Title: Energy: Hard Work
1(No Transcript)
2Energy Hard Work Hot Stuff
- Energy is the ability to do work.
- Work is done when movement occurs against a
restraining force, and it is equal to the force
multiplied by the distance over which the motion
occurs. - Heat is that which flows from a warmer to a
cooler substance - Temperature is a property that determines the
direction of heat flow. When two bodies are in
contact, heat always flows from the object with a
higher temperature to the one with lower
temperature.
3Energy Hard Work Hot Stuff
- Heat is a consequence of motion at the molecular
level. When matter, for example liquid water in a
pan, absorbs heat, its molecules move more
rapidly. - Temperature is a statistical measure of the
average speed of that motion. Hence, temperature
rises as the amount of heat energy is a body
increases.
4Energy Hard Work Hot Stuff
- Units of energy are termed the Joule (J).
- Calories are also used as a measure of energy.
- 1cal 4.184J
- 1Cal 1kcal 1000 cal
- 1Cal 4184J
5Your Turn
- Convert the 425 kcal released when a donut is
metabolized to joules. Then calculate the number
of books you could lift to a shelf 6 feet off the
floor with that amount of energy. (It takes 1J of
energy to lift a book 4 inches.)
6Your Turn
- A 12 oz can of a soft drink has an energy
equivalent of 92kcal. Assume that you use this
energy to lift concrete blocks that weigh 22lb
(10kg) each. How many of these blocks could you
lift to a height of 4 feet with this quantity of
energy? (It takes 10J of energy to lift a book 4
inches.)
7Energy Conservation and Consumption
- Strictly speaking, energy is not consumed.
- Law of Conservation of Energy or the First Law of
Thermodynamics assures us of this. - The energy in the universe is constant.
- However, energy sources like coal, oil, natural
gas are consumed. - The U.S. and Canada use more fossil fuel than any
nation at 95 million kcal.
8Energy Conservation and Consumption
- Graphs like on ICT show that the worlds reliance
and usage of fossil fuel is growing
exponentially. - We are using 5 times as much fossil fuels in 2000
than we did in the 1950s. - Our main sources of energy are oil, natural gas,
coal, nuclear power and hydropower, geothermal,
wind and solar power in that order.
9Consider This
- Imagine that you are put in a time machine and
transported 200 years into the future. You become
an instant celebrity. The talk show host of the
day invites you in to be interviewed. The first
question is How could the people of your century
feel justified in using up so much of the worlds
store of non-renewable resources such as oil and
coal? What is your answer?
10Zero Talking on this Activity
- Get in groups of 32 min
- Give your essay to the person to the right for
them to read10 sec - Read the article that you now have and respond to
them in another short paragraph2 min - Pass your paper to the right again10 sec
- Read the article and the response and write a
response of your own commenting on the original
and the response2 min - Give the paper back to the original author2 min
- Read the responses to your essay2 min
- Discuss your papers and responses with each
other2 min
11Energy Where from and How Much?
- At a time when the nation is seeking new sources
of energy, it is reasonable to ask what is it
that makes some substances such as coal, oil or
wood usable as fuels, while many others are not. - To find the answer, we must consider the
properties of fuels and the means by which energy
is released from them.
12Energy Where from and How Much?
- The most common energy-generating chemical
reaction is burning or combustion. - Combustion is the combination of the fuel with
oxygen to form CO2, H2O and energy. - The stored energy (potential energy) of the
reactants is more than the stored energy of the
products, so the 1st Law of Thermodynamics tells
us that energy must be given off (usually as
heat).
13Energy Where from and How Much?
CH4 O2 ? CO2 H2O Energy
- The above reaction is exothermic.
- This means that energy was given off as the
reactants broke bonds and reformed bonds to make
products. - Endothermic reactions are those that need energy
to be added to the reactants in order to turn
into products.
14Energy Where from and How Much?
- The amount of heat energy produced by a reaction
such as the previous can be calculated using a
calorimeter. - The amount of heat generated depends on the
amount of fuel burned. - Heat of combustion is the quantity of heat energy
evolved when a specified amount of a substance
burns in oxygen. (kJ/mole or equivalents)
15Energy Where from and How Much?
- If the heat of combustion of methane is
determined by calorimetry to be 802 kJ/mole, it
means that every mole of methane emits 802kJ of
energy. - We can use factor label to determine that the
amount of energy given off per gram is 52kJ/g. - The fact that heat is evolved signals that there
is a decrease in the energy of the chemical
system during the reaction.
