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Ap Chemistry Unit 5 Notes - Thermodynamics

1) Thermodynamics is the study of heat (energy) and its transformation between chemical systems and their surroundings. Thermochemistry is the study of heat in chemical reactions and changes in phases. 2) Enthalpy (H) is a measure of the total energy of a system and depends on temperature and pressure. Exothermic reactions have a negative enthalpy change and release heat, while endothermic reactions have a positive enthalpy change and absorb heat. 3) The entropy (S) of a system measures the randomness or disorder within a system. The entropy change of a reaction determines whether it is spontaneous based on the Second Law of Thermodynamics.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2K views6 pages

Ap Chemistry Unit 5 Notes - Thermodynamics

1) Thermodynamics is the study of heat (energy) and its transformation between chemical systems and their surroundings. Thermochemistry is the study of heat in chemical reactions and changes in phases. 2) Enthalpy (H) is a measure of the total energy of a system and depends on temperature and pressure. Exothermic reactions have a negative enthalpy change and release heat, while endothermic reactions have a positive enthalpy change and absorb heat. 3) The entropy (S) of a system measures the randomness or disorder within a system. The entropy change of a reaction determines whether it is spontaneous based on the Second Law of Thermodynamics.

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AP Chemistry Unit 5 - Thermodynamics

Thermochemistry - the study of heat (=energy) in chemistry


Thermodynamics - the study of heat (energy) as it changes
Kinetic Energy - energy of motion
Ek = mv2
o E = Energy in Joules (J)
o m = mass (kg)
o v = velocity (m/s)
Universe = system + surroundings
system confined to only what is being studied
surroundings everything else
Internal Energy
includes all of the potential and kinetic energy of all the parts of the system
E = Ef E i

(change in internal energy)

+ E = the system has gained energy (surroundings lose)


- E = the system has lost energy (surroundings gain)
E=q+w
o q = heat (J)
o w = work (J)
+q = heat added to system
-q = heat lost by system
+w = work done on system by surroundings
-w = work done by system on surroundings
endothermic (heat in) system gains energy, + E
surroundings lose energy so container often feels cold
exothermic (heat out) system loses energy, surroundings gain energy so container will feel warm
State function
a property of a system that is determined only by its present state
does not depend on the pathway it took to reach that state
Common state functions:
o pressure, temperature, volume, internal energy, entropy

Enthalpy (H)
heat flow
H = E + P V (at constant pressure)
o H = enthalpy (J)
o E = internal energy (J)
o PV = work done by changing pressure, volume (J)
+ H = system has gained heat
- H = system has lost heat
Determine the sign of H
ice cube melting
o + H (water gains energy to change from solid to liquid)
1 g of butane (C4H10) undergoes complete combustion
o
H (heat is released)
What if the system is contained so no heat can be released? Will a piston rise or fall?
o 2 C4H10 + 13 O2 8 CO2 + 10 H2O
volume of products > volume of reactants
o piston will rise to maintain a constant pressure
Enthalpy of Reactions
H = Hproducts - Hreactants
enthalpy is an extensive property (depends on amount)
enthalpy change for a reverse reaction will be the same in magnitude, opposite in sign
enthalpy change depends on state of reactants and products
How much heat is released when 4.5 g of methane gas is burned in a constant pressure system? ( Hrxn = -890 kJ)
(-250 kJ)

Calorimetry
-measurement of heat flow
heat capacity - the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of an object by 1K
molar heat capacity - the amount of heat required to raise 1 mole of a substance by 1K
specific heat - the amount of heat required to raise 1 g of a substance by 1 K

s
o
o
o
o

q
m T

s = specific heat (J/gK)


q = amount of heat exchange (J)
m = mass (g)
T = temperature change (K)

Constant Pressure Calorimetry


How much heat is needed to warm 250 g of water from 22
(7.9 x 104 J)

What is the molar heat capacity of water? (C = 75.2 J/mol K)

A student mixes 50 mL of 1.0 M HCl and 50 mL of 1.0 M NaOH in a calorimeter and notices that the temperature
rises from 21.0 C to 27.5 C. Calculate the enthalpy change if the total volume is 100 mL, the density is 1.0 g/mL,
and the specific heat is 4.18 J/gK. (-2.7 kJ)

Hesss Law
if a reaction is carried out in a series of steps, the H for the overall reaction will equal the sum of the
enthalpy changes for the individual steps.
Calculate H for

