08-Bond Energies and Enthalpy Changes
08-Bond Energies and Enthalpy Changes
08-Bond Energies and Enthalpy Changes
Bond energies are used to calculate enthalpy changes that cannot be measured directly.
Example 1:
Calculate the enthalpy change for the reaction H2(g) + Cl2(g) 2HCl(g), given the following
bond energies. E(H H) = 436, E(Cl Cl) = 242, E(H Cl) = 431,
Solution:
H
=
=
=
=
=
862
184 kJ/mol of H2 and Cl2 reacting.
(negative sign means 184 kJ given out when 2 mol of HCl are formed)
We can show this on an energy diagram which represents the heat energy content of the
molecules. 678kJ/mol is put in to split the HH and the ClCl up into atoms, and then
862 kJ/mol is given out when the two new HCl bonds are formed:
2H + 2Cl
atoms
heat energy
content
+678
862
HH +
ClCl
before
184 kJ/mol
net change
progress of reaction
2 HCl
after
Example 2:
Use the bond energies given to find the energy released when one mole of methane is burnt:
CH4 + 2O2 CO2 + 2H2O. Data: CH 413; O=O 497; C=O 803; HO 463 kJ/mol
Solution:
Rewrite the equation showing all the bonds:
H
O=O
HCH +
O=C=O +
O=O
H
H
HOH
HOH
Example 3.
Given the following bond enthalpies.
Bond
FF
NN
Energy
158
163
NH
390
NN
945
HF
563
Calculate the energy change for the reaction: N2H4(g) + 2F2(g) N2(g) + 4HF(g).
Solution.
H
H
NN
+ 2F F N N + 4H F.
H
H
{Sum of bonds broken in reactants} {sum of bonds formed in products}
{4E(N H) + E(N N) + 2E(F F)} {E(N N) + 4E(F F)}
{4(390) + (163) + 2(158)} {(945) + 4(563)}
=> (1560 +163 + 316) (945 + 2252) => 2039 3197 = -1158 kJ.
=> H rxn = -1158kJ.
Example 4.
Calculate the enthalpy of formation of ethane using the following information:
E(C C) = 348 kJmol-1,
E(C H) = 410 kJmol-1.
-1
C(s) C(g);
H = +718 kJmol .
H2(g) H(g); H = +218 kJmol-1.
Solution.
H1 + H2 = H f + H3.
3C(s) + 3H2(g)
=> H f = H1 + H2 H3.
H1
H1 = 2H at [C(s)] = 2(+718) = +1436
H3
Enthalpy changes calculated using bond energies are always different from the correct
enthalpy change because bond energies are not usually exact values for the molecules in any
particular reaction. OR The bond energies used are average and not the exact values of the
molecules in question. Besides, bond energies apply to molecules in the gaseous state while
the compound in question could be in the solid or liquid state.
Uses of bond energies.
i)
Used in comparing bond strength, hence stability of a molecules. The more energy that
is required to break a bond, the more stable the molecule. Oxygen; O = O bond energy
498 kJmol-1 is less stable compared to nitrogen; N N bond energy 945 kJmol-1.
ii)
Used to understanding structure and bonding
iii)
Can be used to predict reactivity. The smaller the bond energy the more reactive the
compound. For elements (non-metal), this only applies across the period not down the
group. Oxygen; O = O bond energy 498 kJmol-1 is more reactive than nitrogen; N N
bond energy 945 kJmol-1.
iv)
Used to estimating the enthalpy change of a reaction.
v)
Used to compared the effectiveness of different molecules as fuels