Thermo chemistry
CHAPTER 6
DR. SULTANA BEDOURA
Lecture Plan 2
Energy
Energy change in chemical reaction
Exothermic and endothermic processes
The first law of thermodynamics
Work, heat and internal energy
Enthalpy
Thermochemical equation
Calorimeter
Hess’s Law
Enthalpy of solution
Energy 3
Energy is the capacity to do work
Radiant energy : comes from the sun and is earth’s primary energy source
Thermal energy : associated with the random motion of atoms and molecules
Chemical energy: the energy stored within the bonds of chemical substances
Nuclear energy : the energy stored within the collection of neutrons and protons
in the atom
Potential energy : the energy available by virtue of an object’s position
Law of conservation of energy
“The total quantity of energy in the universe is assumed constant”
Heat and Thermochemistry 4
Almost all chemical reactions absorb or produce (release) energy, generally in
the form of heat
Heat is the transfer of thermal energy between two bodies that are at different
temperatures
Temperature is a measure of the thermal energy
Thermochemistry is the study of heat change
in chemical reactions
When heat is absorbed or released during a process,
energy is conserved, but it is transferred between This infrared photo shows where
energy (heat) leaks through the house.
system and surroundings The more red the color, the more
energy is lost to the outside
The Systems and Surroundings
5
The system is the specific part of the universe that is of interest in the study
The surroundings are the rest of the universe outside the system
Three types of systems:
Water vapor
Heat Heat
Open system Closed system Isolated system
Allows the exchange of Allows the exchange of Allows neither
both energy and mass energy but not mass energy nor mass
with surroundings To be exchanged
Exothermic and Endothermic6
Processes
Exothermic process : The process that gives off heat – transfers thermal energy
from the system to the surroundings of interest in the study
2H2 (g) + O2 (g) 2H2O (l) + energy
H2O (g) H2O (l) + energy
Endothermic process : The process in which heat has to be supplied to the system
from the surroundings
energy + 2HgO (s) 2Hg (l) + O2 (g)
energy + H2O (s) H2O (l)
Exothermic : Heat released, System surroundings
Endothermic: Heat absorbed, System surroundings
Thermodynamics 7
Thermodynamic: The scientific study of the interconversion of heat and other kinds
of energy
State functions : Properties that are determined by the state of the system,
regardless of how that condition was achieved.
E.g. energy, pressure, volume, temperature
∆E = Efinal – Einitial
∆P = Pfinal – Pinitial
∆V = Vfinal – V initial
Paths (Blue and red) are different though the
∆T = Tfinal – Tinitial potential energy of two hikers is same
First Law of Thermodynamics8
Energy can be converted from one form to another, but cannot be created or
destroyed
∆Esystem + ∆Esurroundings = 0
∆Esystem = - ∆Esurroundings
C3H6 + 5O2 3CO2 + 4H2O + energy
Chemical energy lost by combustion = energy gained by the surroundings
First Law of Thermodynamics9
Another form of first law of thermodynamics, ∆E = q + w
• ∆E is the change in internal energy of a system, a state function
• q is the heat exchange between the system and the surroundings
• w is the work done on (or by) the system
• w = -P∆V , when a gas expands against a constant external pressure
Table: Sign Conventions for Work and Heat
Process In brief Sign
•Work done by the system on surroundings System works ─
•Work done on the system by surroundings Surroundings work +
•Heat absorbed by the system from the surroundings Endothermic process +
•Heat absorbed by the surroundings from the system Exothermic process ─
Work (w) and Heat (q) 10
Work and Heat
Work Heat
• Work (w) = force (f) x distance (d) Heat is kind of energy, q = ∆E – w
• Work done by gas on the Describes about the process
surrounding is, w = - P ∆V Temperature is the measure of heat
∆V > 0; -P ∆V < 0; wsys < 0
• -P ∆V =(F/ d2 )x d3 = F x d = W Temperature and heat is not same
• Not a state function Not a state function
• w = wfinal – w initial q = q final – q initial
• Unit : joules (J) Unit: joules (J)
Class work 11
The work done when a gas is compressed in a cylinder is 462 J. During this
process, there is a heat transfer of 128 J from the gas to the surroundings.
Calculate the energy change for this process.
