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Thermochemistry
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Thermochemistry

Jan 03, 2016

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Thermochemistry. Recall “thermo” – heat energy “Chemistry”- the study of matter, so Thermochemistry is the study of heat energy within matter or the heat energy changes that accompany chemical reactions. Heat & Temperature. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Thermochemistry

Thermochemistry

Page 2: Thermochemistry

• Recall “thermo” – heat energy

• “Chemistry”- the study of matter, so

• Thermochemistry is the study of heat energy within matter or the heat energy changes that accompany chemical reactions.

Page 3: Thermochemistry

Heat & Temperature

• Heat is the sum of the kinetic energies of the particles in a sample of matter.

• Temperature is the average kinetic energy of the particles in a sample of matter.

Page 4: Thermochemistry

Which has more heat?

• A cup of hot water at 70˚C?

• A bathtub full of hot water at 70˚C?

They both have the same temperature, but the bathtub has more heat.

Page 5: Thermochemistry

Specific Heat

• Specific Heat is the amount of heat energy (measured in Joules, J or kJ) required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of a substance by 1 degree C.

• It is the measure of how efficiently a substance absorbs heat. Water is very efficient and therefore important in calorimetry, the process of measuring the amount of heat released or absorbed in chemical processes.

Page 6: Thermochemistry

Specific Heat Calculationsalso known as Heat Capacity, Cp

Cp = __q______ m x ∆T

q= the quantity of heat absorbed or released You may also see “q” as an upper case Q

m= mass in grams

∆T= change in Temperature

Page 7: Thermochemistry

• Can you use the equation to solve for Q?

for m?

for ∆T ?

q = Cp x m x ∆T

Page 8: Thermochemistry

ANSWERSq = Cp x m x ∆T

m = __q______ Cp x ∆T

∆T = __q______ m x Cp

Page 9: Thermochemistry

Let’s work a problem. (See page 497 in text)

• A piece of metal with a mass of 4.68 g absorbs 256 J of heat when its temperature increases by 182 C.

1. What is the specific heat of the metal?

2. Identify the metal.

Page 10: Thermochemistry

• 0.300 J/g x ⁰C

• Strontium (see table on page 495)

Page 11: Thermochemistry

More Practice Problems

Page 498

12.If 335 g water at 65.5 ⁰C loses 9750 J of heat, what is the final temperature of the water?

13.The temperature of a sample of water increases from 20.0 ⁰C to 46.6 ⁰C as it absorbs 5650 J of heat. What is the mass of the sample?

Page 12: Thermochemistry

ANSWERS12.Did you solve for ∆T? ∆T = __q______ m x Cp ∆T = __9750J_____ 335g x 4.184J/g x ⁰C ∆T = 6.956137097What was the FINAL temp.? Did it lose or gain heat according to the

problem?

65.5- 6.96 = 58.5⁰C

Page 13: Thermochemistry

13. Did you solve for mass, m? m = __q______

Cp x ∆T m = 5650J__________

4.184J/g x 26.6

= 50.766g rounded to 50.8g

Page 14: Thermochemistry

The quantity of heat transferred during temperature change depends on:

1. Nature of material2. Mass of matter3. Amount of temperature change

Page 15: Thermochemistry

Thermochemistry equations

• This is an Exothermic reaction because the

4 Fe(s) + 3 O2(g) → 2Fe2O3(s) + 1652kJ

heat energy amount is on the product side of the equation.

Page 16: Thermochemistry

• In an Endothermic reaction the heat energy amount is on the reactant side of the equation.

1652kJ + 2Fe2O3 (s) → 4 Fe(s) + 3O2(g)

Page 17: Thermochemistry

Enthalpy

• Enthalpy is the heat content of a system at constant pressure.

The symbol is H.

Page 18: Thermochemistry

The change in enthalpy for a reaction called the enthalpy heat of reaction & is

represented as:

∆H (rxn) = H(final) - H(initial)

OR

∆H (rxn) = H(products) - H(reactants)

Page 19: Thermochemistry

CHANGES OF STATE (pages 502-505)

Molar Heat (enthalpy) of Vaporization, (∆Hvap)

Hint: vapor = gas so when a substance changes state from gas to liquid or liquid to gas, use the Heat of Vaporization values

Molar Heat (enthalpy) of Fusion, (∆Hfus)

Hint: fusion=molecules fused together as in solid, so when a substance changes state from solid to liquid or liquid to solid use the Heat of Fusion values.

Page 20: Thermochemistry

Refer to Table 16-6 page 502

• Table 16-6 shows the standard enthalpies of Vaporization and Fusion

Note that the units are in

kJ/molewhich means when given mass, you will

need to calculate the mole value for that substance

Page 21: Thermochemistry

Practice Problems

• Page 504 #20, #21, #22

Page 22: Thermochemistry

Solution #20-

What is given in the problem?

Mass= 25.7 g of methanol (CH3OH)

Is this substance melting or freezing?

See chart on page 502. The Heat of fusion for methanol is 3.22kJ/mol.

The Heat of Vaporization is 35.2kJ/mol.

Which do you use?

Page 23: Thermochemistry

Answer

• 32.05 g CH3OH = 1 mole

25.7g x 1mole x 3.22kJ = 2.58kJ/mol

32.05g mole

Page 24: Thermochemistry

Solution #21

• Is this substance melting or freezing? Condensing or boiling?

• What substance is it?

• How many grams?

Page 25: Thermochemistry

More Problems

• In class together:

• Page 881, Problems 3-8

• Page 525, Problems 78-85

You may work with a partner.

Show me your work as I come around to

check your answer.

Page 26: Thermochemistry

Homework questions

HW -Answer questions in text page 524

(46, 47), 49, 52-55, 57-60

Page 27: Thermochemistry

Note again

In Endothermic reactions heat is absorbed and the enthalpy value is on the reactant side of the equation

In Exothermic reactions, heat is released as a product and the enthalpy value is on the product side of the equation.

Page 28: Thermochemistry

QUESTION?

• Is a combustion reaction an ENDO or EXOthermic reaction?

Is heat gained, absorbed OR

Is heat lost, released in a combustion reaction?

Where would the ∆H appear, on the reactant side or the product side?

Combustion is the same as what biological process?

Page 29: Thermochemistry

• Would you expect the ∆H value to be a positive value or a negative value?

Why?

Page 30: Thermochemistry

QUESTIONS???

• Answer questions 23-27 on page 505 of text.