Title: Notebook
1SOS Exam-AID
CHM 1311
Brought to you by Jeremy
2Topics in this Exam-AID 1
- The Fundamentals
- Balancing Chemical Equations
- Stoichiometry
- Composition by mass Determining Chemical
Equations - Trivial things profs might ask to trip you up
(molality, mole fraction, w/w) - Molecular Geometry
3Topics in this Exam-AID 2
- Thermochemistry
- Enthalpy
- Heats of Reaction and Heats of Formation
- Calorimetry
- Entropy
- Free Energy, ?G
- Equilibrium and Equilibrium Constants for
- Gases
- Solutions
- Acids/Bases
- Solubility
4Topics in this Exam-AID 3
- Electrochemistry
- Redox Reactions
- Cell potentials
- Kinetics
- Rate equations
- Rate-Determining Steps
- Quantum Numbers
5Balancing Chemical Equations 1
- Unbalanced
- Ca(OH)2 H3PO4 Ca3(PO4)2 H2O
- Balancing the atom which appears the fewest times
on each side - Then balance the other atoms
- It can help to make a table
6Balancing Chemical Equations 2
- Balanced
- 3 Ca(OH)2 2 H3PO4 ? Ca3(PO4)2 6 H2O
- It helps to know what the products of your
reactions are! - Unbalanced
- C6H5COOH O2 ? ??
7Balancing Chemical Equations 3
- C6H5COOH O2 ? H2O CO2
- Balance the atom that shows up the fewest times
on each side
C6H5COOH O2 ? 3 H2O 7 CO2
LS RS C 7
7 H 6
6 O 4
17
C6H5COOH 15/2 O2 ? 3 H2O 7 CO2
8Stoichiometry
- Ratios and Recipes
- 2 cups Baking Mix 1 Cup Chocolate chips ? 2
(terrible) Chocolate Chip Cupcakes - 2 moles H2 1 mole O2 ? 2 moles H2O
- 212 ratio
9Stoichiometry
- 0.005 mols H2 Y moles O2 ? Z moles H2O
- 2 moles H2 1 mole O2 ? 2 moles
H2O - Because the ratios are the same, you can divide
the equations in order to figure out the number
of moles you need
10 Composition by Mass 1
- Given a chemical formula
- C6H12O6
- Pretend you have one mole of the molecule, and
multiple moles of the component atoms - 1 mole C6H12O6
- 6 moles C, 12 moles H, 6 moles O
11 Composition by Mass 2
- How much do 6 moles of C weigh?
- 6 moles 12.011g/mol 72.066g
- How much do 12 moles of H weigh?
- How much do 6 moles of O weigh?
12Composition by mass 3
- How much would one mole of the substance weigh?
- The molar mass of C6H12O6 is 180.16g/mol
- How much do each of the components weigh?
- 6 moles of C weigh (6 12.011), or 72.066g/mol
- Take percentages
- 72.066/180.16 40.0
13Determining Chemical Formulas
- Steps
- Assume one mole of molecule
- Use molar ratios to determine how many moles of
atoms you have - Convert from moles to mass
- To determine formula, do the opposite
- Assume 100g, find mass of each element
- Convert from mass to moles
- Use the number of moles to create molar ratios to
make your formula
14Determining Chemical Formulas
- You have a substance made of
- 40 Ca, 12 C, and 48 O, molar mass of 100.0869
g/mol - Step One Assume 100g of substance, find mass of
each element - 40 Ca 100g 40g
- 12 C 100g 12g
- 48 O 100g 48g
15Determining Chemical Formulas 2
- Step Two Convert from mass to moles
- Remember moles mass / molar mass
- 40g Ca / 40.078g/mol 0.998 mole Ca
- 12g C / 12.011g/mol 0.999 mole C
- 48g O ??? moles O
16Determining Chemical Formulas 3
- Step Three Use the number of moles to create
molar ratios - Take the smallest number of moles you have and
divide into all the other numbers - 0.998 mole Ca, 0.999 mole C, 3.00 moles O
0.998 0.998 0.998 - 1 mole Ca, 1 mole C, 3 moles O
- If you don't use the smallest number...
