1 / 33

Chapter 6

Chapter 6. Thermochemistry. Energy and Work. In what terms d o chemists define energy? What are some of the many types of energy?. The ability to do work Work is a change in energy because of a process Kinetic , potential, thermal, chemical, nuclear, gravitational, etc.

Download Presentation

Chapter 6

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 6 Thermochemistry

  2. Energy and Work • In what terms do chemists define energy? • What are some of the many types of energy? • The ability to do work • Work is a change in energy because of a process • Kinetic , potential, thermal, chemical, nuclear, gravitational, etc.

  3. Defining Energy Changes • What type of energy is the focus of thermochemistry? • How do we define these objects or bodies? • Heat • Exchange of thermal energy between two objects or bodies • Either as part of the: • System, or • Surroundings

  4. Defining Energy Changes • What are differences between the three types of systems? • Open – exchange of mass and energy • Closed – exchange of energy only • Isolated – no exchange of energy or mass

  5. Defining Energy Changes • What is the difference between exothermic and endothermic processes? • Exothermic • Releases heat to the surroundings • Endothermic • Absorbs heat from the surroundings

  6. Enthalpy • How can we quantify heat? • Impossible to measure the amount of heat in a substance • Must measure the change (Δ) in heat • Enthalpy (H) – measure of heat flow in a constant pressure system • Enthalpy can change during a physical or chemical change

  7. Enthalpy • What is the formula for enthalpy? • ΔH  Enthalpy • ΔH = Hfinal – Hintial • ΔH = Hproducts – Hreactants • ΔH > 0 = endothermic • ΔH < 0 = exothermic

  8. I never really thought about it that way before… • Determine whether the change in enthalpy is positive or negative? • Ice melting • Air around the melting ice • Water vapor condensing on a glass • Cold drink outside on a hot day • Combustion of methane • Neutralization of vinegar with baking soda • Ice absorbs heat, endothermic, + • Air loses heat, exothermic, - • Water vapor loses heat, exothermic, - • Cold drink absorbs heat, endothermic, + • Methane releases heat, exothermic, - • Reaction releases heat, exothermic, -

  9. Thermochemistry • What is the chemical equation for melting ice? • H2O(s) → H2O(l) • ΔH = 6.01 kJ • Positive • Endothermic

  10. Thermochemistry • What is the reaction for the combustion of methane? • CH4(g) + 2O2(g) → CO2(g) + 2H2O(l) • ΔH = -890.4 kJ • Negative • Exothermic

  11. Thermochemistry Notes • What are some guidelines to thermochemical reactions? • Coefficients represent the number of moles • Reversing a reaction changes the sign • If you multiply the reaction by a constant, ΔH is also multiplied by the same constant • Always show the physical state of the substance (s, l or g)

  12. Practice Example 6.1: SO2(g) +½O2(g) → SO3(g) ΔH = -99.1 kJ Calculate the heat evolved when 74.6 g of SO2 is converted to SO3. • Answer = -115 kJ P4(s) + 5O2(g) → P4O10(s) ΔH = -3013 kJ Calculate the heat evolved when 266 g of white phosphorus burns (combusts) in air. • Answer = -6.48 x 103 kJ

  13. Enthalpy of Formation • What is the enthalpy of formation? • ∆Hºf • The heat change when one mole of a compound is formed from its elements at 1 atm • Table 6.3 (pg. 216) • Appendix 3 (pg. A-8)

  14. Enthalpy of Formation • Why is the enthalpy of formation so critical? • When we know the enthalpy of each piece we can determine the enthalpy of the entire reaction (∆Hºrxn)

  15. Enthalpy of Reaction • How do we directly calculate the enthalpy of reaction? • Consider this standard reaction: • aA + bBcC + dD • Lower case letters  molar coefficient (mol) • Upper case letters  enthalpy of formation of substances/chemicals (kJ/mol) • ∆Hºrxn = mƩ∆Hºf(products) - nƩ∆Hºf(reactants) • ∆Hºrxn = [c∆Hºf(C) + d∆Hºf(D)] - [a∆Hºf(A) + b∆Hºf(B)]

