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Exothermic and Endothermic Reactions
© Teachable . Some rights reserved.
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Endothermic and exothermic reactions
Step 1: Energy must be SUPPLIED to break chemical bonds: Step 2: Energy is RELEASED when new chemical bonds are made: A reaction is EXOTHERMIC if more energy is RELEASED than SUPPLIED. If more energy is SUPPLIED than is RELEASED then the reaction is ENDOTHERMIC © Teachable . Some rights reserved.
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Energy level diagrams Energy level Activation energy
Using a catalyst might lower the activation energy Energy given out by reaction Reaction progress © Teachable . Some rights reserved.
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Forming Na+ and Cl- ions from NaCl is an endothermic process
Endothermic process: a change (e.g. a chemical reaction) that requires (or absorbs) heat. Forming Na+ and Cl- ions from NaCl is an endothermic process Photosynthesis is an endothermic reaction (requires energy input from sun)
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Measuring Heat reaction Endothermic reaction, heat taken in & temperature of the substance drops
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Ammonium nitrate + water
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Starting temperature 20⁰ C
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Add ammonium nitrate to water
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a temperature decrease of 8⁰ C
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EXOTHERMIC & ENDOTHERMIC REACTIONS
Exothermic process: a change (e.g. a chemical reaction) that releases heat. Burning fossil fuels is an exothermic reaction
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Exothermic reaction, heat given off & temperature of substance rises.
Heat Released reaction Exothermic reaction, heat given off & temperature of substance rises.
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Exothermic vs endothermic:
EXOTHERMIC – more energy is given out than is taken in (e.g. burning, respiration) ENDOTHERMIC – energy is taken in but not necessarily given out (e.g. photosynthesis) © Teachable . Some rights reserved.
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Examples Exothermic Combustion of fuels Yeast & Hydrogen Peroxide
Epson salts & water Endothermic Photosynthesis Acedic Acid & Sodium Bicarbonate © Teachable . Some rights reserved.
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