Title: Energy and Thermochemistry
1Energy and Thermochemistry
2Energy
- The ability to do work
- 4 Types
- Kinetic Energy in motion
- Potential Stored energy
- Chemical potential energy of compounds and
molecules that can be released as the result of a
chemical reaction - Thermal energy of an object due to the random
motions of its particles
3Thermochemistry
- Changes of heat content and heat transfer
- Follow the Law of Conservation of Energy
- Or, 1st Law of Thermodynamics
- Energy can neither be created nor destroyed only
transferred - Heat will always move from HIGH to LOW (never
reverse)
4Temperature Heat
- Heat not the same as Temperature
- Heat energy transferred to one system by
another due to temperature difference - Temperature measurement of heat energy
- Thermometer
- Higher thermal energy, greater motion of
particles
5System and Surroundings
- System the object in question
- Surrounding(s) everything outside the system
- When both the system and the surroundings equal
the same temperature it is called Thermal
equilibrium - When not equal
- Heat transfer to surrounding Exothermic
- You feel the heat ? Hot Metal!
- Heat transfer to system Endothermic
- You feel cold ? Cold Metal!
6Specific Heat of one object
- Q Cp x m x ?T
- Q heat/energy measured in Joules (J)
- Cp specific heat measured in J/g x 0C
- m mass measured in grams
- ?T change in temperature measured in (0C) (must
be positive)
7Example
- It takes 487.5 J to heat 25 grams of a substance
from 25 C to 75 C. What is the specific heat in
Joules/gC?
8- How many joules of energy must be transferred to
change the temperature of a piece of iron from 50
0C to 150C? The sample contains 475 g.
9- To what temperature will a 50.0 g piece of glass
raise if it absorbs 5275 joules of heat and its
specific heat capacity is 0.50 J/gC? The
initial temperature of the glass is 20.0C.
10- If a sample of chloroform is initially at 25C,
what is its final temperature if 150.0 g of
chloroform absorbs 1.0 kilojoules of heat, and
the specific heat of chloroform is 0.96 J/gC?
11Specific heat and Phase Changes
1235 g of water _at_ 180C ? 1500C
1365 g of solid ethanol _at_ -1170C ? 900C
1413 g benzene _at_ -30C ? 250C
15What is the symbol?
16Enthalpy
- Definition amount of heat energy absorbed or
lost by a system during a chemical reaction
17DH rxn SnH products SnH reactants
- S Sum of. Use Appendix K for the H0f for
different compounds and elements. - n number of moles
- If DH0rxn is a negative value the reaction is
Exothermic - If DH0rxn is a positive value the reaction is
Endothermic
18Endothermic vs Exothermic
19Practice
- Na(s) Cl2(g) ? NaCl(s)
- Na(s) H2O(l) ? NaOH(aq) H2(g)
20Entropy and Gibbs free energy
21Entropy
- 2nd Law of Thermodynamics (Entropy)
- Entropy (S) a measurement of the randomness (or
chaos) of particles in a system - Systems have an overall tendency to increase the
entropy
223rd Law of Thermodynamics
- The entropy (chaos/disorder) of a pure, perfect
crystalline substance is zero at absolute zero. - Will entropy ever be negative? Why?
- DSsystem SnSproducts - SnSreactants
23Things that effect Entropy
- Changing from solid to liquid to gas always gives
you an increase entropy. - Changing from gas to liquid to solid always gives
you a decrease entropy. - As temperature goes up entropy goes up
- As volume of a gas goes up, entropy goes up
- As substances are mixed, entropy increases
- Increasing the number of particles entropy
increases - Increasing the number of moles of gas, entropy
increases
24- 2H2O(g) ? 2H2(g) O2(g)
- CaCO3(s) ? CaO(s) CO2(g)
- NH4Cl(s) ? NH3(g) HCl(g)
- O2(g) ? O3(g)
25Gibbs Free Energy
- Ability to do work
- DGsystem SnGproducts SnGreactants
- If DG is positive nonspontaneous
- If DG is negative spontaneous
26What do the signs mean?
Property Positive Negative
DH
DS
DG
27Quick Review
Enthalpy Entropy Gibbs Free Energy
Define
Symbol
Formula
Unit
28What if it isnt at 250C?
- DG DH TDS
- Temperature must be in Kelvin
- Make sure you convert your S to kilojoules (kJ)
29N2(g) O2(g) ? NO(g)_at_ 1250C
30O2(g) ? O3(g) _at_ 400C
31C2H5OH(l) O2(g) ? CO2(g) H2O(l) _at_ 1250C
32Phase Change and Temperature of Spontaneity
DH DS
- Can be used to determine the boiling point of an
unknown.
T
33HNO3(l) ? HNO3(g)
34S(s) ? S(g)
35Signs and Result of DG
DG DH DS Spontaneous?
36NH3(g) HCl(g) ? NH4Cl(s)
37CCl4(l) ? C(graphite) Cl2(g)