  16. Example • Example 6.6 (pg. 219) 2B5H9(l) + 12O2(g) 5B2O3(s) + 9H2O(l) Use Appendix 3 and the following equation to determine the ∆Hºrxn. The standard enthalpy formation of B5H9 is 73.2 kJ/mol. ∆Hºrxn = [c∆Hºf(C) + d∆Hºf(D)] - [a∆Hºf(A) + b∆Hºf(B)] ∆Hºrxn = [5(-1263.6) + 9(-285.8)] - [2(73.2) + 12(0)] • Answer = -9036.6 kJ

  17. Another Example • Example 6.6 – Practice (pg. 220) • 2C6H6(l) + 15O2(g)  12CO2(g) + 6H2O(l) • Calculate the heat released in kJ by the combustion of benzene. • ∆Hºf(C6H6) = 49.04 kJ/mol • ∆Hºrxn = [12(-393.5)+6(-285.8)]-[2(49.04)+15(0)] • ∆Hºrxn = [-6436.8]-[98.08] • ∆Hºrxn = -6534.9 kJ

  18. Practice Problem #1 Answer for 6.38 (a) = -1410.9 kJ Answer for 6.38 (b) = -1123.5 kJ

  19. Practice Problem #2 ∆Hºrxn = 177.8 kJ remember this is for one mole ∆Hº = 2.70 x 102 kJ

  20. Enthalpy of Combustion • What is the enthalpy of combustion (∆Hºc)? • Also called heat of combustion • Amount of heat released when a substance is combusted with oxygen • Always strongly negative • Table 12 in your data booklet

  21. Enthalpy of Solution • What is the enthalpy of solution (∆Hºsoln)? • Change in enthalpy when a solute is dissolved in a solvent • Can be exothermic or endothermic

  22. Bond Enthalpies • What are bond enthalpies? • Energy required to make and break chemical bonds • Also called bond dissociation energy • More details when we get to chapter nine

  23. Calorimetry • How do we measure heat changes? • Calorimetry is the measurement of heat changes • A calorimeter is the instrument of choice • 1 cal = 4.184 J

  24. Specific Heat and Heat Capacity • What information is needed to determine how much heat is exchanged? • q = mc∆t(IB use) • q = ms∆t(book use) • q = heat (J) • m = mass (g) • ∆t = change in temperature (˚C) • ∆t = tfinal– tinitial • c, s = specific heat (J/(g * ˚C))

  25. Specific Heat and Heat Capacity • What is specific heat (c, s)? • How is this related to heat capacity (C)? • The amount of heat needed (J) to raise the temperature of 1 gram of a substance by 1 ˚C • Water = 4.184 J/(g * ˚C) • The amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of a known mass of a substance by 1 ˚C • C = mc • q = C∆t

  26. Specific Heat and Heat Capacity • What is the difference between specific heat and heat capacity? • c = intensive property, not dependent on mass • C = extensive property, depends on the mass

  27. In other words…

  28. Specific Heat and Heat Capacity • Example 6.2 (pg. 210): A 466 g sample of water is heated from 8.50˚C to 74.60˚C. Calculate the amount of heat absorbed by the water in kJ. • q = mc∆t • q = (466 g)(4.184 J/(g *˚C))(74.60˚C – 8.50˚C) • q = 129000 J • q = 129 kJ

  29. Specific Heat and Heat Capacity Example 6.2 (pg. 210) • An iron bar of mass 869 g cools from 94˚C to 5˚C. Calculate the amount of heat release, in kJ, by the metal. • Specific heat capacity of iron • c = 0.444 J/(g * ˚C) • q = mc∆t • q = (869 g)(0.444/(g *˚C))(5˚C – 94˚C) • q = -34 kJ

  30. Getting Out of the Shower • Why do you get cold when you get out of the shower? • Water that remains on your body wants to evaporate • Water has a high specific heat , so it takes a lot of energy/heat to evaporate • The more energy/heat you lose the colder you feel… obviously

  31. Firewalking • How is it possible to walk across a bed of hot coals at temperatures of over 1000˚C without burning your feet? • Is it psychological? • Or is it simple physical chemistry?

  32. Firewalking World Record

  33. Firewalking • How is it possible to walk across a bed of hot coals at temperatures of over 1000˚C without burning your feet? • Water in feet, high heat capacity • Ash under feet, low heat capacity • The same amount of heat leaving the coals will lower their temperature much more than the same amount heat trying to raise the temperature in your foot

More Related