- 0.998 mole Ca, 0.999 mole C, 3.00 moles O
3 3 3 - 0.33 mole Ca? 0.33 mole C? 1 mole O?
17Determining Chemical Formulas 4
- Step 4 Use the simplest formula to find the true
formula - Find the molar mass of the simplest formula
- The molecular weight of the true compound will be
provided - Make it match by multiplying the number of atoms
by an integer - Why multiply?
18Determining Chemical Formulas 5
- You have an empirical formula CH2O, mm
30.03g/mol - The formula of the true compound is 60.06g/mol
- What is the true formula???
- 30.03 2 60.06
- CH2O 2 C2H4O2
19Trivial Things
- Molality
- Moles of Solute / Mass of Solvent (not
solution) - Mole Fraction A
- Moles of A / Moles of A Moles of B
- m/w (or w/w)
- (mass of solute / mass of solution) 100
20Wrap-Up!
- We discussed
- Balancing chemical equations
- Stoichiometry
- composition by mass
- Determining chemical formula
- Any questions?
21Molecular Geometry
- Sadly, molecular geometry is mostly memorization
- Especially the names of the configurations
- Key Tricks to drawing molecules with proper
geometry - Figure out the electron arrangement first
- Electrons repel, and a tetrahedron provides the
most space for four pairs of electrons - Memorize all the names though /
22Molecular Geometry
23Why do Reactions Happen?
- Thermochemistry and Kinetics!
- Thermochemistry can be broken into
- Enthalpy (?H) and Entropy (S)
- The interaction between the two form Free Energy
(?G) - Free Energy, Enthalpy and Entropy also affect
equilibrium (K)
24Thermochemistry - Enthalpy
- Change in Enthalpy (?H)
- Change in Internal Energy (?U)
- Work done/by on the system(W)
- Most times, work 0 , ?H ?U, except for gases
- ?H ?U W
- If so, change in internal energy is
- ?H ?U q
- Where q is heat energy transferred
25All about q
- q is all about heat transfer
- If q is negative, heat is given off
- If q is positive, heat is absorbed
- Reactions that give off heat usually happen
- Reactions that take up heat usually don't
- How do you figure out what q is?
26Calorimetry
- Experimentally q mc ?T
- c tells you how much heat the material holds per
gram - Check the units of c, usually in J/gK but
sometimes in J/molK - If so, q nC ?T
- If you are given a calorimetry question, c will
be given to you - Except for water. It's 4.18 J/gK
27Hess's Law
- Finding ?Ho is a pain.
- Luckily, Hess's Law states you can find ?H using
any combination of reactions as long as they add
up to the reaction you want - C(s) O2 ? CO2(g) ?H ??
- C(s) ½O2(g) ? CO(g) ?H -110.5
kJ - CO(g) ½O2(g) ? CO2(g) ?H -283.0 kJ
- Think of it like a building
Shamelessly ripped from UOttawa, Pell/Mayer 2009
28Hess's Law
- Taken one step further, you can also take the ?H
of formation of the molecules in the equation - ?H of formation is ?Hf
- ?Hf is the energy it takes to form the molecule
from the constituent elements - ?Hf of all products - ?Hf of all reactants ?H
for reaction
29Hess's Law
- CH4(g) ?Hf -74.87 kJO2 (g)
?Hf 0 kJH2O(g)
?Hf -241.83 kJCO2(g)
?Hf-393.509 kJ - CH4(g) 2O2(g) ? 2H2O(g) CO2(g)
- ?H?Hf (H2O(g) CO2(g)) - ?Hf (CH4(g) O2(g))
30?H Endothermic or Exothermic?
- When ?H is negative, the reaction is exothermic
- Heat is given off to the atmosphere
- Good for the reaction!
- When ?H is positive, the reaction is endothermic
- Heat is absorbed from the atmosphere
- Not so good.
31When does Work Matter?
