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Name ___________________________________________ Topic 10/11 Chapter 5: Thermochemistry 5.1 Energy Energy WorkHeat- Kinetic Energy Kinetic energy is… : KE = Forms of Kinetic energy Chemical Kinetic energy Potential Energy Potential energy is Forms of potential energy Chemical Potential energy Electrostatic energy Eel = Example: electrons Units of Energy Definitions: System and Surroundings System – Surroundings – Energy Flow: Heat flows from…. Conversion of Energy Kinetic / Potential energy - Examples Energy can be transferred as Heat or Work Example: 5.2 First Law of Thermodynamics 1st law - Exchange of Heat between System and Surroundings Endothermic Exothermic - 5.3 Enthalpy Endothermic and Exothermic A process is endothermic when … A process is exothermic when …. Two definitions of Enthalpy: H heat content depends on… H change in heat Energy of states: Gas Gas Liquid liquid Solid solid Sample 5.3 Indicate the sign of the enthalpy change, H in these processes carried out under atmospheric pressure and indicate whether each process is endothermic or exothermic: a) An ice cube melts b) 1 g of butane (C4H10) is combusted in sufficient oxygen to give complete combustion to CO2 and H2O. Practice: molten gold poured into a mold solidifies at atmospheric pressure. With the gold defined as the system is the solidification an exothermic or endothermic process? Explain 5.4 Enthalpy of Reaction Enthalpy of reaction – H = Enthalpy is an extensive property Enthalpy of the reaction in reverse: Enthalpy depends on the states of reactants and products Sample 5.4 How much heat is released when 4.50 g of methane is burned at constant pressure? (1 mole of CH4 releases 890 kJ when burned.) Practice: hydrogen peroxide can decompose to water and oxygen by the reaction 2H2O2 2H2O + O2 ∆H = -196 kJ Calculate the quantity of heat released when 5.00 g of H2O2 decomposes at constant pressure. Heat of Reaction Table I Thermochemical equations (regents) 5.5 Calorimetry Calorimetry Heat Capacity – Specific Heat – C= OR q= Regents Ex1: 100 grams of water at 250C loses 4200 joules of energy. What is its final temperature? Sample 5.5 a) how much heat is needed to warm 250 g of water from 22oC to 98oC? b) What is the molar heat capacity of water? Practice a) Large beds of rocks are used in some solar heated homes to store heat. Assume that the specific heat of rocks is 0.82 J/gK. Calculate the quantity of heat absorbed by 50.0 kg of rocks if their temperature increases by 12.0oC. b) What temperature change would these rocks undergo if they emitted 450 kJ of heat? \ Regents Ex 2: What is the specific heat capacity (Joules per gram per OC) of a substance which absorbs 20. joules of heat to raise 5.0 grams of the substance by 2.0 oC? Regents ex3 What will be the temperature change in 100. grams of water if 0.100 moles of KNO3 are dissolved in it? Ex4: Calculate the heat of solution for KNO3 in kJ/mole, if 10.1 grams of KNO3 is dissolved in 100. g of water causing its temperature to decrease by 8.3 0C? Ex5: Heat of fusion of a solid (Hf) How much heat is absorbed per gram, if 10 grams of a solid melts in 300 grams of water, causing the water temperature to decrease by 500C? Sample problem 5.6: A student mixes 50 mL of 1.0 M HCl with 50 mL of 1.0 M NaOH in a calorimeter, the temp changes from 21.0oC to 27.5oC. Calculate the enthalpy change per mole of HCl Practice: When 50.0 mL of 0.100 M AgNO3 and 50.0 mL of 0.100 M HCl are mixed in a constant pressure calorimeter, the temperature of the mixture increases from 22.30 oC to 23.11 oC. The temperature increase is caused by the following reaction: AgNO3 + HCl AgCl(s) + HNO3 Calculate ∆H for this reaction in kJ/mol AgNO3, assuming that the combined solution has a mass of 100.0 g and a specific heat of 4.18 J/goC In terms of energy flow, explain why the temperature of the water in the calorimeter used in the investigation increases. Show a correct numerical setup for calculating the number of joules of heat gained by the water in the investigation. In the investigation shown, the change in heat of the copper is greater than the change in heat of the water. What error could account for this apparent violation of the law of conservation of energy? [do not use human error as part of the answer] Bomb calorimetry Sample 5.7: Bomb Calorimetry The combustion of methylhydrazine (CH6N2) a liquid rocket fuel, produces N2(g) , CO2(g) and H2O (l): 2CH6N2 (l) + 5O2(g) 2N2(g) + 2CO2(g) + 6H2O (l) When 4.00 g of methylhydrazine is combusted in a bomb calorimeter, the temperature of the calorimeter increases from 25.00 0C to 39.50 0C. In a separate experiment the heat capacity of the calorimeter was found to be 7.794 kJ/0C. Calculate the heat of reaction for the combustion of one mole of CH6N2. How is C for the bomb calorimeter calculated? A 1.630 g sample of naphthalene C10H8, is completely burned in a bomb calorimeter assembly and a temperature increase of 8.46oC. If the heat of combustion of naphthalene is -5156 kJ/mol C10H8 what is the heat capacity of the bomb calorimeter? Practice: a 0.5865 g sample of lactice acid (HC3H5O3) is burned in a calorimeter whose heat capacity is 4.18 kJ/oC. The temperature increases from 23.10oC to 24.95oC. Calculate the heat of combustion of lactic acid a) per gram and b) per mole. 5.6 Hess’s Law Defined: Example: 5.7 Enthalpies of formation H the old way: combine H values for breakdown of each reactant and formation of each product. Better way: H = n H p H = H f,products products −H reactants – n H f Calculation of dH by Hf’s C3H8(g) + 5O2(g) 3CO2(g) + 4H2O(l) f ,reactants