GENERAL CHEMISTRY II - Midterm
GENERAL CHEMISTRY II - Midterm
GENERAL CHEMISTRY II - Midterm
GENERAL CHEMISTRY II
- TUTORIAL CLASS FOR MIDTERM EXAM -
Contents
1. Stoichiometry
2. The thermodynamics of chemical reactions
3. The kinetics of chemical reactions
Contents
1. Stoichiometry
2. The thermodynamics of chemical reactions
3. The kinetics of chemical reactions
1.1. Stoichiometry calculation
Stoichiometric calculations are used to determined the relations between the amount of
disappeared reagents and products based on the stoichiometric coefficients of the reaction
equation, which are expressed through molar interpretation : calculate amount of mole.
aA + bB → cC + dD (a, b, c, d > 0)
Stoichiometric mixture: contained reagents are in needed ratio for complete reactions.
Non-stoichiometric mixture: the reagent in excess remains after the reaction while the
limiting reagent is completely consumed (in the case of a complete reaction).
Incomplete reactions: the term yield is used: ratio of the amount of mole reaction product
formed to the amount of mole that theoretically could have been formed, multiplied by
100%.
Example 1: 20 ml of a 0.40 molar solution of Fe(III) ions is diluted to 100ml. 10 ml
of the diluted solution is mixed with 10 ml of a solution that contains 0.60 mmol
Sn(II) ions. Afterwards this mixture is diluted to 50 ml. Calculate the
concentrations of all ions in the mixture.
Just a reminder
1.2. Gas law
For ideal gas
pV = nRT
● p: pressure (Pa/atm) (1 atm = 101325 Pa)
● V: volume (L)
● n: amount of gas mole (mol)
● T: temperature (K)
● R = 8.314 J K-1mol-1 = 0.082 L atm K-1mol-1 (gas constant)
*In approximation, this law also can be used for real gases.
1.3. Dalton’s law of partial pressures
Example 2: A piece of potassium reacts with water. The gas formed is trapped
in a gas burette. The gas volume increases with 36.5 mL. The temperature is
20°C, the pressure is 1,000 atm, and the vapor pressure of water at 20°C is
0.023 atm.
b) The gas mixture in the setup (gas mixture + excess air) with an electric
discharge is brought to reaction, calculate the decrease of the gas volume,
when the temperature is back to 20°C while pressure stays at 1.000 atm.
Contents
1. Stoichiometry
2. The thermodynamics of chemical reactions
3. The kinetics of chemical reactions
2.1. Introduction
Sign convention
Thermodynamic systems
W = −1140kJ
−354.55J
Exercise:
There are 2 cups (A) and (B) containing 200 mL of HCl 0,8M, respectively. Cup
(A) is added with 200 mL of NaOH 1 mM and cup (B) is added with 400 mL of
NaOH 0.5 mM. Supposing the effects of the surrounding environment is
negligible, what can we expect about the highest temperature of each cup,
knowing that they have the same heat capacity.
(1) The highest temperature of cup (A) is higher than that of club (B)
(2) The highest temperature of cup (B) is higher than that of club (B)
(3) The highest temperature of cup (A) is equal to that of club (B)
(4) We can not expect to guess this without experimental measurements.
2.2. First law of thermodynamics
Internal energy ( ) is the sum of the potential and kinetic energies of all
molecules, atoms and ions in the system.
dU = dW + dQ
=> The total energy remains constant, although it may be converted from one form to
another (law of energy conservation)
Consequences:
● In an isolated system ΔU = 0
● At constant volume, ΔU = ∆Q (because dW = PdV and ∆V = 0)
2.3. Enthalpy
The enthalpy H is the sum of the internal energy U and the term pV (work).
H = U + pV and ΔH = ΔU + pΔV
At constant pressure: ΔH = ∆Q - pex. ΔV + pΔV = ∆Q (|pex| = |p|)
=> ΔH = heat exchanged at constant pressure
(We also apply this when the question ask us to calculate ΔH for a reaction at a certain
temperature)
For reaction contained gases: ΔH = ΔU + ΔnRT (Δn is the difference in mole of gas
between after reaction and before reaction)
Enthalpy is the state function => Reversing a reaction or a process changes the sign of ΔH
A → B (1) and B → A (2) so we have:
The standard enthalpy of formation of an element ( ) in its standard state is zero.
2.3. Enthalpy
- Standard enthalpy change ΔH° is the enthalpy change of the transformation of substances
at their standard state (gas: p = 1 atm; solid/liquid : most stable state, p = 1 atm. ; dissolved
substance: concentration 1 M and T = 298 K)
*In most of the cases, we can assume that influence of T on ΔH° is negligible
The enthalpy change of a global process is the sum of the enthalpy changes of the different
steps.
Hess cycle
Hess diagram
2.5. Second law of thermodynamics and Entropy
Entropy S is the parameter that measures the disorder of matter and energy, unit J/K.
Second law of thermodynamics state that the driving force of a spontaneous process is
towards a more chaotic state => Total ΔS during spontaneous process is always positive
Consequences:
The (Gibbs) free energy is the difference between the enthalpy and the term TΔS:
We have ΔS - ΔH/T > 0 or TΔS - ΔH > 0 for spontaneous irreversible reactions (previous
derivation of second law)
=> ΔG < 0 (exergonic) for spontaneous reaction, and ΔG > 0 (endergonic) for nonspontaneous
reaction.
ΔG = ΔG0 + RT ln Q
ΔG = ΔG0 + RT ln Q = ΔG0 + RT ln K = 0
=>
Reaction with reagent A => reaction rate = – d[A]/dt = k[A] => - k.dt = d[A]/[A]
A pseudo-first order reaction is a reaction of higher order that is carried out in such a way that the
reaction behaves like a first order reaction
Reaction with reagent A and reaction rate = – d[A]/dt = k[A]2 => - k.dt = d[A]/[A]2
Half life of a reagent is the time needed to reduce the concentration of that reagent to half of
its initial value.
=> Substitute into integrated rate law: t1/2 is the time for [A]t to reach ½[A]0
Exercise: In the reaction A→products:
At t=0 [A]=0.1563M;
After 1.00 minute, [A]=0.1496M;
After 2.00 minutes, [A]=0.1431M;
(a) Calculate the average rate of reaction during the first minute and during
the second minute.
(b) Why are these two rates not equal?
(c) Determine the order of the reaction and calculate the rate constant
3.4. Reaction mechanism
- Law of Mass Action: The rate of a simple (one step) reaction is directly proportional to the
concentration of the reacting substances.
-Intermediates are species that appear in a reaction mechanism but not in the overall balanced
equation
- The step in the reaction mechanism that determines the rate of the global reaction is called the
rate determining step, which is the slowest step in the mechanism.
3.5. Activation energy and energy diagram
- The collision theory: A reaction occurs after a collision between the reagents (X and Y).
Only collisions with sufficient kinetic energy and the right orientation are efficient.
- The activation energy is the minimum amount of energy needed to initiate or start a
chemical reaction.
- Energy diagram:
3.6. Arrhenius equation
=> The dependence of rate constant on temperature
Catalyst is a substance that accelerates the reaction without being used up itself. The
catalyst has an effect on the reaction mechanism that decreases activation energy.
2 types of catalyst:
Thanks For
Listening