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Video 6.1. Q=mc Δ T. Table I. Exothermic reactions release heat and have negative values. Example : When Carbon and Oxygen react they release 393.5kJ of heat per mole reacted. Endothermic reactions absorb heat and have positive values.
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Video 6.1 Q=mcΔT
Table I • Exothermic reactions release heat and have negative values. • Example: When Carbon and Oxygen react they release 393.5kJ of heat per mole reacted. • Endothermic reactions absorb heat and have positive values. • Example: When Nitrogen and Oxygen react they absorb 182.6kJ of heat per mole.
Table I examples • When C2H4 is formed, is heat released or absorbed? • Table I: 2C + 2H2 C2H4 ΔH=52.4kJ • When 2 moles of CH4 burn in oxygen, how much heat is released? • Table I: CH4 + 2O2 CO2 + H2O ΔH=-890.4kJ • 2CH4 2(-890.4) = -1780.8 KJ
Table I examples • Reactions that release the most energy are the most stable. Which reaction becomes the most stable? • 4Al + 3O2 2Al2O3ΔH=-3351kJ • Where did these values come from?
Calculating Heat of reactions • q is the symbol for heat. • If q is positive, the heat is endo. • If q is negative, the heat is exo. • q is measure in Joules, (J) or kilojoules (kJ). • The heat of a reaction is based on: • the mass of the substance • the temperature change it undergoes • specific heat.
Specific Heat • Specific heat is the heat needed to raise the temperature of one gram of a substance one degree Celsius.
To calculate heat: q = mcΔT 1. The temperature of 95.4g of copper increases from 25 to 48C and absorbed 849J. Calculate copper’s specific heat. 849= (95.4) (x) (48-25) Q = 0.387 J/gC
q = mcΔT 2. How much heat is needed to raise the temperature of 100g of water 50C? Q = (100) (4.18) (50) Q = 20900J or 20.90 KJ
q = mcΔT 3. If 600J are needed to heat 50g of water to 100C, what is the initial temperature? 600 = (50) (4.18) (x) X = 2.87 97.13C
Video 6.2 Review Gases, Liquids, and Solids With Phase Change Diagrams
Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases KMT describes perfect gases: • Gases move in constant, random, straight-line paths. • Gases are separated by large distances, much larger than their particle size. Therefore, gases volume is negligible. And gases are easily compressed. • Gases do not have attractive or repulsive forces between molecules. • Collisions between molecules can transfer energy but the total energy of the system is constant. This is called an elastic system.
Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases In summary, Perfect gases: • Have no mass • Have no volume • Have no intermolecular forces
Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases • But we don’t have perfect gases. How do real gases deviate from ideal gases? • They have a volume, mass and small IMF under high pressure and low temperature. • So, a real gas must be hot and under low pressure to behave like an ideal gas.
Pressure • Gases exert a pressure on surrounding substances because they are constantly moving and colliding with other surfaces. • Only in a vacuum, where there are no molecules, there is no pressure. • Gas pressure can be measured in atmospheres or kilopascals, according to reference table A.
Liquids • No definite shape • Definite volume • Constant motion • No arrangement • Molecules are closer together than a gas
Solids • Definite shape • Definite volume • Constant vibration • Molecules are packed tightly in a geometric (crystalline) pattern
Phase Changes Identify the phase change and if it’s endothermic or exothermic: • Evaporation • Condensation • Melting • Freezing • Sublimation • Deposition Liquid to gas endothermic Gas to liquid exothermic Solid to liquid endothermic Liquid to solid exothermic Solid to gas endothermic gas to solid exothermic
Thermochemistry • The study of energy changes that occur in chemical reactions. • Kinetic energy refers to energy of motion. (Temperature) • Potential Energy refers to stored energy.
Cooling Curve A C B E D F
Video 6.3 q=mHf q=mHv
When can you use q=mcΔT? • Only on the solid, liquid and gas only lines. (Where the temperature changes) • So, what equations do we use if the temperature is not changing?
Two more equations from Table T • Heat of vaporization: heat needed to change a substance from gas to liquid or liquid to gas. q=mHv • Heat of fusion: heat needed to change a substance from solid to liquid or liquid to solid. q=mHf • If the IMF is strong, the heats of vaporization and fusion is high.
Q=mHv • Calculate the number of joules needed to vaporize 423g of H2O. Q = (423) (2260) 955, 980J or 955.98KJ
Q=mHf • How much heat is needed to melt ice at 0C if the sample weighs 255g? Q = (255) (334) 85,170J or 85.17 KJ
Measuring heat in the lab You can measure the heat of physical and chemical changes in a calorimeter. The calorimeter acts like a styrofoam cup, it insulates the reaction (doesn’t let the overall heat change).
Measuring heat in the lab • The heat released by the reaction equals the heat absorbed by the water. • You will measure the change in heat of the water using q=mcΔT.
Measuring heat in the lab • You will use a calorimeter more like this. • You must make sure you always stir the solution to make the heat equal throughout the cup.
A student places a 68.4g piece of metal at 99.5C in a calorimeter filled with 103g of water at 25.2C. The temperature changes to 27.6C. • In terms of the metal, is the reaction endothermic or exothermic? • Calculate the heat absorbed by the water. • Calculate the heat released by the metal. • Calculate the specific heat of the metal. • Using the following specific heats, determine the identity of the metal and calculate the % error. Aluminum: 0.21 J/gC Copper: 0.090 J/gC Gold: 0.030 J/gC