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Thermochemistry. Thermodynamics. Study of energy transformations Thermochemistry is a branch of thermodynamics which describes energy relationships in chemical reactions. Energy. Capacity to do work or to transfer heat
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Thermodynamics • Study of energy transformations • Thermochemistry is a branch of thermodynamics which describes energy relationships in chemical reactions
Energy • Capacity to do work or to transfer heat • Mechanical work (w) is the product of force (F) operating on an object and the distance (d) through which it moves • W = F x d • Energy is required to do work
Heat (Q) • Heat is the energy transferred from one object to another due to a difference in temperature
Forms of Energy • Kinetic Energy – energy of motion - magnitude depends on the mass of the object and its velocity - EK = ½ m v2 - both mass and speed determine how work it can do
Potential Energy – stored energy • Other forms of energy are simply types of kinetic or potential on an atomic or molecular level
Energy Units • Joule (J) • 1J = 1 kg m2/ s2 • A calorie (cal) is the amount of energy required to raise the temp of 1 g of water 1 ºC 1 cal = 4.184 J
Example • A 145 g baseball is thrown with a speed of 25 m/s. Calculate the kinetic energy in Joules. • What is the kinetic energy in calories?
Systems • Portion we single out for study • Surroundings is everything else outside the system • When studying energy changes in a chemical reaction, the reactants and products are the system and everything else is the surroundings
Law of Conservation of Energy • Energy can be converted from one form to another but cannot be created or destroyed • Also called “First Law of Thermodynamics”
Internal Energy • Total energy of a system – sum of kinetic and potential energies • Cannot determine exact internal energy • Can only determine a change in internal energy ΔE = Efinal – Einitial
If ΔE is positive there is a gain in internal energy in the system • If ΔE is negative the system lost energy to its surroundings • Higher energy systems tend to lose energy and are therefore less stable
Heat and Work • Any system can exchange energy with surroundings in two ways – as heat or work • Internal energy increases as heat is added to or work is done on a system ΔE = Q + w Q is positive if heat is added to system w is positive if work is done on the system
Heat Changes • Exothermic Reactions – when heat is given off by the reaction (-Q) • Endothermic Reactions – when heat is used by the reaction (+Q)
Example • As a combustion reaction occurs the system loses 550 J of heat to its surroundings and it does 240 J of work in moving a piston. What is the change in its internal energy?
State Function • These are systems for whom the value of ΔE does not depend on the previous history of the sample, only on the present condition • Energy is a state function • Work and heat are not state functions