Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Lecture 304/18/07
2
Solid/Liquid Heat of fusion Solid Liquid Endothermic ice Water (333 J/g or 6 KJ/mol) Heat of crystallization Liquid Solid Exothermic Water ice (- 333 J/g or - 6 KJ/mol)
3
Liquid/Gas Heat of vaporization Liquid Gas Endothermic water water vapor (40.7 KJ/mol) Heat of condensation Gas Liquid Exothermic vapor Water (- 40.7 KJ/mol)
4
Solid/Gas Heat of sublimation Solid Gas Endothermic Heat of deposition Gas Solid Exothermic
5
What is the minimum amount of ice at 0 °C that must be added to 340 mL of water to cool it from 20.5°C to 0°C?
6
A rainstorm deposits 2.5 x 10 10 kg of rain. Calculate the quantity of thermal energy in joules transferred when this much rain forms. (∆H cond = - 40.7 KJ/mol) Exothermic or endothermic?
7
1 st Law of Thermodynamics revisited ∆E = q + w Change in Energy content heat work
8
work (w) = - F x d w = - (P x A) x d w = - P∆V if ∆V = 0, then no work
9
State function property of a system whose value depends on the final and initial states, but not the path driving to Mt Washington route taken vs. altitude change ∆E is a state function q and w are not
10
Change in Enthalpy (∆H or q p ) equals the heat gained or lost at constant pressure ∆E = q p + w ∆E = ∆H + (-P∆V) ∆H = ∆E + P∆V
11
∆E vs. ∆H Reactions that don’t involve gases 2KOH (aq) + H 2 SO 4 (aq) K 2 SO 4 (aq) + 2H 2 O (l) ∆V ≈ 0, so ∆E ≈ ∆H Reactions in which the moles of gas does not change N 2 (g) + O 2 (g) 2NO (g) ∆V = 0, so ∆E = ∆H Reactions in which the moles of gas does change 2H 2 (g) + O 2 (g) 2H 2 O (g) ∆V > 0, but often P∆V << ∆H, thus ∆E ≈ ∆H
12
Enthalpy is an extensive property Magnitude is proportional to amount of reactants consumed H 2 (g) + ½ O 2 (g) H 2 O (g) ∆H = -241.8 KJ 2H 2 (g) + O 2 (g) 2H 2 O (g) ∆H = -483.6 KJ Enthalpy change for a reaction is equal in magnitude (but opposite in sign) for a reverse reaction H 2 (g) + ½ O 2 (g) H 2 O (g) ∆H = -241.8 KJ H 2 O (g) H 2 (g) + ½ O 2 (g) ∆H = 241.8 KJ Enthalpy change for a reaction depends on the state of reactants and products H 2 O (l) H 2 O (g) ∆H = 88 KJ
13
Constant pressure calorimetry (coffee cup calorimetry) heat lost = heat gained Measure change in temperature of water
14
Constant pressure calorimetry (coffee cup calorimetry) heat lost = heat gained Measure change in temperature of water 10 g of Cu at 188 °C is added to 150 mL of water in a coffee cup calorimeter and the temperature of water changes from 25 °C to 26 °C. Determine the specific heat capacity of copper.
15
Bomb calorimetry Mainly for combustion experiments ∆V = 0 q rxn + q bomb + q water = 0 combustion chamber
16
Bomb calorimetry Mainly for combustion experiments ∆V = 0 q rxn + q bomb + q water = 0 Often combine q bomb + q water into 1 calorimeter term with q cal = C cal ∆T combustion chamber
17
Bomb calorimeter math q rxn + q bomb + q water = 0 q rxn + C bomb ∆T + C water m water ∆T = 0 In the lab: q rxn + q calorimeter = 0 q calorimeter = q bomb + q water q rxn + C calorimeter ∆T = 0 empirically determined same value On the exam
18
Bond enthalpies
19
Enthalpies of formation
20
Hess’ Law
21
Example A hot plate is used to heat two 50-mL beakers at the same constant rate. One beaker contains 20.0 grams of graphite (C=0.79 J/g-K) and one contains 10 grams of ethanol (2.46 J/g-K). Which has a higher temperature after 3 minutes of heating?
22
Standard heat of reaction (∆H° rxn ) Same standard conditions as before: 1 atm for gas 1 M for aqueous solutions 298 K For pure substance – usually the most stable form of the substance at those conditions
23
Standard heat of formation (∆H° f ) Enthalpy change for the formation of a substance from its elements at standard state Na(s) + ½ Cl 2 (g) NaCl (s) ∆H° f = -411.1 kJ Three points An element in its standard state has a ∆H° f = 0 ∆H° f = 0 for Na(s), but ∆H° f = 107.8 KJ/mol for Na(g) Most compounds have a negative ∆H° f formation reaction is not necessarily the one done in lab
24
Using ∆H° f to get ∆H° rxn 2 ways to look at the problem Calculate ∆H° rxn for: C 3 H 8 (g) + 5 O 2 3 CO 2 (g) + 4 H 2 O (l) Given: 3 C(s) + 4 H 2 (g) C 3 H 8 (g) ∆H° f = -103.85 KJ/mol C(s) + O 2 (g) CO 2 (g) ∆H° f = -393.5 KJ/mol O 2 (g) + 2 H 2 (g) 2H 2 O (l) ∆H° f = -285.8 KJ/mol
25
Using Hess’s Law and ∆H° f to get ∆H° rxn 1 st way: Hess’s Law C 3 H 8 (g) + 5 O 2 3 CO 2 (g) + 4 H 2 O (l) ∆H° rxn = ∆H 1 + ∆H 2 + ∆H 3 Reverse 1 st equation: C 3 H 8 (g) 3 C(s) + 4 H 2 (g) ∆H 1 = - ∆H° f = 103.85 KJ Multiply 2 nd equation by 3: 3C(s) + 3O 2 (g) 3CO 2 (g) ∆H 2 = 3x∆H° f = -1180.5 KJ Multiply 3 rd equation by 2: 2O 2 (g) + 4 H 2 (g) 4H 2 O (l) ∆H 2 = 2x∆H° f = -571.6 KJ ∆H° rxn = (103.85 KJ) + (-1180.5 KJ) + (-571.6 KJ) ∆H° rxn = -1648.25 KJ
26
Using ∆H° f to get ∆H° rxn 2 nd way C 3 H 8 (g) + 5 O 2 3 CO 2 (g) + 4 H 2 O (l) ∆H° rxn = Σn ∆H° f (products) - Σn ∆H° f (reactants) ∆H° rxn = [3x(-393.5 KJ/mol) + 2x(-285.8 KJ/mol)] – [(-103.85 KJ/mol) + 0] ∆H° rxn = [-1752.1 KJ] – [-103.85 KJ] ∆H° rxn = -1648.25 KJ
27
Spontaneity Some thought that ∆H could predict spontaneity Sounds great BUT.....
