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General chemistry
Unit 2: Characteristics of Matter and Calculations in chem
Energy Changes in Chemical Reactions
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All chemical reactions exhibit the two fundamental laws: the law of
conservation of mass
and the law of
conservation of energy.
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Energy
The
capacity
to do
work
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Forms of
energy
Kinetic
energy
Thermal
energy
Chemical
energy
Potential
energy
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Energy can be
transformed
from one
form
to
another.
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Energy
can neither be
created
nor
destroyed.
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The total quantity of
energy
in
the
universe is
assumed constant.
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Heat
The
transfer
of
thermal energy
between two bodies that are at
different temperatures
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Thermochemistry
The study of
heat change
in
chemical reactions
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Types of systems
Open
Closed
Isolated
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Open system
Can exchange
mass
and
energy
with its
surroundings
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Closed system
Allows the
transfer
of
energy
(
heat
) but not
mass
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Isolated system
Does not allow the
transfer
of either
mass
or
energy
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The
combustion
of
hydrogen
gas in
oxygen
Releases
considerable
amount of
energy
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Combustion of hydrogen
2H2(g)
+
O2(g)
à
2H2O(l)
+
energy
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Exothermic process
A process that
gives off heat
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Decomposition of mercury (II) oxide
energy +
2HgO(s)
à
2Hg(l)
+
O2(g)
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Endothermic process
Heat
has to be
supplied
to the
system
by the
surroundings
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Calorimeter
A closed container designed specifically to measure
heat
changes
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Calorimetry
The measurement of
heat
changes
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Specific heat
(s)
The amount of
heat
required to
raise
the
temperature
of
one gram
of the
substance
by
one degree Celsius
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Heat capacity
(C)
The amount of
heat
required to raise the
temperature
of a given quantity of the substance by
one degree Celsius
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Specific heat
has the units
J/g·°C.
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Heat capacity
has the units
J/°C.
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Path function
Heat
(
q
) is a
path function
, which values are
dependent
on the
path taken
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Calculating heat change
1.
q
=
msΔt
2. q
=
CΔt
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Δt
The
temperature
change
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The sign convention for q is
positive
for
endothermic
process and
negative
for
exothermic
process.
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Heat of combustion
is usually measured by placing a known mass of a compound in a steel container called a
constant-volume bomb calorimeter.
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The
closed bomb
is immersed in a known amount of
water
and the sample is ignited
electrically.
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The
heat
produced by the
combustion reaction
can be calculated accurately by recording the
rise
in
temperature
of the
water.
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The
heat
given off by the sample is absorbed by the
water
and the
bomb.
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qsystem
The
heat change
of the system
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qsystem =
0
qcal
+
qrxn
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The quantity of Ccal is
calibrated
by
burning
a substance with an
accurately
known
heat
of
combustion.
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Constant-pressure
calorimeter is used to determine the
heat
changes for
noncombustion
reactions.
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Heat changes for the process (qrxn) is equal to the
enthalpy change
(
ΔH
).
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Enthalpy
(H)
Defined by the equation
H = E + PV
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ΔH is
positive
for
endothermic
processes and
negative
for
exothermic
processes.
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ΔH value does not refer to a
particular reactant
or
product
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Quoted ΔH value refers to
all the reacting species
in
molar quantities
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