∆E = q + w
= -128 J + 462 J
= 334 J
Class work 12
A gas expands and does P - V work on the surroundings equal to 325 J. At the
same time, it absorbs 127 J of heat from the surroundings. Calculate the change
in energy of the gas.
∆E = q + w
= 127 J - 325 J
= -198 J
Class work 13
A sample of nitrogen gas expands in volume from 1.6 L to 5.4 L at constant
temperature. What is the work done in joules if the gas expands (a) against a
vacuum and (b) against a constant pressure of 3.7 atm?
∆V = 5.4 L – 1.6 L = 3.8 L
(a) Given , P = 0
w = - P∆V = 0 x 3.8 = 0 j
(b) Given , P = 3.7 atm
w = - P∆V
= -3.7 atm x 101.325 X 103
Pa 1
x 3.8 L x 3m 3
1 atm 10 L
= -1424.6 Pa.m3 = - 1424.6 j
Internal Energy and the First Law 14
of TD
How first law of TD can be applied to processes carried out under different
conditions
Two situations most commonly encountered in the laboratories:
• Pressure on the system kept constant:
∆E = q - P ∆V
• Volume of the system kept constant:
∆E = q + w
= qv − P ∆V
= qv [∆V = 0 ]
When the process is so rapid :
Assume no heat exchange occurs between the system and its surroundings;
∆E = q + w = 0 w [q = 0]
Enthalpy 15
Enthalpy (H): The amount of heat content used or released in a system at
constant pressure.
Expressed as the change in enthalpy. (ΔH)
ΔH = H (products) – H (reactants)
Heat used/consumed: endothermic: ΔH> 0
Heat released/ produced: exothermic: ΔH<0
Unit(SI): Joules/ Calorie [1 cal = 4.184 J]
ΔH is a state function
Enthalpy & the First Law of TD
16
First Law of Thermodynamics: E = q + w
At constant pressure:
E = qP – PV
qP = E + PV….. (1)
For Enthalpy (H) a new function:
H = E + PV
H = E + (PV) @ constant P
H = E + PV….. (2)
From (1) & (2) H = qP
Enthalpy : quantify the heat flow into or out of a system that occurs at constant pressure
ΔH is a state function. Whereas qp is not state function
A Comparison of ∆H and ∆ E17
2Na(s) + 2H2O(l) 2NaOH (aq) + H2(g) H = -367.5 kJ/mol
Assumption: T = 250C and V is negligible
Then, @ 1 atm and 25 oC, 1 mole H2 = 24.5 L
-PV = -1 atm x 24.5 L = -2.5 kJ
E = H - PV = -367.5 kJ/mol – 2.5 kJ/mol = -370.0 kJ/mol
ΔH and ΔE are approximately same.
In above reaction, the ΔH is smaller than ΔE
as some internal energy released to do gas expansion work.
For reactions that do not involve gases, ΔH = ΔE.
For ideal gases,
ΔE = ΔH – Δ(PV) = ΔH- Δ (nRT)
= ΔH- RT Δn [Δn = number of moles in product- number of moles in reactants]
Thermochemical Equations18
In a chemical reaction two changes occur-
1. Chemical change
P4(s) + 5O2(g) P4O10(s) ; ∆H = -3013 KJ/mol
2. Physical change
H2O (s) H2O (l) ; ∆H = 6.01 KJ/mol
H2O (l) H2O (g); ∆H = 6.01 KJ/mol
Thermochemical Equations19
H = heat given off or absorbed during a reaction at constant pressure
•System absorbs heat •System gives off heat
•Endothermic •Exothermic
•Hproducts > Hreactants •Hproducts < Hreactants
•H > 0 •H < 0
• 6.01 kJ are absorbed for every 1 mole of ice that • 890.4 kJ are released for every 1 mole of methane that is
melts at 00C and 1 atm combusted at 250C and 1 atm
H 2O ( s) H2O (l) H = 6.01 kJ/mol CH4 (g) + 2O2 (g) CO2 (g) + 2H2O (l) ; H = -890.4 kJ/mol
Thermochemical Equations20
The The stoichiometric coefficients always refer to the number of moles of a
substance: H 2O ( s ) H2O (l) ΔH = 6.01 kJ/mol
If you reverse a reaction, the sign of ΔH changes:
H2O (l) H2O (s) ΔH = -6.01 kJ/mol
If you multiply both sides of the equation by a factor n, then ΔH must change by
the same factor n:
2H2O (s) 2H2O (l) ΔH = 2 x 6.01 = 12.0 kJ
The physical states of all reactants and products must be specified in
thermochemical equations
H2O (s) H2O (l) ΔH = 6.01 kJ/mol
H2O (l) H2O (g) ΔH = 44.0 kJ/mol
Class Work 21
How much heat is evolved when 266 g of white phosphorus (P4) burn in air?
