Illustrated Guide to Home Chemistry Experiments

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280 DIY Science: Illustrated Guide to Home Chemistry Experiments


SBSTITUTIU oNS ANd modIfICATIoNS


  • You can prepare 50 mL of 1.0 M sodium hydroxide
    solution by dissolving 2.00 g of sodium hydroxide
    in about 40 mL of water in a small beaker and then
    making it up to 50.0 mL in your graduated cylinder.
    Allow the sodium hydroxide solution to cool to room
    temperature before using it.

  • You can prepare 50 mL of 1.2 M hydrochloric acid
    solution by adding 5.0 mL of concentrated (37%,
    12 M) hydrochloric acid to about 35 mL of water in a
    small beaker and then making it up to 50.0 mL in your
    graduated cylinder. If you use hardware-store muriatic
    acid (typically 31.45% or 10.3 M HCl), add 5.8 mL of
    the acid to about 35 mL of water in a small beaker and
    then make it up to 50.0 mL in your graduated cylinder.
    Sodium hydroxide is the limiting reagent in this
    experiment, so the exact molarity of the hydrochloric
    acid is not critical, as long as HCl is in excess. Allow the
    hydrochloric acid solution to cool to room temperature
    before using it.

  • If you already have 1.0 M stock solutions of sodium
    hydroxide and hydrochloric acid made up, you can
    use them. Make sure the HCl is slightly in excess. For
    example, use 45.0 mL of 1.0 M sodium hydroxide and
    55.0 mL of 1.0 M hydrochloric acid.


Chemical reactions absorb or release energy,


usually in the form of heat (also called thermal


energy). Endothermic reactions absorb heat;


exothermic reactions release heat. If the


reaction occurs in a solution in a calorimeter,


the heat absorbed (or released) by the reaction


reduces (or increases) the temperature of


the solvent. This heat transfer to or from the


solvent can be quantified with the familiar


formula:


q = mcΔT


or, if water is the solvent:


q = (mcΔT)water


RIREEqU d EqUIpmENT ANd SUppLIES

£ goggles, gloves, and protective clothing

£ calorimeter

£ thermometer

£ graduated cylinder, 100 mL

£ sodium hydroxide (NaoH) solution, 1.0 m (50 mL)

£ hydrochloric acid (HCl) solution, 1.2 m (50 mL)

where Q is the amount of heat transferred, m is the mass of
the water, c is the specific heat of water, and ΔT is the change
in temperature of the water. With known values for the mass
and specific heat of water and ΔT determined experimentally,
the value of Q can be calculated. (Remember that Q for an
exothermic reaction is a negative value.) Q may be expressed in
the traditional units of calories (cal) or in SI units of joules (J).
The calculation is the same in either case. Only the units for the
specific heat of water (c) are different:


cwater = 1.00 cal/(g · °C)


cwater = 4.18 g · °C)j/(


In this laboratory, we neutralize 50.0 mL of 1.0 M sodium
hydroxide solution with an equal volume of 1.2 M hydrochloric
acid solution. (We use a slight excess of HCl to ensure that all of
the sodium hydroxide is consumed by the reaction.) The balanced
equation for this reaction is:


HCl(aq) + NaoH(aq) → H 2 o + NaCl(aq)


This reaction is exothermic, so the final temperature of the
solution is higher than the starting temperature, and the value
of Q is negative. Because the starting and final solutions are
dilute, we can as a working approximation assume that their
density is the same as that of water, 1.00 g/mL, which simplifies
calculations. Filling in the known values gives us:


q = [100 g] · [1.00 cal/(g · °C)] · [ΔT]


LABORATORY 15 .4:


dETERmINE THE ENTHALpy CHANGE of A REACTIoN


Once we determine ΔT experimentally, plugging that value into
the equation gives us the value of Q—the amount of thermal
energy transferred. Determining the enthalpy change requires
one more step. Q is denominated in calories or Joules, and
the enthalpy change of reaction, ΔH°reaction, is denominated in
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