http://www.ck12.org Chapter 17. Thermochemistry
- Molar heats of fusion and vaporization allow calculations of energy changes involving a phase transition.
- Combinations of the above parameters can be used to calculate total energy changes for transitions that involve
both temperature changes and changes of state. - Heat of solution data provides information about enthalpy changes that occur when a solute dissolves in a
solvent.
Lesson Review Questions
Reviewing Concepts
- Define the following terms:
a. heat of fusion
b. heat of vaporization
c. heat of solution - Indicate whether the following processes are exothermic or endothermic:
a. melting of water
b. conversion of liquid bromine to a gas
c. condensation of chlorine gas
d. conversion of sodium chloride crystals to molten (liquid) NaCl
Problems
- Mercury melts at -39°C. How much energy is required to melt 150. grams of mercury if its molar heat of
fusion is 2.29 kJ/mol? - Sulfur has a boiling point of 444.6°C. If the heat of vaporization for sulfur is 45 kJ/mol, how much heat is
released when 42 grams of sulfur vapor is converted to liquid sulfur? - Calculate the total enthalpy change when 200. grams of water vapor at 120°C is converted to liquid water at
42°C. - How much energy is involved in dissolving 76 grams of NaCl in water? Is this an exothermic or endothermic
process? - Calculate the total energy involved in converting 50. grams of ice at -10°C to liquid water at 95°C.
- If the heat of solution for LiBr is -49 kJ/mol, how many grams of LiBr must be dissolved in order to release
3,500 joules of energy?
Further Reading / Supplemental Links
- Specific heat and heat capacity: http://www.iun.edu/~cpanhd/C101webnotes/matter-and-energy/specificheat.h
tml - Heat of solution: http://sunny.moorparkcollege.edu/~chemistry/chemistry_1B_labs/experiment_one.pdf
- Visual illustration of heats of solution: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o7adWQqvDUU
Points to Consider
- How do you determine the enthalpy of formation for a reaction that is not feasible to run in the laboratory?