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Agenda: Thermochemistry Heating & Cooling Curves – a review Graphing temperature change Phase Change Diagrams Why are some compounds liquids and gases at room temperatures ? Homework:
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Energy requirements for water Three formulas : specific heat Q = mC p ∆T heat of fusion Q= mH f heat of vaporization Q= mH v Heating Cooling Energy (heat) addedEnergy (heat) released:
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Review: Heating curve with heat formulas Scroll down http://www.kentchemistry.com/links/Matter/ HeatingCurve.htm http://www.kentchemistry.com/links/Matter/ HeatingCurve.htm
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Energy calculations related heating or cooling specific substances Specific heat (C p ) Latent heat Heat of fusion (H f ) Heat of vaporization (H v ) Use reference tables – values for each pure substance
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Heat calculations – 3 formulas Specific heat = heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of substance 1 °C Formula: Q = mC p ∆T Specific heat Specific for each pure substance Use reference tables
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Heat calculations – 3 formulas Heat of fusion - Amount of heat added to melt a substance Amount of heat released to freeze a substance Formula Q= mH f Specific for each pure substance Use reference tables
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Heat calculations – 3 formulas Heat of vaporization- Amount of heat added to boil a substance Amount of heat released to condense a substance Formula Q= mH v Specific for each pure substance Use reference tables
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Heat energy In a heat calculation problem, if the problem asks about melting/freezing you would multiply the mass times _____________________. heat of fusion heat of vaporization or specific heat In a heat calculation problem, if the problem asks about vaporizing/condensing of steam, you would multiply the mass times ________. Heat of fusion Heat of vaporization Specific heat In a heat calculation problem, if the problem asks about a change in temperature, you would multiply the mass times ___________________ times the change in temperature. Heat of fusion Heat of vaporization Specific heat
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Thermochemistry Problems related to water 1.How much heat is required to raise the temperature of 789 g of water from 25 o C to 70 o C? 2. How much heat is released when 432 g of water cools from 71 o C to 18 o C? 3. How many joules of heat are given off when 5.9 g of steam cools from 175 o C to 125 o C?
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4. How many joules does it take to melt 35 g of ice at 0 o C? 5. How much heat is released when 85 g of steam condense to liquid water? 6. How much heat is necessary to raise the temperature of 25 g of water from 10 o C to 60 o C? 7. How much heat is given off when 50 g of water at 0 o C freezes?
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How much energy is needed to heat water from a solid to a vapor? Graph the data – using most of the graph paper Time (when heat energy is added) Resulting temperature See Textbook
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What factors impact change? Intermolecular forces Energy Conditions: T, P, V, amount,
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Phase Diagrams: What is added to this diagram? Why?
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Phase diagrams http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLOPaJ 8lcr8&feature=endscreen&NR=1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLOPaJ 8lcr8&feature=endscreen&NR=1
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PHET States of Matter http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/stat es-of-matter http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/stat es-of-matter
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Phase Diagrams. Use the phase diagram for water below to answer the following questions. What is the state of water at 2 atm and 50 C? What phase change will occur if the temperature is lowered from 80 C to -5 C at 1 atm? You have ice at -10 C and 1 atm. What could you do in order cause the ice to sublime? Interpreting Phase Diagrams
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Interpreting a Phase Diagram of Water at varying pressures Example: 100 atm
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1)What is the normal melting point of this substance? ________ 3)What is the normal boiling point of this substance? ________ 4)What is the normal freezing point of this substance? ________ 5)If I had a quantity of this substance at a pressure of 1.25 atm and a temperature of 0 0 C and heated it until the temperature was 750 0 C, what phase transition(s) would occur? At what pressure(s) would they occur? 6)At what temperature do the gas and liquid phases become indistinguishable from each other?________ 7)If I had a quantity of this substance at a pressure of 0.25 atm and a temperature of -100 0 C, what phase change(s) would occur if I increased the pressure to 1.00 atm? At what temperature(s) would they occur?
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Water: Connecting Phase Diagram and Heating Curve
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Vapor Pressure – Physical Equilibrium The vapor pressure is the pressure measured when there is an equilibrium between the gas and liquid phases. The rates of condensation and vaporization are equal.
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Vapor pressure http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/liquid s/vpress.html http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/liquid s/vpress.html Discovery Ed video
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Resources for S, L, G http://www.kentchemistry.com/links/Matter/ HeatingCurve.htm
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How does the chemical composition of a substance impact whether it is a gas, liquid or solid at room temperature?
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Look at this list of gases. Make a conclusion related to the gases in terms of size and type of compound (bond type). Room Temperature
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Elements that exist as gases at 25 0 C and 1 atmosphere
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Factors that Impact State of Matter 1. Type of compound – Ionic, Covalent, Metallic 2. Shape 3. Size 4. Polarity Together impacts intermolecular forces
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Shapes of Molecules https://ed.ted.com/lessons/what-is-the- shape-of-a-molecule-george-zaidan-and- charles-morton https://ed.ted.com/lessons/what-is-the- shape-of-a-molecule-george-zaidan-and- charles-morton PHET simulation (?) http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/mol ecule-shapes http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/mol ecule-shapes
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Intermolecular Forces Impact state of matter for molecules Covalent Compounds Forces between molecules Not between individual atoms Much weaker than the bonds within a molecule (intramolecular bond) Much weaker than ionic, covalent & metallic bonds
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Intermolecular Forces Three Types Hydrogen Dipole – dipole London Dispersion (Van der Waals) Based on weak attraction between molecules partial negative – partial positive
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Polarity http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/mol ecule-polarity http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/mol ecule-polarity Use real molecules tab Molecular dipoles Electronegativity Electron density or electrostatic potential Note: VSEPR – valence shell electron pair repulsion impacts shape
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Types of Intermolecular Forces Strongest intermolecular force Hydrogen “ bond” (~ 10% of a covalent bond) Molecule must be polar (+ and – sides) H in one molecule is attracted to the N,O,F of another molecule Hydrogen Bond - bad choice of words – an attractive force, not a bond
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Hydrogen “bonds”: attraction between H with N, O, F
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Types of Intermolecular Forces Other intermolecular forces Dipole-dipole – all polar molecules (weaker) London dispersion forces – all molecules (weakest)
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Dipole-dipole Based on polarity of molecules Found with polar covalent compounds Use with elements other than H attracted to N, O or F
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London Dispersion Weakest Temporary polarity Based on movement of the electrons around the nucleus Impacts all molecules – non-polar and polar
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Why is water unique? Why does ice float on water? https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-does-ice- float-in-water-george-zaidan-and-charles- morton https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-does-ice- float-in-water-george-zaidan-and-charles- morton Hydrogen bonds -
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