P4 (s) + 5O2 (g) P4O10(s) ΔH = - 3013 kJ/mol
x 1 mol P x -3013 kJ = -6470 kJ
266 g P4 4
1 mol P4
123.9 g P4
Specific Heat & Heat Capacity
22
The specific heat (s) of a substance: The amount of heat (s) required to raise the
temperature of 1 gram of the substance by one degree Celsius.
unit: J/g . °C
Heat (q) absorbed or released: q = m x s x ∆t where , ∆t = tfinal – tinitial
The heat capacity (C) of a substance: The amount of heat (q) required to raise the
temperature of given quantity (m) of the substance by one degree Celsius. C
=mxs
Unit: J/ °C
Heat (q) absorbed or released: q = C x ∆t where , ∆t = tfinal – tinitial
Class Work 23
How much heat is given off when an 869 g iron bar cools from 94oC to 5oC?
s of Fe = 0.444 J/g • oC
t = tfinal – tinitial = 5oC – 94oC = –89oC
q = ms t = 869 g x 0.444 J/g • oC x –89oC
= –34,000 J
Calorimetry 24
Calorimetry is the act of measuring the heat change of chemical
reactions or physical changes
Calorimeter is the specifically designed closed container
We will discuss two different types of calorimeters-
1. Constant-volume calorimeter
2. Constant-pressure calorimeter
Constant-Pressure Calorimeter
25
qsys = qwater + qbomb + qrxn
qsys = 0
qrxn = - (qwater + qbomb)
qwater = m x s x t
qbomb = Cbomb x t
Reaction at Constant V
H = qrxn
H ~ qrxn
No heat enters or leaves!
Constant-Volume Calorimeter
26
qsys = qwater + qcal + qrxn
qsys = 0
qrxn = - (qwater + qcal)
qwater = m x s x t
qcal = Ccal x t
Reaction at Constant P
H = qrxn
No heat enters or leaves!
Heat of Typical Reaction at 27
Heats of some reactionsConstant P
measured at constant pressure
Standard Enthalpy of Formation
28
As there is no way to measure the absolute value of the enthalpy of a substance,
must measure the enthalpy change for every reaction of interest
Establish an arbitrary scale with the standard enthalpy of formation (Hf0) as a
reference point for all enthalpy expressions
Standard enthalpy of formation (Hf0) is the heat change that results when one
mole of a compound is formed from its elements at a pressure of 1 atm
The standard enthalpy of formation of any element in its most stable form is zero
H0 (O2) = 0 H0 (C, graphite) = 0
f f
H0 (O3) = 142 kJ/mol H0 (C, diamond) = 1.90 kJ/mol
f
Standard enthalpy of reaction: For aA + bB cC +f dD
H0 = [ c H0 (C) + d H0 (D) ] - [ a H0 (A) + b H0 (B) ]
rxn f f f f
Hess’s law 29
When reactants are converted to products, the change in the enthalpy is same
whether the reaction takes place in one step or in a series of steps.
Enthalpy is a state function, it does not matter how you got there, only where you
start and end.
Hx
A+B C+D
H1 H2
Intermediate
Products
Hx = H1 + H2
Standard Enthalpy of Formation
30
C(graphite) + O2(g) CO2(g)
CO(g) + 1/2O2(g) CO2(g)
C(graphite) + 1/2O2(g) CO(g) ?