16Energy Where from and How Much?
- The fact that heat is evolved signals that there
is a decrease in the energy of the chemical
system during the reaction. - So, the energy change is reported as
-802kJ/mole.
17Energy Where from and How Much?
- But where does the energy come from? We have
discussed that energy is released during a
reaction such as this, and that the reactants
have more energy than the products, but where
does the energy come form? - The answer is found in the molecular structures
of the compounds
18Today
- Pick up more notes at desk nearest door.
- WHAT!? MORE NOTES?!
- Yes, more notes
- Get out a sheet of paper, periodic table,
pen/pencil, and a calculator for the graded quiz.
- QUIZ?!
- Yes, a graded quiz.
- GRADED QUIZ?! THIS STINKS!Yes, I know.
19Todays Graded Quiz CheckAbsolutely no talking
or asking questionsif you are talking you will
get no credit for this graded quiz.
- Define electronegativity (?).
- Which has a higher ?,
- Ba or O
- Cl or F
- N or C
- Draw NF3 and check the formal charges.
- List two units to measure heat.
- What does it mean to say the heat of combustion
of methane is -802kJ/mol?
20Final Quiz Question
- According to the information given to you, the
heat of combustion of methane is 802kJ/mole.
Methane is usually sold by the standard cubic
foot (SCF). One SCF contains 1.25moles of CH4.
Calculate the energy (in kJ) that would be
released by burning 15 SCF of methane. (Hint
this is a factor label problem)
21Energy Where from and How Much?
Write the balanced equation for the combustion of
methane (CH4).
Draw all the molecules from this equation.
O
H
H
H
C
H
H
OO
OCO
?
OO
O
H
H
H
- Bond breaking is endothermicneed energy to tear
away atoms. - Bond forming is exothermic.
22Energy Where from and How Much?
O
H
H
H
C
H
H
OO
OCO
?
OO
O
H
H
H
- For this reaction to take place, 4 C-H bonds and
2 OO bonds are broken and 2 CO and 4 O-H bonds
are formed.
23Calculating Energy Changes in Chemical Reactions
- Bond energy is the amount of energy that must be
absorbed to break a specific chemical bond. - The more bonds broken, the more energy it takes.
- All values in the table are given in kJ/mole and
are given a positive sign. - Energy used to break bonds is given () and
energy given off is given (-).
24Calculating Energy Changes in Chemical Reactions
- Breaking Bonds (endo)
- 4 C-H bonds 411kJ 1644kJ
- 2 OO bonds 494kJ 988kJ
- Total energy absorbed 2632kJ
- Making Bonds (exo)
- 2 CO bonds -799kJ -1598kJ
- 4 H-O bonds -459kJ -1836kJ
- Total energy released -3434kJ
- Net energy -802kJ (released)
25More Funner Way
- ?Hºrxn (S bonds broken) (S bonds formed)
Sum of
Heat of the reaction at standard conditions
26You Try
- Determine the heat of combustion of one mole of
propane (C3H8). - Acetone (H3CCOCH3) can be converted to isopropyl
alcohol (H3CHCOHCH3) by reacting it with H2 gas.
Calculate the heat change of this reaction. - Oxygen difluoride reacts with water to form
oxygen and hydrofluoric acid. If the ?Hºrxn is
-318kJ/mole, what is the bond dissociation energy
associated with an OF bond? - How much energy is given off when 150mL of
ethanol (C2H5OH) is burned on a desk? (Density
0.85g/mL)
27You Try
- How much energy is given off when 100g of methane
reacts with oxygen?
28Hesss Law
- Hess noticed that heat change was a state
functionwhich means - That it doesnt matter the path you take to get
to the end as long as you get to the end. - A state function is like going to the baseball
field. - There are many paths that you can take to get to
the fieldbut the displacement of your body from
this spot to the field is the same.
29Hesss Law
BB Field
U
30Hesss Law
- In all cases, you ended up about 500 feet from
where you started. - Hess didnt care about the path you took as long
as you ended up in the same place. - He took this idea into the chemistry world.
- He stated in going from a particular set of
reactants to a particular set of products, the
change in enthalpy (H) is the same whether the
reaction took place in one step or a series of
steps.
31Hesss Law
- N2(g) 2O2(g)? 2NO2(g) ?H1 68kJ
- This shows the reaction in one step.
