 PNH3 + PN2 + PH2 + 2x) + (0.56 − x) + (0.63 − 3x) 1.1967 − 2x x = = = = 0.99 atm 0.99 0.99 0.103 The equilibrium pressures are PNH3 = 0.21 atm PN2 = 0.45 atm PH2 = 0.32 atm And KP at 200 ◦ C is KP = P2NH3 (0.21)2 = = 3.0 PN2 P3H2 0.45 · 0.323 With T1 = 673 K and T2 = 473 K, the van’t Hoff equation lets us find ∆Hrxn : ∆H 1 1 K2 = − − ln K1 R T2 T1 ∆H 1 3.0 1 = − − ln 1.6 × 10−4 8.314 J mol−1 K−1 473 K 673 K ∆H −4 K−1 ) 9.84 = − −1 −1 (6.28 × 10 8.314 J mol K ∆H = −130.2 kJ mol−1 Since the formation reaction for NH3 is 1 3 N2 (g) + H2 (g) NH3 (g) 2 2 then −130.2 kJ mol−1 = −65.1 kJ mol−1 2 This number is a bit off the actual value (−45.9). ∆Hf◦ (NH3 (g)) = 16