Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

THERMOCHEMISTRY Specific Heat Thermochemistry 17.1  Thermochemistry is the study of energy changes (HEAT) that occur during chemical reactions and changes.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "THERMOCHEMISTRY Specific Heat Thermochemistry 17.1  Thermochemistry is the study of energy changes (HEAT) that occur during chemical reactions and changes."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 THERMOCHEMISTRY Specific Heat

3 Thermochemistry 17.1  Thermochemistry is the study of energy changes (HEAT) that occur during chemical reactions and changes in state.

4 Heat (q)  Heat is the energy that transfers from one object to another because of a temperature difference between them.  Heat ALWAYS flows from a warmer object to a cooler one.

5 Heat movement  Heat moves between the system (reaction) and the surroundings  *** must obey the law of conservation of energy (heat (energy) is never created nor destroyed, just transferred)  Thermochemical equations tell you the direction of heat flow by the “sign”, + or -

6 Endo vs. Exo-  Endothermic reactions: absorbs heat from surroundings (+). If you touch an endothermic reaction it feels COLD  Exothermic reactions: release heat to the surroundings (-) If you touch an exothermic reaction it feels HOT

7 HEAT energy  UNIT of energy = JOULE (J)  Heat capacity is how much heat (energy) is needed to increase the temperature of an object by 1 C.  *** heat capacity of an object depends on both its mass and its chemical composition The greater the mass, the greater its heat capacity

8 Both the iron & wooden bars have the same mass, BUT they are made of different materials. They heat at different rates BECAUSE they have different SPECIFIC HEAT CAPACITIES  Small SPECIFIC HEAT. Heats up fast, only a little bit of energy is needed to raise the temperature of the iron bar.  Large Specific Heat. Heats up slow. Lots of heat is needed to raise the temperature of the wooden bar. Iron BAR Wooden BAR

9 SPECIFIC HEAT (C) SPECIFIC Heat Capacity (specific heat, C)  specific to a substance  Amount of heat it takes to raise the temp. of 1 g of a substance by 1 C Units = (J/gC)  Specific heat values (in J/gC):  CO 2 (g) = 0.843 J/gC  Cu(s) = 0.382 J/gC  Fe(s) = 0.446 J/gC  H 2 O (l) = 4.184 J/gC

10 CALCULATING HEAT - You can calculate how much heat is needed to raise the temperature of a given amount of substance  q = mCT  Where: q = heat (Joules) m = mass (grams) C = specific heat (J/gC) T = change in temperature (C) T f -T i

11 Example 1 How much heat is given off by a 50.0 g sample of copper when it cools from 80.0 to 50.0C? q = mcΔt q = (50.0 g)(0.382 J/gC)(50.0 C - 80.0 C) q = -573 J q = (50.0 g)(0.382 J/gC)(-30.0 C) (heat is given off)

12 Example 2 Iron has a specific heat of 0.446 J/gC. When a 7.55 g piece of iron absorbs 10.33 J of heat, (A) what is the change in temperature? (B) If it was originally at room temp. (22.0C), what is the final temperature? q = mcΔt 10.33 J = (7.55 g)(0.446 J/gC)(t) t f = 25.1 C t = 3.07 C = t f – 22.0 C

13 Example 3  A metal plate originally at 25.0 o C and a mass of 135.5 g absorbs 9,870 J of heat when placed in a 215.6 o C oven. Calculate the plate’s specific heat. q = mcΔt 9870 J = (135.5 g)(c)(190.6 C) c = 0.382 J/gC

14 Based on the table of specific heats, what metal is this? c = 0.382 J/gC  Specific heat values (in J/g  C):  CO 2 (g) = 0.843 J/g  C  Cu(s) = 0.382 J/g  C  Fe(s) = 0.446 J/g  C  H 2 O (l) = 4.184 J/g  C


Download ppt "THERMOCHEMISTRY Specific Heat Thermochemistry 17.1  Thermochemistry is the study of energy changes (HEAT) that occur during chemical reactions and changes."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google