- But the reaction can be thought of as occurring
in 2 distinct steps - N2(g) O2(g) ? 2NO(g) ?H2 180kJ
- 2NO(g) O2(g) ? 2NO2(g) ?H3 -112kJ
- N2(g) 2O2(g)? 2NO2(g) ?H1 68kJ
32Hesss Law
- Often we will know the ?H of a reaction or we can
use calorimetry to get it. - But sometimes we are unable to use any means to
calculate itother than Hesss Law.
33Hesss Law
- For example it is too difficult to use
calorimetry to calculate ?H of diborane (B2H6).
So we use Hesss Law and some reactions that we
can determine ?H for. - 2B (s) 3H2 (g) ? B2H6 (g)
- We then use the following data
- 2B (s) 3/2O2 (g) ? B2O3 (s) ?H -1273kJ
- B2H6 (g) 3O2 (g) ? B2O3 (s) 3H2O (g) ?H
-2035kJ - H2 (g) ½ O2 (g) ? H2O (l) ?H -286kJ
- H2O (l) ? H2O (g) ?H 44kJ
34All you!
- Given the following data
- 2O3 (g) ? 3O2 (g) ?H -427kJ
- O2 (g) ? 2O(g) ?H 495kJ
- NO(g) O3(g) ? NO2(g) O2 (g) ?H -199kJ
- Calculate H for this reaction
- NO(g) O(g) ? NO2(g)
35Getting a Reaction Started Activation Energy
- CH4 O2 ? CO2 H2O energy
- What happens when gas like methane is pumped into
a room with oxygen? - Nothing.
- Just because 2 chemicals are in contact with each
other does not mean that a reaction will occur
even if it is exothermic. - A spark or a flame is needed to start the
reaction and get the methane to burn in oxygen.
36Getting a Reaction Started Activation Energy
- The spark or flame supplies the energy needed to
jumpstart the reactioncalled activation energy.
37Energy
Activation Energy
Energy of Reactants
-?H
Energy of Products
38Getting a Reaction Started Activation Energy
- The bigger the hill, the slower or less likely
the reaction will take place. - The lower the hill, the faster the reaction will
take place. - Some possible fuels have too high of Ea and are
not useful and some have to low of a Ea and are
dangerous.
39Other Ways to get a Reaction to Go!
- Grinding up the fuel (coal) which increases the
surface area will speed up the reaction. - Increasing the temperature of the fuel mixture
will increase the rate of the reaction as well.
40Changing Gears from Reactions
- We have been talking about the heat gained or
lost during a chemical reaction and it has been a
load of fun. - Now we are going to look at how heat is gained or
lost when we look at the physical changes of
melting, boiling and temperature change.
41Today
- If you missed yesterday copy this website.
- The answers are due on Monday.
- http//www.mrfischer.com/wp-content/uploads/23-the
rmwebquestques.pdf - By Monday BONUS points on Quest possible.
- Bring empty and clean 2L bottles get 1 added to
quest grade (Max 5) - Bring 1L bottle of vegetable oil (5)
42Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- If ice turns into water, what is needed?
- If water turns into vapor, what is needed?
- If the temperature of water increases, what is
needed? - HEAT!!!!
mass
q mCp?T
Change in temperature
?T Tf - Ti
heat
Specific heat
Amount of heat needed to increase the temp of 1g
of a substance by 1ºC
43Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- Specific heat (Cp) is different for every
substance and it is different for each phase of a
given substance. - Cp ice 2.02 J/gºC
- Cp water 4.2 J/gºC
- Cp vapor 2.06 J/gºC
- ExHow much heat is needed to raise the
temperature of 150g of water from 2.0ºC to 93ºC?
44Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- If ice is melted, heat is needed, but we dont
look at the temperature. - Energy added is used to stretch bonds not make
the particles move faster (T). - Types of bonds
- Intra-molecularatoms are held together inside a
molecule. - Inter-molecularmolecules are held together in a
substance.
45Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- The equation we need to determine the heat
necessary to melt a given amount of solid is
mass
q m?Hfus
heat
Heat of Fusion
Amount of heat needed to melt 1g of a solid
46Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- Heat of fusion (?Hfus) is different for every
substance. - ?Hfus ice 330 J/g
- ExHow much heat is needed to melt 150g of ice?
47Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- If water is boiled, heat is needed, but we dont
look at the temperature. - Energy added is used to break bonds not make the
particles move faster (T).
48Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- The equation we need to determine the heat
necessary to boil a given amount of liquid is
mass
q m?Hvap
heat
Heat of Vaporization
Amount of heat needed to boil 1g of a liquid
49Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- Heat of vaporization (?Hvap) is different for
every substance. - ?Hvap water 2260 J/g
- ExHow much heat is needed to boil 150g of water?
50Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
Add heat boil q m?Hvap
G
Add heat and T incq mCp?T
100ºC
Add heat melt q m?Hfus
T (ºC)
L
Add heat and T incq mCp?T
0ºC
S
Add heat and T incq mCp?T
Heat (q in Joules)
51Try em!
Ask this question is the substance changing
temperature or changing phase?
If it is changing temperature, which eqn works?
If it is changing phase, which eqn works?
- How much heat is absorbed by a 6.00g piece of
-13.0ºC ice cube when it is heated to 0.0ºC? - 160J
- How much energy does it take to melt the 6.00g
ice cube if it is at its melting point? - 1980J
- How much energy is absorbed by 6.00g of liquid
water at 0.0ºC to bring it to waters boiling
point? - 2500J
- How much energy does it take to turn 6.00g of
liquid water at 100.0ºC to steam? - 13600J
- How much energy is needed to take 6.00g of steam
at 100.0ºC to steam at 120ºC? - 250J
52OK...try this
- How much heat is needed to turn ice at -11ºC into
water at 55ºC?
53Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- If a piece of hot metal is dropped in a beaker of
cool water, what happens to the temperature of
the metal? The water? - So, if the water absorbs 100kJ of energy the
metal loses - 100kJ of energy.
- The metals temperature drops.
54Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- So, the heat lost by an object is gained by
another object. - Heat lost -q
- Heat gained q
- So, for the hot metal/cool water example, the
heat gained by the water (qwater) equals the
heat lost by the metal (qm). - qwater -qm
- qwater qm 0
55Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- If a piece of ice melts, where does the heat come
from? - Something outside of the ice cube.
- If we place and ice cube in a glass of Kool-Aid
what supplies the heat to melt the ice? - Mostly the Kool-Aid.
- So, if the ice absorbs 100kJ of energy the
Kool-Aid loses - 100kJ of energy.
- The Kool-Aids temperature drops.
56Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- What if we have a 55.0g of a piece of metal, say
iron, at 99.8ºC and we place it in a 225g of
water at 21.0ºC.What is the specific heat of the
metal if the final temperature of the water and
Fe is 23ºC?
57Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- Heat lost by iron is qFe
- Heat gained by water is qH2O
- -qFe qH2O
- qFe qH2O 0
- What happens to the iron as heat is lost?
- Temperature drops.
- What equation do we use for temperature change?
- q mCp?T
58Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- What happens to the water as heat is gained?
- Temperature rises.
- What equation do we use for temperature change?
- q mCp?T
- So we can rewrite the previous eqn as
- (mCp ?T)Fe (mCp ?T)H2O 0
59Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- (mCp?T)Fe (mCp ?T)H2O 0
- (55.0g)(X)(76.8ºC) (225g)(4.2J/gºC)(2.0ºC) 0
- -4224g ºC X 1890J 0
- -4224g ºC X -1890J
- X -1890J / -4224g ºC
- 0.448 J/gºC
60Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- Another example
- What is the minimum amount of ice at 0ºC that
must be added to the contents of a 340. mL glass
of Kool-Aid to cool it from 20.5ºC to 0.0ºC.
Assume Cp of Kool-Aid is the same as liquid water
and that no heat is gained or lost to the
surroundings.
61Heat to Change Temperature and to Change Phase
- qice qKoolAid 0
- What happens to the ice when heat is added to it?
- What happens to the Kool-Aid as heat is lost?
- The qs then are
- (m?Hfus)ice (mCp ? T)KA 0
- (m)(330J/g)(340g)(4.2J/gºC)(-20.5ºC)0
- m 88.7g ice needed
62Old Fuel
- Coal, oil and natural gas possess many of the
properties needed in a fuel. - So, most of the energy we use comes from these
sources. - These fossil fuels can be thought of as sunshine
in the solid, liquid and gas state. - Sunlight was captured millions of years ago in
green plants that over the years has decomposed
and highly compressed into the fossil fuels we
use today.
63Old Fuel
- 2800kJ CO2 H2O ? C6H12O6 O2
- Plants require about 2800kJ of energy from the
sun for each mole of glucose they produce. - On the other hand we use the 2800kJ of energy per
mole of glucose we eat. - This energy is converted into the energy that our
muscles and nerves use throughout the day.
64Coal
- When the Industrial Revolution began, wood was
the major source of fuel in England. - Over a short time all the forests were cut down
and wood was scarceso coal took over. - Burning 1g of coal produces 30kJ of heat while
burning 1g of wood produces only 10-14kJ of heat. - Coal was definitely the choice.