- Remember, W ?PV
- When you have a gas that expands, it cools off
and does work - If you just measured the temperature change, you
would get a false reading - Therefore, ?H ?U q w
- q P?V
32(No Transcript)
33Entropy
- Entropy is a measure of disorder in the universe
- Having more things will make them more disordered
- Having a molecule that can twist and turn makes
it more disordered - Gases are more disordered than solids
34Enthalpy, Entropy and Free Energy
- ?Go is free energy
- ?Go ?Ho - T?So
- ?So is entropy (J/molK)
- ?S and ?H don't change with T
- ?Go is for T 298K, standard conditions, 1 atm
- Just like ?H, negative is good!
35Finding ?Go, ?Ho, ?So
- If ?Go isn't given, you can calculate it from ?H
and ?S - You can also calculate it from ?Gof from a table
of ?Go by using Hess's law
36Finding ?Go, ?Ho, ?So
?Hfo (kJ/mol) ?Gfo (kJ/mol) ?So (J/molK)
CO(g) -110.5 -137.2 197.7
Cl2(g) 0 0 223.1
COCl2(g) -218.8 -204.6 283.5
?Go ?Gfo (products reactants)
-204.6 137.2 -67.4 kJ
?Go ?Hfo (products reactants) - T ?So
(products - reactants) -218.8kJ
110.5kJ (298) (283.5-223.1-197.7)J/molK
-108.3 kJ 40915.4J -108.3 kJ
40.91 kJ -67.4 kJ
Pirated from Waterloo Chemistry Pages
37Finding ?Go, ?Ho, ?So
- H2(g) N2(g) ? 2NH3(g)
- ?Hf for NH3(g) is -46.1kJ/mol?S for H2(g) is
130.7J/molK, for N2(g) is 191.56J/molK, and for
NH3(g) is 192.77J/molK - What is ?Go , assuming standard conditions?
-
38?Go and ?G?
- ?Go is great! And useless by itself
- It is only for T 298K
- ?G (no o) is the value for the actual condition
- ?Go lets you get ?G!
- ?Go ?Ho - T ?So
- ?G ?H - T ?S
39?G and Reaction Favourability
- If ?G negative, reaction likely to happen If
?G positive, reaction will not happen it might
happen in the reverse direction - By plugging values into ?G ?H - T ?S, you can
find ?G 0 - At ?G 0, the reaction is in equilibrium
40Decomposition in Equilibrium
- 2AlCl3 (s) ? 2Al(s) 3 Cl2 (g) At what
temperature will the decomposition of AlCl3(s) be
in equilibrium?
Enthalpy (kJ/mol) Free Energy (kJ/mol) Entropy(J/molK)
Cl2 (g) 0 223.08 0
Al (s) 0 28.3 0
AlCl3 -706.63 109.29 -630.0
Cl2 (g) Chlorine gas 0 223.08 0
Al(s) Aluminum solid 0 28.3 0
AlCl3 (s) Aluminum Chloride -705.63 109.29
-630.0
41Decomposition in Equilibrium
- ?H ?Hf (products) ?Hf (reactants)
- 2 (-706.63) 0
- -1413.26 kJ/mol?S ?S (products) ?S
(reactants) 2(-630.0) 0 -1260
J/molK ?G ?H - T ?S 0 -1413.26 (T)
1.26 T 1121 K
42Equilibrium Constant K
- K is the equilibrium constant it is temperature
dependent - Given balanced formula
- aA bB ? cC dD
- K Cc Dd
Aa
Bb - In the case of gases Kp pCc pDd
p Aa pBb - K gt 1 is product favoured
- Klt 1 is reactant favoured
43K
- Keq /Kc K for equation (c for concentration)
- Ksp K for dissolved substances (sp for
solubility product) - Ka /Kb K for an acid / K for a base
- ALL Ks are calculated the same way! Do not
include solids/pure liquids in the calculation. - K Cc Dd
Aa
Bb - Except for gases, which can be calculated
with pressure
44Kp and Gases
- For gases, Kp pCc pDd
p Aa pBb - Pressures are just easier to use, especially
since - Total Pressure Sum of the individuals pressures
of the gases - Kp Kc (RT)n
- P RTn/V
45Examples of K
- H2SO4(aq) H2O(l) ? HSO4-(aq) H3O(aq)
- Ka HSO4- H3O / H2SO4
- 2SO2(g) O2(g) ? 2SO3(g)
- Kp pSO32 / pSO22 O2
- CaCO3(s) ? Ca2(aq) CO32-(aq)
- Ksp Ca CO3
46Put example here
47K, ?G, and Equilibrium
- When ?G 0, the reaction was at equilibrium
- How can this be related to K?