Given
o
o
o

2 C (s) + H2 (g) C2H2 (g)

C2H2 (g) + 5/2 O2


2 (g) + H2O (l)
C (s) + O2 (g) CO2 (g)
H2 (g) + O2 (g) H2O (l)

H = -1299.6 kJ
H = -393.5 kJ
H = -285.8 kJ

( Hrxn = 226.8 kJ)


Enthalpy of Formation Hf
the amount of energy needed to form a 1 mole of a compound from its elements at standard
conditions
Note: Standard conditions here are 1 atm at 298 K
o (vs. 1atm, 0 C for molar volume of a gas)

What is the Hf for argon?


0! There is no formation of a compound.
Which reactions are formations?
2 Na (s) + O2 (g) Na2O (s)
o yes
2 K (l) + Cl2 (g) 2 KCl (s)
o no, K would be a solid under standard conditions
two moles of product are formed
K (s) + Cl2 (g) KCl (s)
C6H12O6 (s) 6 C (diamond) + 6 H2 (g) + 3 O2 (g)
o No, decomposition
o 6 C (graphite) + 6 H2 (g) + 3 O2 (g) C6H12O6 (s)
Hrxn = Hproducts - Hreactants
Calculate the enthalpy of reaction for the combustion of 1 mole of methanol (CH 3OH, -1367 kJ)

Strength of Covalent Bonds


Bond enthalpy H for the breaking of a bond in one mole of a gaseous substance
o Always positive
o As H increases, bond strength increases
o Generally, as the number of bonds between two atoms increases, strength increases and the
bond length decreases
Hrxn =

( Hbonds broken) -

( Hbonds formed)

Estimate the enthalpy of reaction for the combustion of ethane (C2H6) gas. ( Hrxn = -1416 kJ)

First Law of Thermodynamics


Energy cannot be created or destroyed.
Spontaneous process
One that proceeds on its own without outside assistance
The reverse reaction will be non-spontaneous
Predict which are spontaneous
When a piece of metal at 150
o Spontaneous
Water at room temperature decomposes into H2 and O2 gas.
o Not spontaneous; reverse is spontaneous once ignited by a spark or flame
Benzene (C6H6) vapor at 1 atm condenses to become a liquid at the normal boiling point.
o Process is at equilibrium neither forward or reverse reaction is spontaneous
Entropy
S (J/K) the extent of randomness in a system
Mercury is a silvery liquid at room temperature. The normal freezing point is -38.9 C, and its Hfus is 2.29
kJ/mol. What is the entropy change when 50.0 g of liquid mercury freezes at the normal freezing point? (-2.44
J/K (negative entropies tend to be non-spontaneous)

Second Law of Thermodynamics


Any irreversible process results in an overall increase in entropy, where as a reversible process
results in no change in entropy.
o i.e. The entropy of the universe is always increasing
Entropy increases for
o Gases formed from liquids or solids
o Liquids or solutions formed from solids
o Reactions where there are more product gas molecules than reactant molecules
Is S + or -?
H2O (l) H2O (g)
o positive
Ag+ (aq) + Clo negative
4 Fe (s) + 3 O2
o negative

2O3

(s)

N2 (g) + O2
o Need more information

Third Law of Thermodynamics


The entropy of a pure crystalline solid at 0K is 0.
Entropy Changes in Reactions
S = S

products

- S

reactants

Using Appendix C, calculate the change in entropy for the formation of ammonia gas from hydrogen and
nitrogen gas. (-198.3 J/K)

Gibbs Free Energy


Determines the spontaneity of a reaction
Exothermic reactions and those that increase in entropy tend to be spontaneous, but they could be
competing factors (endothermic, increase in entropy)
G= H-T S
o
G < 0, reaction is spontaneous
o
G > 0, reaction is not spontaneous (reverse rxn will occur)
o
G = 0, reaction is at equilibrium (btw. reactants & products)
Effect of Temperature on Spontaneity of Reactions
H

-T S

G= H-T S

Reaction Characteristics

Spontaneous at all temperatures

Non-spontaneous at all temperatures

+ or

Spontaneous only at low T

+ or

Spontaneous only at high T

Using Appendix C, determine whether or not the reaction of forming ammonia gas from nitrogen and
hydrogen gas is spontaneous at 25 C and at 500 . (-33.3 kJ, 61 kJ)

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