65Coal
- Coal has a chemical formula of C135H96O9NS.
- In addition samples of coal also contain small
amounts of Si, Na, Ca, Al, Ni, Cu, Zn, As, Pb and
Hg. - The more impurities the lower the grade and the
lower the amount of heat released during the
burning of coal.
66Try This One
- Assuming the composition of coal can be
approximated by the previous given chemical
formula, calculate the mass of carbon (in tons)
contained in 1.5 million tons of coal, which is
the amount of coal that a typical power plant
would burn. (Hint Mass )
67Petroleum
- Around 1950, petroleum surpassed coal as the
major energy source in the US. - It is liquid so it is easier to pump from the
ground reserves, transported via pipelines and
fed automatically to its point of use. - Also petroleum yields about 48kJ per gram
burnedmuch more than coal.
68Petroleum
- However, crude oil must be processed before it
can be used. - The crude oil is refined by a process called
distillation into many different usable forms of
fuels. - It can be separated into gasoline, kerosene, gas
oil, lubricating oil and petroleum gas.
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71Manipulating Molecules
- Research has found that not all compounds
distilled from crude oil are useful for desired
applications. - Chemists have devised ways to take these high
molecular weight compounds and create smaller
more usable compounds through a process called
cracking. - C16H34 is a byproduct of distillation but is not
very useful. - C16H34 ? C8H18 C8H16 or
- C16H34 ? C5H12 C11H22
72Seeking Substitutes
- Because the worlds coal supply is much greater
than our available oil reserves, there is
interest in converting coal into gaseous and
liquid fuels that are identical with or similar
to petroleum products. - An old technology that does this is blowing steam
over hot carbon called coke. - Coke is the impure carbon that remains after
volatile components have been distilled from
coal. - C(s) H2O(g) ? CO(g) H2(g)
73Seeking Substitutes
- The CO and H2 are called water gas and were used
as energy to light cities. - Fischer-Tropsch process for producing synthetic
gasoline uses this reaction. - The CO and H2 are passed over an iron or cobalt
catalyst which promotes the formation of
hydrocarbons. - The hydrocarbons range in size from methane to
5-8 carbon atoms (that are typically used in
gasoline).
74Seeking Substitutes
- This process is economically feasible in
locations where coal is cheap and plentiful and
oil is scarce and expensive. - This is the case in South Africa, where 40 of
the gasoline is obtained from coal. - In the future, such technology might become
competitive in other parts of the world.
75Seeking Substitutes
- The concerns about dwindling supplies of
petroleum have also led to the use of renewable
energy sources. - This generally refers to biomass which are
materials produced by biological processes. - Wood is one such source, but there is far too
little wood to meet our energy demands. - Plus we would be destroying good CO2 absorbers.
76Seeking Substitutes
- Our favorite, ethanol (C2H5OH) is another
alternative biomass fuel getting a lot of press
of late. - Ethanol is formed by the fermentation of
carbohydrates such as starches and sugars. - Enzymes released by yeast cells catalyze the
reaction that is typified by - C6H12O6 ? 2 C2H5OH 2 CO2
- The burning of ethanol releases 1367kJ per mole
burned. (30kJ/glower than 48kJ/g produced by
gasoline)
77Seeking Substitutes
- The burning of ethanol releases 1367kJ per mole
burned. - Corn is being used to create ethanol and added to
unleaded gas at 8515 to create E85 gas. - In general, E85 gas is cheaper than unleaded gas,
but you can only use E85 gas in certain vehicles. - Should Oil Companies be banned from Owning
Ethanol Plants ?
78Seeking Substitutes
- Ethanol or flex-fuel cars are common in countries
such as Brazil. - They farm sugar cane and convert it to ethanol
and run any mixture of ethanol-gas they choose. - But by using computer sensors that adjust to
whatever mix is in the tank, flex car engines run
on either ethanol, gasoline, or any combination
of the two. - Gas-electric hybrids are another option.
79Seeking Substitutes
- Unlike hybrids sold in the US, for example, flex
cars sold in Brazil don't cost any more than
traditional models. - In fact, some models are only available with flex
engines now. - Ethanol engines use 25 percent more ethanol per
mile than gasoline. But ethanol usually sells at
somewhere between a third to half of the price of
gas.
80Seeking Substitutes
- Another potential energy source is a commodity
that is cheap, always present in abundant supply
and is always being renewed. - It is garbage.