- ?G ?Go RT ln K
- ?Go -RT ln K
- ?Go -600 kJ/mol
- T 200K T
1200K RlnK 3
RlnK 0.5
48Q and Lechatalier's Principle
- Lechatalier's principle is like a seesaw
- Reactants ?
Products - Where ?G is experimental, while ?Go is for
standard conditions - Q is experimental, while K is for theoretical
equilibrium
49Q
- If the experimental conditions thereoretical
equilibrium, Q K - I2(g) H2(g) ? 2HI(g) at some temperature/
pressure - For this T and P, Kc 1
- Therefore 1 HI2 / H2 I2
- You have 10 moles of HI, two moles of H, and two
moles of I in the vessel. Which way will the
reaction go?
50Q
- Q HI2 / H2 I2
- 102 / 2 2
- Q 100/4 25
- if Q K, the reaction would be at equilibrium
- Q gt K, the reaction will go towards reactants
- Q lt K, the reaction will go towards products
- ?G ?Go RT ln Q
51Q in a Ksp Problem
- PbCl2 is highly insoluble in water. The Ksp of
PbCl2 is 1.6 10-5. PbCl2 is added to 0.1L of
water at 298K, 1atm pressure. a) How much PbCl2
dissolves?b) What is ?Go? - 0.058g of NaCl are added to the solution.
- c) Find Q.
- d) What is ?G right when the NaCl is added?
- e) How much PbCl2 is left dissolved?
52 Q in a Ksp Problem
- a) How much PbCl2 dissolves?Ksp 1.6 10-5
Keep in mind that ICE tables are for
concentration! Therefore the concentration of the
ions is x and 2x, not actual amount.
PbCl2(s) ? Pb2(aq) 2Cl-(aq)I /
0 0C / x
2xE / x
2x
Ksp (x) (2x)2 1.6 10-5 4x3x
0.0159 Therefore 0.00159 moles of PbCl2 dissolve
53Q in a Ksp Problem
- b) What is ?Go??G ?Go RT ln Q?G 0At
equilibrium right now, Q Ksp 1.6 10-5T
298 KR 8.314Therefore, ?Go - RT ln 1.6 10
-5 - ?Go 27359 kJ/mol
54Q in a Ksp Problem
- 0.0058g of NaCl are added to the solution.
- c) Find Q.mmNaCl 58.44g/molTherefore 0.001
mols are added to the solution
PbCl2(s) ? Pb2(aq)
2Cl-(aq)I / 0.00159
(0.003180.001) 0.1
0.1
Q 0.0159 (0.0418)2 2.8 10-5
55Q in a Ksp Problem
- d) What is ?G right when the NaCl is added?
?G ?Go RT ln QQ 2.8 10-5?Go 27359
kJ/mol?G 27359 8.314 298 ln 2.8 10-5?G
1385 kJ/mol
56Q in a Ksp Problem
- e) How much PbCl2 is left dissolved?
- Ksp 1.6 10-5
- PbCl2(s) ? Pb2(aq)
2Cl-(aq)I / 0.0159
0.0418C / -x
-2xE / 0.0159- x
0.0418 -2xKsp (0.0159-x)
(0.0418-2x)2
57. . .
- Ksp (0.0159-x) (0.0418-2x)2
- Is not exactly solvable with the math we know
- Using a simplification
- Ax3 Bx2 Cx D Ax3 D
- X 0.0057
- 0.0159- x 0.0418 -2x 0.0102 M
Pb2 0.0304M Cl- - 0.00102 Pb
58Van't Hoff Clausius-Clapeyron
- Van't Hoff
- Clausius-Clapeyron
Note H is kJ/mol, while S is J/molK
This equation allows you to find one K if given
another K
59Using Van't Hoff and Clausius-Clapeyron
- You have the reaction
- CaCO3 ? CaO CO2
- At 400o C, K 3.610-6
- At 500o C, K 2.2 10-4
- What is ?Ho, ?So, ?Go, and K at 500o C?
