Energy Flashcards
For Test 3
What is energy, and the equation for energy transfer?
- Energy is the capacity to do work or supply heat (1st law)
- ΔE = q + w
- A change in energy = heat and work combined
- You get ΔE if you measure heat exchange at constant volume. (bomb calorimetry)
- ΔE = qV
What are the two types of energy?
- Potential energy - the energy of position or properties
- Chemical energy is a form of this, because of the electrical attractions and repulsions within atoms, molecules and ions
- Kinetic energy - energy of motion
- Can be work (ex: moving pistol) or heat (ex: making molecules move faster)
What is internal energy?
- The sum of molecular kinetic and potential energies
- Heat and work
- Extensive property - higher with more molecules
Temperature vs heat
And the equation that relates them
- Temperature is an intensive property, determines the direction of heat flow
- Heat is a process, the transfer of energy from an object with high temperature to one at low temperature. Extensive property.
- Conducted by molecular collisions
q = m • c • Δ t
heat flow = mass • heat capcity or specific heat • temp change
Bond energy
breaking vs. formation
- Breaking bonds requires energy, consumes it.
- Higher final potential energy.
- Forming bonds generates/releases energy
- Lower final potential energy, more stable. The rest left as kinetic energy, which can be work or heat.
Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution of speeds
- If you raise the temperature of your system, the speed of the molecules in that system increases
- If all of the molecules in your system have a larger speed and are colliding with each other, they are more likely to react with each other
What is reaction energy?
Reaction energy is the sum of all the bonds being broken and all the bonds being formed.
Exothermic reactions
- The system gives off heat to the surroundings
- Release more energy during the reaction than has been consumed
- Overall bond energy is more stable at the end (since bond formation releases energy)
- Ex: combustion
- Breaking bonds is exothermic
- We use this term when discussing enthalpy.
- Negative enthalpy of reaction means an exothermic reaction
- (For energy, we use the terms exergonic and endergonic.)
Endothermic reactions
- The system absorbs heat from surroundings
- It takes more energy to break the bonds than you get at the end, so it pulls energy from its surroundings
- Breaking bonds is endothermic
- We use this term when discussing enthalpy.
- (For energy, we use the terms exergonic and endergonic.)
- ΔH of your reaction (your system) is positive, then the reaction was endothermic
What is our main equation for heat transfer,
and what do the variables stand for?
q = msΔT
can also be written
q = nCΔT
q = heat (energy units, Joules)
m = mass (g)
n = moles
s = specific heat capacity (when working with grams) J/g° C
C = heat capacity (when working with moles) J/moles° C
What does the sign of q tell us?
- If q is a positive value→ the system gains energy. Heat moves from the SURROUNDINGS into the SYSTEM.
- Endothermic.
- If q is a negative value→ the system loses energy. Heat is a product.
- Exothermic
What is work, and the main context in which we use it?
- Work is movement against a restraining force
- Context: expansion of a gas. Look for creation of gas molecules
- The gas is moving against pressure, but increasing in volume
- w = -PΔV
- P pressure is always positive
ΔV is always positive for expansion of a gas, because growing volume
If “w” work is negative, that means your system has done work
* depends on Δn<sub>gas</sub>
What is enthalpy?
- Enthalpy = energy without the work. Represented by H.
- ΔH = ΔE - w
- Usually a good stand in for energy. Same unit, Joules (J).
- You get ΔH when you measure the heat exchanged at constant pressure. (Solution calorimetry)
- ΔH = qP
- If the ΔH of your reaction (your system) is positive, then your reaction is endothermic.
- Don’t forget to first find q of your system: In an isolated system, qsystem = -qsurroundings
What are the two kinds of calorimetry?
- Bomb calorimetry
- Constrain the volume to force the system to transfer all energy as heat rather than work
- ΔE = qV (at a constant volume)
- Solution calorimetry
- In a cup. Atmospheric pressure is the constant. Not measuring work, so define Enthalpy as energy without the work.
- ΔH = qP (at a constant pressure)
- In a cup. Atmospheric pressure is the constant. Not measuring work, so define Enthalpy as energy without the work.
State function vs path function
- State functions just depend on final # - initial #.
- Ex: energy and enthalpy
- We do use signs because that tells us the direction of the flow.
- Path functions depend on how you got there
- Ex: heat and work. Transfers, not amounts.