C(graphite) + O2(g) CO2(g)
+ CO2(g) CO(g) + 1/2O2 (g)
C(graphite) + 1/2O2(g) CO(g)
H0f (CO) = − 110.5 kJ/mol
Class Work 31
From these data, calculate the enthalpy change for the transformation
S(rhombic) S(monoclinic)
S(rhombic) + O2(g) SO2(g) ΔH°rxn = -2296.06 kJ/mol
S(monoclinic) + O2(g) SO2(g) ΔH°rxn = -2296.36 kJ/mol
(Monoclinic and rhombic are different allotropic forms of elemental sulfur)
S(rhombic) + O2(g) SO2(g) ΔH°rxn = -2296.06 kJ/mol
(+) SO (g) S(monoclinic) + O (g) ΔH°rxn = 2296.36 kJ/mol
2 2
S(rhombic) S(monoclinic) ΔH°rxn = 0.30 kJ/mol
Problem 32
Calculate the standard enthalpy of formation of CS2 (l) given that:
C(graphite) + O2 (g) CO2 (g) H0 rxn= -393.5 kJ/mol
S(rhombic) + O2 (g) SO2 (g) H0 rxn= -296.1 kJ/mol
CS2(l) + 3O2 (g) CO2 (g) + 2SO2 (g) H0 rxn= -1072 kJ/mol
1. Write the formation reaction for CS2
C(graphite) + 2S(rhombic) CS2 (l)
Problem (cont ) d
33
C(graphite) + 2S(rhombic) CS2 (l)
2. Add the given rxns so that the result is the desired rxn.
C(graphite) + O2 (g) CO2 (g) H0 rxn= -393.5 kJ/mol
2 S(rhombic) + 2O (g) 2SO (g) H0 rxn= -296.1 kJ/mol X2
2 2
(+) CO (g) + 2SO2 (g) CS2 (l) + 3O2 (g) H0 rxn= +1072 kJ/mol
2
C(graphite) + 2S(rhombic) CS2 (l)
rxn
H0 = -393.5 + (2x-296.1) + 1072 = 86.3 kJ/mol
Problem 34
Benzene (C6H6) burns in air to produce carbon dioxide and liquid water. How
much heat is released per mole of benzene combusted? The standard enthalpy
of formation of benzene, water and CO2 is 49.04 kJ/mol, -187.6 kJ/mol and -393.5
kJ/mol respectively.
2C6H6 (l) + 15O2 (g) 12CO2 (g) + 6H2O (l)
H0 rxn = nHf0 (products) - mHf0 (reactants)
H0 rxn = [12 Hf0 (CO2) + 6 Hf0 (H2O)] – [ 2 Hf0 (C6H6)]
H0 rxn = [12 x – 393.5 + 6 x -187.6] – [2 x 49.04] = - 5946 KJ
Heat released per mole of benzene = ( -5946 KJ) / 2 mol
Problem 35
Calculate the standard enthalpy of formation of C2H2 from its elements:
2C(graphite) + H2 (g) C2H2 (g)
The equations for each step and the corresponding enthalpy changes are
(a) C(graphite) + O2(g) CO2 (g) H0 rxn
= -393.5 kJ/mol
(b) H2(g) + 1/2O2 (g) H2O (l) H0 rxn
= -285.8 kJ/mol
(c) 2C2H2(g) + 5O2 (g) 4CO2 (g) + 2H2O (l) H0 rxn= -2598.8kJ/mol
ax4 4C(graphite) + 4O2(g) 4CO2 (g) H0rxn = 4 x -393.5 kJ/mol
cx-1 4CO2 (g) + 2H2O (l) 2C2H2(g) + 5O2 (g) H0rxn =-1x -2598.8 kJ/mol
(+)
bx2 2 H2(g) + O2 (g) 2H2O (l) H0rxn = 2x -285.8 kJ/mol
4C(graphite) + 2H2 (g) 2 C2H2 (g) H0rxn rxn
= 453.2 kJ/mol
Enthalpy of Solution 36
The enthalpy of solution ( Hsoln) is the heat generated or absorbed when a
certain amount of solute dissolves in a certain amount of solvent.
Heats of solution of some
Ionic compounds
1. Which substance(s) could be used for melting ice?
2. Which substance(s) could be used for a cold pack?
Given, Hsoln = Hsoln - Hcomponents
The Solution Process for NaCl
37
Hsoln = Step 1 + Step 2 = 788 – 784 = 4 kJ/mol
Thank You