81Seeking Substitutes
- Elk River Resource Recovery Facility (ERRRF) in
Hennepin, MN processes garbage into refuse
derived fuel (RDF). - ERRRF serves five area counties. Hennepin County
contracts to deliver up to 235,000 tons of
garbage to ERRRF each year. - The RDF is transported to a nearby power plant,
where it is combusted to generate electricity. - The RDF from Hennepin County garbage produces
enough electricity to provide power to the
equivalent of 12,700 homes each year.
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83Seeking Substitutes
- This resource recovery approach simultaneously
addresses two major problems - The growing need for energy
- The growing mountain of waste
84Write
- The Elk River Resource Recovery Facility has been
the subject of a great deal of controversy for
the county residents. The idea of generating
usable energy from trash sounds great, until the
facility is built in your neighborhood. This is a
problem faced by the homeowners and residents in
the area surrounding the plant. To address
residents concerns, an open meeting between the
residents and representatives of the plant is
scheduled. Managers from the plant, engineers,
and representatives of the state pollution
control agency will be present. Prepare a list of
questions that you, as a resident in this area,
would like to see addressed at this meeting.
85The Case for Conservation
- The fundamental feature of the universe is that
energy and matter are conserved. - However the process of combustion degrades both
energy and matter, converting them to less useful
forms. - As residents of the universe, we have no choice
but to obey its unavoidable laws. - The planets fossil fuel stores are limited and
although we could go many years without running
out, there will come an end.
86The Case for Conservation
- The demands of the power plants in the world for
coal, oil and gas are huge. - Fibers, plastics, rubber, dyes, medicines, and
pharmaceuticals are currently produced from
petroleum. - Once the petroleum is gone, we will need to find
a different way to make these as well. - On a positive note, the world is aware of this
situation and many have been working to find
better alternatives all the time.
87The Case for Conservation
- To a considerable extent, taste ultimately
influences what technology can do to conserve
energy. - As individuals and as a society, we must decide
what sacrifices we are willing to make in speed,
comfort and convenience for the sake of our
dwindling fuel supplies and the good of the
planet.
88The Case for Conservation
- The costs might include higher taxes, more
expensive gasoline, and electricity, fewer and
slower cars, warmer buildings in the summer and
cooler ones in the winter. - One thing seems clear the best time to examine
our options, our priorities, and our will is
before we face another full blown energy crisis.
89Review
- What does the 1st Law of Thermodynamics state?
(a.k.a. Law of Conservation of Energy) - Define energy.
- Define work.
- Define heat.
- What is the unit for energy?
- What is the difference between and exo and
endothermic reaction?
90Review
- Define activation energy and draw an energy graph
showing an exothermic reaction. - What is combustion?
- Draw these moleculesO2, CO2, H2O, CH4, C3H8)
- What is bond energy?
- Is bond breaking an endo or exothermic process?
91Review
- Is bond forming an endo or exothermic process?
- What is the energy given off or absorbed for the
reaction of octane (C8H18) with O2 to form CO2
and H2O? - What are three main fossil fuels used today?
- How are fossil fuels like sunshine in the solid,
liquid or gas form.
92Review
- How does the 1st Law of Thermodynamics
illustrated through fossil fuels? - How does the 1st Law of Thermodynamics
illustrated through photosynthesis? - What is cracking and when is it used during
fossil fuel refinement? - Rank the following in order from lowest to
highest energy output per gram used petroleum,
coal, ethanol, wood.
93Review
- Give a reason why it is good to use wood as fuel
and one that is not good. - Give a reason why it is good to use coal as fuel
and one that is not good. - Give a reason why it is good to use petroleum as
fuel and one that is not good. - Give a reason why it is good to use ethanol as
fuel and one that is not good.
94Review
- How is coal converted to synthetic gasoline?
- What is E85?
- How is ethanol made?
- What are flex-fuel cars?
- Who is ahead of the US in the usage of ethanol
fueled cars? - What is being done in Hennepin MN?
95The Other Side of the Inconvenient Truth
- Get ready to take Notes on some videos.
96Message to Seniors
- "Senior skip day may result in the loss of
special privileges planned for your class,
including your senior day breakfast, the senior
cookout on your last day, and of course
Baccalaureate and Graduation. This class at our
school gets out waaaaay earlier than most schools
with the Senior Seminar, so there should be no
need for a skip day. Please know that the
administration will find out and will follow up
with the appropriate consequences." - So sayeth el Bridges