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Thermochemistry. 16.1. Thermochemistry. study of the transfer of energy as heat V irtually every chemical reaction is accompanied by a change in energy. Chemical reactions usually absorb or release energy as heat.
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Thermochemistry 16.1
Thermochemistry • study of the transfer of energy as heat • Virtually every chemical reaction is accompanied by a change in energy. • Chemical reactions usually absorb or release energy as heat. • Thermochemistry: is the study of the transfers of energy as heat that accompany chemical reactions and physical changes.
Thermochemistry • Temperature: average kinetic energy of the particles in a sample of matter • K=273.15 + °C • 1 Joule= 1N·m=1kg·m2/s2 • Joule:is the SI unit of heat as well as all other forms of energy.
Heat • energy transferred between samples of matter because of a difference in their temperatures • Heat can be thought of as the energy transferred between samples of matter because of a difference in their temperatures. • Energy transferred as heat always moves spontaneously from matter at a higher temperature to matter at a lower temperature.
The direction of energy transfer is determined by the temperature differences between the objects within a system. The energy is transferred as heat from the hotter brass bar to the cooler water. • This energy transfer will continue until the bar and the water reach the same temperature.
Specific Heat • Specific heat: amount of energy required to raise the temperature of one gram of a substance by 1 °C • cp=specific heat • q=energy lost or gained (in J) • m=mass of sample (in g) • ΔT=change in temperature (in °C or K) • Energy transferred as heat always moves spontaneously from matter at a higher temperature to matter at a lower temperature. • Heat can be thought of as the energy transferred between samples of matter because of a difference in their temperatures. q=mcDT
Page 533 You need ALL these for HW • Other cp • Steel = 0.452 • P = 0.80 • Concrete = 0.75 • Wood = 2.00 • Ethanol = 2.5 Write these Additional 5 down in your notes. You need them for HW, too!
Enthalpy ΔH = H(products)-H (reactants) • An enthalpy change is the amount of energy absorbed or lost by a system as heat during a process at constant pressure. • The energy absorbed or released as heat during a chemical reaction at constant pressure is represented by ∆H. • The H is the symbol for a quantity called enthalpy.
ΔH = H(products)-H (reactants) 2H2 (g) + O2 (g) 2H2O (g) DH=-483.6 kJ/mol 2H2O (g) 2H2 (g) + O2 (g)DH= +483.6 kJ/mol exothermic endothermic
If R>P then the reaction is exothermic • If R<P then the reaction is endothermic EA curves and Reaction Types
Classwork • Specific Heat worksheet • Problems # 1, 4, 6, 7, 10 • Finish Worksheet Homework
Specific Heat WS Answers • 3,100 J • 15,000 J • 4,520 J • 6,270,000 J • 2.5, ethanol • 0.8, P • 0.25kg • 14kg • 22C or 22K • -1C or -1K • steel
Activation Energy 17.1
Activation energy • EA= activation energy • The energy required to begin a reaction
If R>P then the reaction is exothermic • If R<P then the reaction is endothermic EA curves and Reaction Types
Catalyst • Lowers the EA of a reaction, while not being consumed • Will remain After the reaction
Classwork Homework • Activation Energy Worksheets 1 and 2
Reaction Rate 17.2
Collision Theory • Reaction rate is a function of the collisions between molecules • For a chemical reaction to occur, molecules must collide with the correct • Orientation • Energy
Nature of Reactants • Inert or stable atoms or molecules are less likely to react simply because of their nature
Surface Area • Increased surface area allows for a greater reaction rate since more material is able to come into contact with other reactants
Temperature • Increased temperature increases the likelihood of collisions • It also increases the energy of the collisions
Concentration • Increased concentration increases the likelihood of collisions
Catalysts • Catalysts lower the energy required to get a reaction going • They are not used up in the process of the reaction
Collision Theory Worksheet • Reaction Rate Worksheet Classwork/Homework
Chemical Equilibrium Chapter 18
Reversible reactions • Chemical reactions in which products can reform into reactants • Endothermic in one direction, exothermic in the other direction • 2HgO2Hg + O2 • A + BC + D
Equilibrium • Occurs when the forward reaction and the reverse reaction occur at the same rate • Le Châtelier’s Principle: equilibrium is shifted in the direction that tends to release the stress on the system
Change in Pressure 3H2+ 1 N22 NH3 + 92kJ • (a) H2, N2, and NH3 are in equilibrium within a closed system. • (b) Addition of more N2 causes a stress on the initial equilibrium. • (c) The new equilibrium position for this system.
Change in Concentration • A + B C + D • By adding A or B, equilibrium will shift to increasing C and D • By adding C or D, equilibrium will shift to increasing A and B
Change in Temperature Recall that: • Endothermic (-) • – energy is absorbed • - Temperature decreases • Exothermic (+) • - energy is released • - temperature increases Energy is a Reactant!! Energy is a Product!!
Change in Temperature • Different temperatures can cause an equilibrium system to shift and seek a new equilibrium position.
Reactions that go to completion • Form a Gas 2. Form a Precipitate 3. Form a Slightly Ionized Product
Form a gas • Often move toward completion because the gas is naturally removed as it diffuses away unless it is trapped • H2CO3 H2O + CO2
Form a precipitate • Precipitate is insoluble (or it wouldn’t form) and is therefore removed from system shifting equilibrium
Slightly ionized • H+ (or H3O+)and OH- are usually removed from system, shifting equilibrium
Equilibrium Constant • Keq = Products over reactants, when coefficients become exponents
Equilibrium Constant A 2B + C Write the equilibrium constant. Keq = [B]2[C] [A]
Classwork/Homework • Le Châtelier’s Principle Worksheet