Title: Thermochemistry
1Thermochemistry
2Section 1 The Nature of Energy
- Energy is the capacity to do work or produce heat.
Law of Conservation of Energy
Total energy of the universe is constant. Energy
lost Energy gained by something else.
Potential Energy energy due to position
mgh Kinetic Energy energy of motion ½ mv2
3Heat is a transfer of energy
- System vs Surroundings
- State Function a property that depends only on
the present state of the systemnot on the
changes it has or will experience. - Internal energy
- Pressure
- Volume
- Enthalpy
System
Surroundings
4Thermodynamic Quantities
- Consist of two parts
- 1) the number indicates how much
- 2) the sign- indicates direction of flow
HEAT q
WORK w
ENTHALPY H
Internal Energy E
Negative Values flow out of system Positive
Values Flow into system
5Exothermic and Endothermic
- Exothermic Reaction
- Feels hot
- Heat transferred to surroundings (lost by
system) - Negative enthalpy and heat values
- Endothermic Reaction
- Feels cold
- Heat transferred to system (gained by system)
- Positive enthalpy and heat values
6PV Work
- Work (w) Forcedisplacement
- W F d F Dh
- W P A Dh
P Force/Area
When pressure of system does not change W -PDV
VOLUME!
7Try Me Problem
- A balloon is inflated to its maximum capacity by
heating. If the volume changes from 4.0 x 106L
to 4.5 x 106L by addition of 1.3 x 108J energy as
heat. Assuming that the balloon expands against
constant 1.0 atm pressure. Calculate Internal
Energy. - (1 Latm 101.3 J)
8Section 2 Enthalpy Calorimetry
- Specific/Molar Heat of Combustion
- q mcDT q ncDT
- -The heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 g
(or 1 mol) of substance 1 degree K.
9How is enthalpy different?
- Enthalpy, H, is the amount of energy capable of
doing work in a system. - The amount of energy contained within the bonds
of chemicals involved in the system. - H E PV
Answer Now
Use the equation above and the total internal
energy equation to determine an
alternate equation for enthalpy
10A Third Way to find DHrxn
- DHrxn DHproducts DHreactants
- How do you measure this stuff?
- CALORIMETRY!
11Section 3 Hesss Law
- Enthalpy is a state function
- The value will be the same regardless of how many
steps are needed to complete the reaction.
Hesss Law States The enthalpies of individual
steps in a reaction mechanism can be added
together to calculate the enthalpy of the overall
reaction.
12Fundamentals for Applying Hesss Law
- Reverse the reaction, reverse the sign on
enthalpy. - Multiply the reaction by a coefficient, multiply
the enthalpy by the same coefficient. - Add the reactions together, add the enthalpies
together.
why?
13Try Me!
- Overall N2O4(g)gtN2(g) 2O2(g)
- Reaction Mechanism
- NO2(g) ? ½ N2(g) O2(g) H-84.75 kJ
- 2NO2(g) ? N2O4(g) H-145.5 kJ
This is fun! Lets do some more!
14Section 4 Enthalpies of Formation
- The enthalpy of formation (Hfo) for an element in
its standard state is ZERO.
Standard State is at 1 atm and 25oC
The more negative the value of Hfo, the more
stable the compound.
DHrxn Snp)DHfoprod)-Snp(DHforct)
15Sample Problems
- Try Me 1
- Find the enthalpy for the reaction
- 4NH3(g) HCl(l) ? 4NH4Cl(s)
- Try Me 2
- Find the enthalpy for the reaction
- 2Al(s) Fe2O3(s) ? Al2O3(s) 2Fe(s)