28
Spontaneity Some thought that ∆H could predict spontaneity Exothermic – spontaneous Endothermic – non-spontaneous Sounds great BUT some things spontaneous at ∆H > 0 Melting Dissolution Expansion of a gas into a vacuum Heat transfer Clearly enthalpy not the whole story
29
Entropy (Measurement of disorder) Related to number of microstates ∆S universe = ∆S system + ∆S surroundings 2 nd Law of Thermodynamics Entropy of the universe increases with spontaneous reactions Reversible reactions vs. Irreversible reaction
30
Standard heat of formation (∆H° f ) Enthalpy change for the formation of a substance from its elements at standard state Na(s) + ½ Cl 2 (g) NaCl (s) ∆H° f = -411.1 kJ Key points
31
Entropy (Measurement of disorder) Related to number of microstates S = klnW ∆S universe = ∆S system + ∆S surroundings 2 nd Law of Thermodynamics Entropy of the universe increases with spontaneous reactions Reversible reactions ∆S universe = ∆S system + ∆S surroundings = 0 Can be restored to the original state by exactly reversing the change Each step is at equilibrium Irreversible reaction ∆S universe = ∆S system + ∆S surroundings > 0 Original state can not be restored by reversing path spontaneous
32
3 rd Law of thermodynamics S = O at O K S° - entropy gained by converting it from a perfect crystal at 0 K to standard state conditions
33
3 rd Law of thermodynamics S = O at O K S° - entropy gained by converting it from a perfect crystal at 0 K to standard state conditions ∆S° = ΣS°(products) - ΣS°(reactants)
34
Example Sulfur (2.56 g) was burned in a bomb calorimeter with excess O 2. The temperature increased from 21.25 ºC to 26.72 ºC. The bomb had a heat capacity of 923 J/ºC and the calorimeter contained 815 g of water. Calculate the heat evolved per mole of SO 2 formed. S(s) + O 2 (g) SO 2 (g)
35
Standard heat of reaction (∆H° rxn ) Same standard conditions as before:
36
Using ∆H° f to get ∆H° rxn 2 ways to look at the problem Calculate ∆H° rxn for: C 3 H 8 (g) + 5 O 2 3 CO 2 (g) + 4 H 2 O (l) Given: 3 C(s) + 4 H 2 (g) C 3 H 8 (g) ∆H° f = -103.85 KJ/mol C(s) + O 2 (g) CO 2 (g) ∆H° f = -393.5 KJ/mol O 2 (g) + 2 H 2 (g) 2H 2 O (l) ∆H° f = -285.8 KJ/mol
37
Degrees of freedom translational motion molecules in gas > liquid > solid vibrational motion movement of a atom inside a molecule rotational motion rotation of a molecule
38
Entropy trends Entropy increases: with more complex molecules with dissolution of pure gases/liquids/solids with increasing temperature with increasing volume with increasing # moles of gases
39
Which has higher entropy? dry ice orCO 2 liquid water at 25°Corliquid water at 50°C pure Al 2 O 3 (s)orAl 2 O 3 with some Al 2+ replaced with Cr 3+ 1 mole of N 2 at 1 atmor1 mol of N 2 at 10 atm CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 (g)or CH 3 CH 3 (g)
40
Is the reaction spontaneous?
41
Gibbs Free Energy ( ∆G) ∆G° = ∆H° - T∆S° ∆G = ∆H - T∆S ∆G° = Σn∆G f ° (products) - Σn∆G f ° (reactants)
42
Gibbs Free Energy ∆G = ∆H - T∆S ∆H∆S-T∆S∆G spontaneous? example -+ 2O 3 (g) 3O 2 (g) +- 3O 2 (g) 2O 3 (g) -- H 2 O (l) H 2 O (s) ++ H 2 O (s) H 2 O (l)
43
Gibbs Free Energy (∆G) and equilibrium R = 8.314 J/mol-K
45
Example A hot plate is used to heat two 50-mL beakers at the same constant rate. One beaker contains 20.0 grams of graphite (C=0.79 J/g-K) and one contains 10 grams of ethanol (2.46 J/g-K). Which has a higher temperature after 3 minutes of heating?
46
Example 59.8 J are required to change the temperature of 25.0 g of ethylene glycol by 1 K. What is the specific heat capacity of ethylene glycol?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.