Taken from UOttawa, Prof St-Amant,, past
midterms
60Acid-Base Equilibrium
- How do Ka, Kb, Kw, pKa, pKb, pH, and pOH all
relate? - H2O(l) H2O(l) ? H3O(aq) OH-(aq)
- The K of this reaction is 1.010-14
- Hence Kw 1.010-14
61Acid-Base Equilibrium
- Whenever you add acid/base to a solution, it
reacts with the water to form H3O or OH- - In neutral water, H3O is 10-7 OH- is 10-7
- pH - log H3O 7
- pOH - log OH- 7
- pH pOH 14
- Adding acid increases H3O , so pH decreases
- Adding base decreases H3O, so pH increases
62Acid-Base Equilibrium
- In the same vein, pKa pKb 14
- HA H2O ? H3O A- Ka Some
- A- H2O ? HA OH- Kb Some
- H2O H2O ? H3O OH- Kw 10-14
- Ka Kb Kw
63(No Transcript)
64Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation
- Instead of using an ICE table, you can simplify
with -
- This assumes that acid gt 100Ka
65A Buffer Example
- Calculate the pH of 1.00L of a buffer system
composed of 0.90M acetic acid, CH3COOH and 0.60M
sodium acetate, NaCH3COO - a) initially
- b) after the addition of 0.1L of 0.5M NaOH
- The Kb of acetate is 5.610-10
Taken from UOttawa, Prof St-Amant,, past
midterms
66A Buffer Example
- First, find Ka Ka Kb 10-14
- Ka 10-14/5.610-10 1.8 10-5
- We can calculate the pH of the solution before
the addition of NaOH, using the
Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, since acid gt Ka
67A Buffer Example
- pH pKa log A- / HA - log 1.8
10-5 log ( 0.6 / 0.9) - 4.57
CH3COOH H2O ? CH3COO H3O
68A Buffer Example
- b) After the addition of 0.1L of 5M NaOH? (How
many moles of NaOH is that?)
CH3COOH H2O ? CH3COO H3O
I (0.9 - 0.5)/1.1 / (0.60.5)/1.1
0 C -x /
x x E 0.36 -x
/ 1x x
Step 1 Neutralize acid/baseStep 2 Add
conjugate base/acid to other sideStep 3
Recalculate concentrationsStep 4 Finish your
ace table
69A Buffer Example
CH3COOH H2O ? CH3COO H3O
- E 0.36 -x / 1x
x Ka 1.8 10-5 (1x) (x) /
(0.36-x)0 6.5 10-6 -1.000018 x -x2 - X 0.0000065 molspH H3O - log 0.0000065
- 5.19
70Electrochem Redox Reactions
- Redox reactions are composed of
- Reduction and Oxidation
- LEO (goes) GERLoss of Electrons is
OxidationGain of Electrons is Reduction - Reduction must be paired with Oxidation
- When do you know if something is
oxidized/reduced?
71Oxidation States
- 1. Check the Oxidation states!
- Unbalanced
- C6H5NO2 Sn ? C6H5NH2 Sn2
72Redox Reactions
- 2. Begin to write out half-reactions
- Sn ? Sn2 2e-
- C6H5NO2 6e- ? C6H5NH2
- 3. Balance atoms besides O and H
- 4. Balance charge with H-
- Sn ? Sn2 2e-
- C6H5NO2 6e- 6H ? C6H5NH2
73Redox Reactions
- 5. Balance LS and RS with H2O
- Sn ? Sn2 2e-
- C6H5NO2 6e- 6H ? C6H5NH2 2H2O
- 6. Add your reactions together so e- cancels out
- 3Sn ? 3Sn2 6e-
- C6H5NO2 6e- 6H ? C6H5NH2 2H2O
74Redox Example
- Balance the following equation
- S2O62-(aq) HClO2(aq) ? SO42-(aq) Cl2(g)
Taken from UOttawa, Prof St-Amant,, past
midterms
75Cell Potentials
- Oxidation potential Reduction Potential
- Li(aq) e- ? Li(s)
Eo - 3.04 VCu2(aq) 2e- ? Cu(s)
Eo 0.34 V - 2 Li (s) ? 2Li(aq) 2e-
Eo 3.04 V Cu2(aq) 2e- ?
