Thermochemistry
Thermochemistry
Thermochemistry
THERMOCHEMIST
INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
LECTURE 9:
RY
DR MOHD RAZALI SHAMSUDDIN
Learning Outcomes:
By the end of this chapter, students should be able to:
Temperature
03 changes and heat
04 Hess’s Law
capacity
05 Enthalpy of reaction
01
THERMOCHEMIST
RY, SYSTEM &
SURROUNDING
ENERGY Thermal energy is
The ability to do work. Energy can be the energy of motion of
converted into work, heat, or radiation. In particles such as atoms,
simple words, energy is the capacity for doing molecules or ions.
work.
N
NUCLEAR
THERMODYNAMIC THERMOCHEMISTRY
VS
The study of energy the study
and its of chemical reactions and
transformations the energy changes
that involve heat
s t h e
d o e
h ere o?
W t g
hea
Thermochemistry
surrounding
system
system
surrounding surrounding
system surrounding
system
system
surrounding
System: Surrounding:
the part that is being studied the rest that interacts with the system
02
ENTHALPY AND
HEAT IN
CHEMICAL
REACTION
Heat (q) Is the energy transferred (heat flow) by a
system through temperature difference
Ice gets warmer while hand Cup gets cooler while hand
gets cooler gets warmer
surrounding
Ice cubes absorb heat energy from their
surroundings and melt to form liquid
water
(no chemical bonds are broken or
formed)
Exothermic
energy is transferred into the
release energy to the surroundings.
surrounding
The change in enthalpy ( ΔH) will
be negative.
system
surrounding
How do we
measure heat in
chemical
reactions?
Heat changes in chemical
reactions are most often
measured in the laboratory
under conditions in which the
reacting system is open to the
atmosphere. In that case, the
system is at constant pressure.
◆ Comes from the
Greek word:
“enthalpein”
◆ Meaning: to warm
◆ The exact value
cannot be
calculated, often
expressed as a
change in enthalpy,
∆H
The bomb
calorimeter is
used to determine
the calorific values
of solid and liquid
fuels.
Thermochemical equation
The quantity of energy released or absorbed as heat during a reaction is written and is represented
by H
two moles of hydrogen react with one mole of oxygen to make two moles of water,
the characteristic enthalpy change is -570 kJ
Where ∆T = Tf - Ti
Specific heat
capacity of
some common
materials
Exercise
How much heat energy is needed to warm 250 g of water (about 1 cup)
from 22oC (about room temperature) to near its boiling point, 98oC? (The
specific heat of water is 4.18 J g-1 K-1)
Exercise
If 25.0 g of Al cool from 310oC to 37oC, how many joules of heat energy are lost by
the Al? C = 0.897 J/g•K
How much heat energy is released when 7.1 g of substance is cooled from 100 oC to
room temperature (25 oC) ?
(The specific heat of the substance is 0.460 J g -1 oC-1)
Thermal equilibrium
qsys = -qsurr
Or
-qsys = qsurr
-ve sign is written where the
exothermic reaction occurs (Tf
> Ti) Tfinal should be in between Tinitial of
both substance
Supposed a block of metal initially at 55oC is
submerged into water initially at 75oC.
-ve sign at H2O
because it is
exothermic reaction
occurs
(Tf (H2O) > Ti (H2O) )
qmetal =-qwater qmetal = -qH2O
qsoln = -qrxn
qsoln = msoln x Csoln x ∆Tsoln = -qrxn Indirectly measured from
the solution’s information
*soln = solution
Example
A 32.5 g aluminium initially at 45.8 oC is submerged into 105.3 g of water at 15.4oC. What is
the final temperature of both substances at thermal equilibrium? C Al= 0.903 J g-1 oC-1 CH2O =
4.18 J g-1 oC-1
A block of copper of unknown mass has an initial temperature of 64.5 oC. The copper is
immersed in a beaker containing 95.7 g of water at 22.7 oC. When the two substances reach
equilibrium, the final temperature is 24.2 oC. What is the mass of the copper block. [C Cu=
0.385 J g-1 oC-1 , CH2O = 4.18 J g-1 oC-1]
Exercise
To determine whether a shiny gold-colored rock is actually gold, a chemistry student decides to measure
its heat capacity. She first weighs the rock and finds it has a mass of 4.7 g. she then finds that upon
absorption of 57.2 J of heat, the temperature of the rock rises from 25 oC to 57oC. Find the specific heat
capacity of the substance composing the rock and determine whether the value is consistent with the rock
being pure gold. [CAu= 0.129 J g-1 oC-1]
When 200.0 g of AgNO3 solution mixes with 150.0 g of NaI solution, AgI formed precipitates, and the
temperature of the solution rises by 1.34 oC. Assume the specific heat capacity of the solution is 4.184 J g -1
C , calculate heat of the reaction.
o -1
Relationship between ∆H and q
At constant pressure
b. Zinc metal eggs with hydrochloric acid according to the balance equation:
Zn(s) + 2HCl(aq) ZnCl(aq) + H2(g)
When 0.103 g of Zn(s) is combined with enough HCl to make 50.0 mL of solution in a coffee-cup calorimeter,
all of the Zn reacts, raising the temperature of the solution from. 22.5 oC to 23.7oC . Find ∆Hrxn for this reaction
is written. Use 1.0 g/mL as the density of the solution and C = 4.18 J g -1 oC-1 as the specific heat capacity.
04
HESS’S
LAW
“The law states that the enthalpy change for a reaction that is carried out in a series of
steps is equal to the sum of the enthalpy changes for the individual steps”.
Consider the thermochemical cycle below:
∆H1 ∆H
A B A D
By Hess’s Law: What is the relationship between ∆H, ∆H1, ∆H2, and
∆H3?
∆H1 + ∆H2 = ∆H3 + ∆H4
∆H = ∆H1 + ∆H2+ ∆H3
39
Consider the following generic reaction.
A + 2B C ∆H1
A + 2B C ∆H1
C 2D ∆H2
What is ∆H for reaction:
A + 2B 2D
A + 2B C ∆H1
C 2D ∆H2
Overall: A + 2B 2D ∆H = ∆H1 + ∆H2
C(s) + 2H2(g) →CH4(g) ∆Hof = ??
CH4(g) + 2O2(g) →CO2(g) + 2H2O(l) ∆Hoc [CH4]= -891 kJmol-1
C(s) + O2(g) → CO2(g) ∆Hof [CO2]= -393 kJmol-1
H2(g) + ½O2(g) → H2O(l) ∆Hof [H2O]= -286 kJmol-1
Given the following data:
SrO(s) + CO2(g) → SrCO3(s) ΔH = −234 kJ
2SrO(s) → 2Sr(s) + O2(g) ΔH = +1184 kJ
2SrCO3(s) → 2Sr(s) + 2C(s) + 3O2(g) ΔH = +2440 kJ
Find the ΔH of the following reaction:
C(s) + O2(g) → CO2(g)
05
ENTHALPY
OF
REACTION
ENTHALPY OF REACTION
The enthalpy of reaction for a chemical reaction is the difference
between total product and total reactant molar enthalpies, calculated
for substances in their standard states.
Let say,
aA + bB → cC + dD
given:
N2(g) + 3H2(g) ---> 2NH3(g) ΔH = −91.8 kJ
C(s) + 2H2(g) ---> CH4(g) ΔH = −74.9 kJ
H2(g) + 2C(s) + N2(g) ---> 2HCN(g) ΔH = +270.3 kJ