Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
CH13 CHEMISTRY E182019 SUMMARY and test This course is approximately at this level Rudolf Žitný, Ústav procesní a zpracovatelské techniky ČVUT FS 2010 CH13 SUMMARY and test Written test consists in 8 questions and one example. Each question represents 8 points, numerical example 16 points. Taken together, maximum from the written test is 80 points. Oral part (discussion of laboratory protocols, and written test) is 20 points. Rating A B C D E F 90+ 80+ 70+ 60+ 50+ ..49 CH13 1. Units, constants… mass length temperature internal energy m L T U kg m K,oC J 1 lb=0.45 kg 1 ft=0.3 m oF=1.8 oC+32, K=C+273.15 1 BTU=1 kJ mole = 6.02 x 1023 (Avogadro's number) R = 8.314 kJ/(kmol.K) (Universal gas constant) MH=1 g/mole, MC=12 g/mole, MN=14 g/mole, MO=16 g/mole Atmospheric pressure p=1.03·105 Pa Reference temperature T=298K Water: Density =1000 kg/m3, cp=4.2 kJ/(kg.K), hLG=2200 kJ/kg, Tc=3740C Air: Density =1.2 kg/m3, cp=1 kJ/(kg.K), CH13 1. Concentrations… Mass concentration Molar concentration Molality Mass fraction Molar fraction CH13 1. Units, concentrations… Example: Calculate mass fraction of oxygen in air assuming volumetric composition of air 21:79 (MO=16, MN=14). CH13 2. periodic table,pH, polar/covalent bonds, the column 1 contains alkali metals, which have one more electron than the corresponding noble gases Non-metals Missing electrons Metals Superfluous electrons Covalent bond CH4 (shared pairs) H has 1 electron in valence, C has 4 electrons in valence hydrogen needs 1 more electron to complete the valence (s-sublevel) carbon has only 4 electrons in valence shell and needs 4 more. 4 pairs of shared electrons complete valences of H, C Ionic bond NaCl (electrostatic attraction ions) Na-1 electron in valence, Cl-1 missing electron in valence sodium lends 1 electron chlorine borrows this electron (will have the same valence shell as stable Ar) Na+ cation Cl- anion (negative charge) the column 18 contains noble gases which are inert . . CH13 2. pH, polar/covalent bonds, periodic table Number of free protons H+ in 1 l of water [H+] is related to pH value pH = - log [H+] pH < 7 pH >7 acids (concentration of free protons > 10 mol/l) bases (concentration of free protons < 10 mol/l) - log -7 -7 + [H ][OH ]=14 CH13 2. pH, polar/covalent bonds How to derive the Lewis formula, given a chemical formula (and charge of ion). 1. Draw a possible structure(s) 2. Calculate total number of valence electrons (– charge of ion in case of ions) 3. Try to distribute these electrons so that all elements fill their valence shell (octet rule). Carbon dioxide CO2 (4+2x6)=16 electrons (8 pairs) . Sulfate (SO4)2- (6+4x6) + 2=32 electrons (16 pairs) 2- O O=C=O O S O O-C-O because there is 10 pairs O CH13 2. pH, polar/covalent bonds Example: Hydrochlorid acid has pH=2. Calculate mass of HCl in 1 l of electrolyte. Solution: HCl + H2O → H+ + Cl- + H+ + OHDecomposed HCl Decomposed H2O 14 =-log[H+]-log[OH-]=2- log[OH-] Universal constant Total amount of H+ → [OH-]=10-12 negligibl e Amount of free protons decomposed from HCl is 10-2-10-12 /l MHCl=36.5 g/mol, for molar concentration 10-2 mass of HCl is 0.365 g CH13 3. stoichiometry Stoichiometric coefficients are negative for reactants and positive for products Stoichiometric coefficients are calculated by balancing all elements (each element represents one homogeneous algebraic equation for i) CH13 3. stoichiometry Example: Calculate kg of water that is produced by burning 2 kg of methane. CH13 4. Enthalpy, entropy, Gibbs energy First law of thermopdynamics δq = du + δw Internal energy du = cv dT Enthalpy dh = cp dT h=u+pv Entropy ds = (du+pdv)/T=dq/T Gibbs energy g=h-Ts s hLG T s cv ln T2 R v2 ln T1 M v1 CH13 4. Enthalpy, entropy, Gibbs energy Hess law The enthalpy change of the reaction is a function of state and is independent of any intermediate reaction. Standard enthalpy of formation ~0 ( h f ,compound ) 298 Enthalpy change of a chemical reaction ( Hr0 )298 ~0 ~0 P ( h f , P )298 R ( h f , R )298 P R Negative-exothermic, Positive-endothermic reaction Gibbs energy change of a chemical reaction (Gr0 )298 P (g 0f , P )298 R (g 0f , R )298 P Negative-feasible reaction R CH13 4. Enthalpy, entropy, Gibbs energy Example: Write