Cu(s)
Eo 0.34 V
3.34 V - ?Go - nFEocell ?G
- nFEcell
They do NOT change when you multiply the molar
coefficients!
76Kinetics
- Thermodynamics is not the only thing that makes
reactions go! Kinetics play a large role too - Kinetics tell you how fast reactions go
- Kinetically, some reactions proceed so slowly,
they don't proceed at all - Given A B ? C
- Rate law k Am Bn
- Rate laws are determined experimentally!
- The order of the reaction is the sum of the
coefficients
77Reaction Rates
- All reaction rates must be determined
experimentally - You did this in one of your labs
- You can measure the initial rate of change of the
concentration of the reactants/problems - Experiment 1 2 3 4
- Ao 0.100 0.200 0.200 0.100
- Bo 0.100 0.100 0.300 0.100
- Co 0.100 0.100 0.100 0.400
- Rate 0.100 0.800 7.200 0.400
78Integrated Rate Law
- The whole point of the integrated rate law is to
turn the rate law into something that can be
modeled with a linear equation - From the linear equation, you can easily
determine K, and figure out other points on the
line - If 0th order A -kt AoIf 1st order ln
A -kt ln AoIf 2nd order 1/A kt
1/Ao
79Integrated Rate Laws
Attempt to graph H2O2 vs Time
Time H2O2 ln H2O2 1/H2O2
0 1 0 1
120 0.91 -0.09 1.1
300 0.78 -0.25 1.28
600 0.59 -0.53 1.69
1200 0.37 -0.99 2.7
1800 0.22 -1.51 4.55
2400 0.13 -2.04 7.69
3000 0.082 -2.5 12.2
6000 0.05 -3 20
80Integrated Rate Laws
Attempt to graph 1/H2O2 vs Time
Time H2O2 ln H2O2 1/H2O2
0 1 0 1
120 0.91 -0.09 1.1
300 0.78 -0.25 1.28
600 0.59 -0.53 1.69
1200 0.37 -0.99 2.7
1800 0.22 -1.51 4.55
2400 0.13 -2.04 7.69
3000 0.082 -2.5 12.2
6000 0.05 -3 20
81Integrated Rate Laws
Attempt to graph ln H2O2 vs Time
Time H2O2 ln H2O2 1/H2O2
0 1 0 1
120 0.91 -0.09 1.1
300 0.78 -0.25 1.28
600 0.59 -0.53 1.69
1200 0.37 -0.99 2.7
1800 0.22 -1.51 4.55
2400 0.13 -2.04 7.69
3000 0.082 -2.5 12.2
6000 0.05 -3 20
82RDS
- Chemical reactions are actually a series of
complex reaction reactions involving many
intermediates - The speed of the overall reaction is limited by
the formation of the slowest intermediate - Think about an assembly line
- The rate law reflects the interactions of this
slowest step - If rate k A, molecule A must be in the
slowest step, and no other molecules - If rate k A2, two molecules of A are involved
in the slowest step, and no others
83RDS and Catalysts
- There are many reasons the RDS might be slow
- Usually, because it is not as thermodynamically
favourable - This is reflected in the activation energy of the
step - How much energy to stay in a reactive state
- Catalysts change the reactive state itself, or
make it easier to get into the reactive state, so
the reaction can proceed
84Quick Quantum Number Overview
- Your Quantum numbers are n, l, mn, and ml
- n Principle, what shell you are in
- S P D F
- l Angular, n-1
- mn Magnetic, - L to L
- ms Spin, 1/2 or -1/2
85Quick Quantum Number Overview
86Quick Quantum Number Overview