Transcript
Page 1: Chemistry and Energy

How are they related?

Page 2: Chemistry and Energy

Energy Encountered Daily

Page 3: Chemistry and Energy

Is Heat Used or Released? Endothermic reactions used heat

from the surroundings Sweating Refrigeration

Exothermic heat releases heat to the surroundings Hot hands Combustion Exercise

Page 4: Chemistry and Energy

Endothermic Reactions

Decrease in kinetic energy decrease in temperature heat will transfer from the environment to the system resulting in a cooler environment

Absorbs heat from its surrounding. The system gains heat Positive value for q H = q = 0 Hproducts Hreactants

Page 5: Chemistry and Energy

Exothermic Reactions

Increase in kinetic energy increase in temperature of system heat released to the environment resulting in a hotter environment

Releases heat to its surroundings The system loses heat Negative value for q H = q = 0 Hproducts Hreactants

Page 6: Chemistry and Energy

Enthalpy

Heat content for systems at constant pressure

Symbol is H Terms heat and enthalpy are used

interchangeably for this course H = q = m C T

Heat moves from ________ to ___________.

Page 7: Chemistry and Energy

Law of Conservation of Energy

Energy is not lost or gained in a chemical reaction

 In a chemical reaction potential energy is transferred to kinetic energy

Page 8: Chemistry and Energy

Thermochemical Equations

An equation that includes the heat change

Example: write the thermochemical equation for this reaction CaO(s) + H2O(l) Ca(OH)2(s) H = -

65.2 kJ

CaO(s) + H2O(l) Ca(OH)2(s) + 65.2 kJ

Page 9: Chemistry and Energy

Stoichiometry and Thermochemistry

Tin metal can be extracted from its oxide according to the following reaction:

SnO2(s) + 4NO2(g) + 2H2O(l) + 192 kJ Sn(s) + 4HNO3(aq)

How much energy will be required to extract 59.5 grams of tin?

Page 10: Chemistry and Energy

How to solve

1. Use your stoichiometry2. Treat heat as a reactant or

productSnO2(s) + 4NO2(g) + 2H2O(l) +

192 kJ Sn(s) + 4HNO3(aq)59.5 g Sn 1 mol Sn 192 kJ 1 g Sn 1 mol Sn

Page 11: Chemistry and Energy

If an Object feels hot, it means it is undergoing a change with a H that is:

a. positiveb. negativec. whether the object feels hot

or not is unrelated to its Hd. I don’t know  

Page 12: Chemistry and Energy

If the object feels hot, it means it is undergoing:

a. an exothermic reactionb. an endothermic reactionc. whether it feels hot or not is

unrelated to whether it is undergoing an exothermic or an endothermic change

Page 13: Chemistry and Energy

How does ice melt?

Page 14: Chemistry and Energy

Molar Heat of Fusion

Heat absorbed by one mole of a substance during melting

Constant temperature Hfus H2O(s) H2O(l) H = 6.01

kJ/mol

Page 15: Chemistry and Energy

Molar Heat of Solidification Heat lost when 1 mole of a liquid

solidifies Temperature is constant Hsolid Hfus = -Hsolid

H2O(l) H2O(s) H = -6.01 kJ/mol

Page 16: Chemistry and Energy

Molar Heat of Vaporization Heat needed to vaporize 1 mole

of a liquid Hvap H2O(l) H2O(g) Hvap = 40.7

kJ/mol

Page 17: Chemistry and Energy

Molar Heat of Condensation Heat released when 1 mole of

vapor condenses Hcond

H2O(g) H2O(s) Hcond = -40.7 kJ/mol

Hvap = -Hcond

Page 18: Chemistry and Energy

Phase Change Diagram for Water

Page 19: Chemistry and Energy

Phase Change Diagram

Page 20: Chemistry and Energy

The House that Heats Itself http://www.sciencefriday.com/videos/

watch/10007

Page 21: Chemistry and Energy
Page 22: Chemistry and Energy

Calorimetry

Method used to determine the heat involved in a physical or chemical change.

Relies on the law of conservation of energy

Page 23: Chemistry and Energy

Calorimeter

Page 24: Chemistry and Energy

Simple Calorimeter

Page 25: Chemistry and Energy

Calorimetry Math Heat gained by the water = q Heat lost by the system = -q

mCT = q T = Tf –Ti , m = mass, C = specific heat

q gained by water = q lost by system q water = - q system  mCT = -mCT(mass H2O)(spec. heat H2O)(T H2O) = -

(mass sys)(spec. heat sys)(T sys)


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