definition of specific entropy. Calculate specific entropy change corresponding to temperature increase of water from 20 to 1000C assuming constant specific heat capacity of H2O (l) – you should know this value. CH13 5. State and phase equations Antoine p ln p A L-liquid B C T S-solid a VdW ( p ~ 2 )(v~ b) RT v G-gas pv T Clausius Clapeyron dp h dT T v R T M CH13 5. State and phase equations Multiphase and multicomponent equilibrium Raoult´s law pA pA " xA Henry’s law pA HxA CH13 5. State and phase equations Example What is the correct formulation of Raoult's law? a) pa/pa"=ya b) pa/p =ya c) pa/p =xa d) pa/pa"=xa CH13 6. Electrochemistry, Reactions Oxidation ANODE Reduction CATHODE 2 Zn Zn 2e Cu 2 2e Cu Anode of galvanic cell is dissolved CH13 6. Electrochemistry, Reactions REACTION PROGRESS Or how to calculate concentrations of all participating species knowing only one scalar variable k A A B B C C D D nA nA0 nB nB 0 nC nC 0 nD nD 0 A B C D cA cA0 cB cB 0 cC cC 0 cD cD 0 [ ] V A B C D dci i d [ ] CH13 6. Electrochemistry, Reactions REACTION RATE AB+C A+BC d [ ] 1 dci r dt i dt dcA Ae dt dcA Ae dt Ea RT Ea RT Activation energy cA cAcB CH13 6. Electrochemistry, Reactions Reversible REACTION A A B B C C D D Equilibrium constant (in terms partial pressures and concentrations) pC pD cC cD Kp p A p B c A cB Equilibrium constant (as a function Kp e 0 Greaction RT of temperature and Gibbs energy) E2 A1 E1RT e A2 CH13 6. Reactions Example: If you combine potassium and chlorine in a galvanic cell, what will be anode? Estimate resulting voltage of this cell. Standard reduction potentials [Malinovský 1987] Half-reaction Eo/V -2.925 K e K 2 -0.763 Zn 2e Zn 0 2 H 2e H2 0.337 Cu 2 2e Cu 0.799 Ag e Ag 1.23 Cl2 2e 2Cl 2 1.5 Au 2e Au Table of reduction potentials will be given as a part of problem setting Example: Reaction rate increased 2 times, when reaction temperature was increased from 10000C to 12000C. Calculate activation energy of the reaction. CH13 7. Organic chemistry ALKANES linear chains containing single bonds Derived alkyl groups -R ALKENES linear chains containing at least one double bond ALKYNES linear chains containing at least one triple bond AROMATIC ring structure with alternating single and double bonds Derived aryl groups -R CH13 7. Organic chemistry functional group derived from alkanes -CH3 (methyl), -C2H5 (ethyl), -C3H7 (propyl), … (alkyl groups) -OH (hydroxyl group /alcohols/), -COOH (carboxyl group /acids/), -NH2 (amines), -CONH2 (amides). Connecting functional groups -O- (ethers), R-CO-R (ketones, carbonyl group), R-CO-H (aldehydes) -COO- (esters /fats/). CH13 7. Organic chemistry Example: Classify and name the following compound O CH3CH2-C-H Solution: ethylaldehyde CH13 8. Polymers, Biochemistry Can be anything, for example amyl or aryl groups, halogens R H C C H H Polyolefines N=.. . Polyamides Amide group H H H H H H N C C C C C C N H H H H H H H H O H H H H O C C C C C C H H H H Polyhexamethylene adipamide (nylon 6/6) N CH13 8. Polymers, Biochemistry Biomolecules - polymers (except lipids) Nucleic acids Lipids Carbohydrates e.g.Fats e.g.Starch Cellulose DNA Proteins RNA Amino acids (CH2O)6n H N C6H12O6 fructose, glucose H R O C C H O H CH13 8. Polymers, Biochemistry Example: What is polyethylene (write formula)? Example: Classify starch and cellulose (what is it: protein, carbohydrate, lipid, or acid?). Describe differences. Final example CH13 Reaction enthalpy, spontaneity of chemical reaction (temperature range), equilibrium constant Given data from the following table, calculate maximum of what can be said about the chemical reaction: fermentation of ethylalcohol (~ s 0 ) 298 ~ ( hf0 ) 298 ( g~f0 ) 298 kJ.mol-1.K-1 H2(g) 0.13057 N2(g) 0.19150 O2(g) 0.20503 C(s) 0.00574 CO(g) 0.19756 CO2(g) 0.21360 CH4 (g) 0.18615 C2H5OH(l) 0.16100 C6H6(l) 0.17280 kJ.mol-1 0 0 0 0 -110.5 -393.5 -74.8 -277.7 49.0 kJ.mol-1 0 0 0 0 -137.1 -394.4 -50.8 -144.9 129.7 Substance Substance (~ s 0 ) 298 ~ ( hf0 ) 298 ( g~f0 ) 298 kJ.mol-1.K-1 kJ.mol-1 kJ.mol-1 CaO(s) 0.04000 -635.5 -604.2 CaSO4(s) 0.10700 -1432.7 -1320.3 H2O(g) 0.18871 -241.8 -228.6 NH3(g) 0.19230 -46.1 -16.5 NO(g) 0.21065 90.2 86.6 NO2(g) 0.23990 82.1 104.2 SO2(g) 0.24810 -296.8 -300.2 SO3(g) 0.2566 -395.7 -371.1 S8(s) 0.2540 0 0