1 / 9

Heat of Fusion

Heat of Fusion. Hfus = 80 cal/g = 334 J/g. Latent Heat. Take 1 kg of water from –10 o C up to 150 o C we can plot temperature rise against absorbed heat. steam (water vapor). 100 C. ice. water. 0 C. -10 C. H f = 80 cal/g. H v = 540 cal/g. Q heat absorbed.

duane
Download Presentation

Heat of Fusion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Heat of Fusion

  2. Hfus = 80 cal/g = 334 J/g

  3. Latent Heat • Take 1 kg of water from –10 oC up to 150 oC we can plot temperature rise against absorbed heat steam (water vapor) 100 C ice water 0 C -10 C Hf = 80 cal/g Hv = 540 cal/g Q heat absorbed Hf is the heat of fusion Hv is the heat of vaporization

  4. LAW OF CONSERVATION OF ENERGY Energy cannot be created or destroyed.

  5. Law of Conservation of Energy The amount of energy you must give up from one system, to get a particular thing to happen to another system, is always the same. Energy lost in one place Energy gained somewhere else =

  6. Exothermic and Endothermic Processes • Exothermic • process that releases energy to the surroundings • Endothermic (melting) • process that absorbs energy from the surroundings • (need heat to make the reaction happen) • Examples

  7. Heat vs Temperature Heat energy is the collective random motion of molecules, and temperature is a measure of how fast the molecules are moving.

  8. Heating Curve for Water E. Steam abosrbs heat & increases temp. D. Water boils & absorbs latent heat of vaporization vaporization E gas D 100 condensation C C. Rise in Temp liquid water absorbs heat liquid melting Temperature (oC) B 0 B. Absorption of Latent (hidden) Heat A freezing solid A. Rise in Temp as ice absorbs Heat added LeMay Jr, Beall, Robblee, Brower, Chemistry Connections to Our Changing World , 1996, page 487

More Related