CHEMISTRY 2 Model
CHEMISTRY 2 Model
CHEMISTRY 2 Model
SOLIDS LIQUIDS
EVAPORATION
LIQUID VAPOR
CONDESATION
7.BOILING POINT- is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of
a liquids is equal to the external pressure (atmospheric pressure
above the liquid).
- when the boiling point is given , the pressure is also stated.
-when we express the boiling point without the pressure, it is
interpreted to be the normal boiling point at the standard atmospheric
pressure of 760 mm Hg at sea level.
-The boiling point is the most commonly used physical properties for
characterizing and identifying substances.
1. PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
BOILING POINT
Water has relatively high boiling point (100 ˚C at 1atm), which indicates its
stability.
Substance of comparable molar mass like ammonia and methane are gases at a
temperature that water is liquid.
If water were to be similar to other liquids on Earth, it would boil at normal surface
temperature s and thus, exists only as a gas, then we would not have the much
needed water in the water in the liquid phase for drinking.
Table 2.1 PROPERTIES OF SOME COMPOUNDS
Methanol 32 65 0.60
Acetone 58 56 0.53
Water serves as the earth’s thermal regulator, considering that more than
70% of the earth’s surface is covered with water.
SOLVENT ACTION
Water dissolves more substances than any other common liquid.
That is why it is the most commonly used polar solvent.
This property makes water the most effective liquid for transporting dissolve
nutrients, in the bloodstream, and eliminating wastes from living tissues in our
bodies.
This dissolving ability also explains why water is the most important agent in
the erosion of weathered materials on the earth’s surface and why tropical
areas are much more eroded than deserts.
Water that runs over and through the surface of the land dissolves many
minerals of the rocks and soil.
Unfortunately, this ability is also the reason why water is easily polluted, stays
polluted often and remains stagnant for a long time.
This simply shows that wherever water flows, either through the ground or
through our bodies, it takes along valuable chemicals, minerals, and nutrients.
CHEMICAL PROPERTIES
Heat Fusion- the amount of heat required to completely melt a solid, once it
has reached a melting point.
Vapor Pressure of a Solid- the attractive forces among the particles of the
solid are supposed to keep them in the solid state until it starts to melt.
Sublimation- the change from solid to gas without passing through the liquid
states.
SECTION 2:
TYPES OF SOLID
Solids are generally classified
into two groups:
METALIC MOLECULAR
CRYSTALS CRYSTALS
IONIC COVALENT
CRYSTALS NETWORK
CRYSTALS
METALLIC CRYSTALS
FUSION VAPORIZATION
SO (MELTING) LI
Q
(BOILING) G
LI SOLIDIFICATION UI CONDENSATION A
D D
(FREEZING) (LIQUEFYING)
S
DEPOSITION
Heat Energy Released/ Kinetic Energy Decrease
THERMODYNAMICS
The First Law of Thermodynamics
It
is also called Law of Conservation of Energy.
States that energy cannot be created or destroyed
but can simply be converted to other forms of
energy:
∆ 𝑈 =𝑞 +𝑤
GIVEN: Solution:
a).
50J of heat during a transformation
=50J + (-15J)
(a) 15J =35J
(b)65J
a).
=50J + (-65J)
FORMULA:
=-15J
Energy can exists in different forms. It can be any of the
following forms:
Electrical
Energy- is the energy of mobile electrons
that produce electricity.
FUNCTION SIGNIFICANCE
THERMOCHEMISTRY
The study of the energy changes that accompany chemical
transformation in matter.
All changes that matter undergoes, whether physical or
chemical, occur with loss or gain of energy.
Burning of fuel gas (butane, ) releases energy in the form
of heat and light as the fuel reacts with oxygen in air.
This means that the energy content of combustion
products, carbon dioxide, and water is lower compared to
that of and oxygen gas.
Activation Energy
The
energy required to break the bonds in the reactants for a
chemical reaction to occur.
EXOTHERMIC AND ENDOTHERMIC REACTIONS
Step1: Energy must be “ supplied ” to break chemical bonds of
reactants.
Step2: Energy is “released” when new chemical bonds are made in the
products:
Endothermic
Heat (energy) taken in
REACTANTS
Temperature of the substance
Products fuel cold
Endothermic Reactions
You may see an endothermic reaction written like
this…
OR
-
Heat
and temperature change are related by a proportionality
constant referred to as heat capacity (C), which is the amount
of energy is needed to increase the temperature of a
substance on material by 1˚C. This constant is expressed in
the units J/˚C.
The heat capacity of the substance can only be determined
experimentally through calorimetry.
For a pure substance, the heat capacity is equal to the
product of its mass (m) and specific heat ( c ).
C=mc
Therefore,
q=mc
The specific heat of a substance is
the amount of energy needed to
increase the temperature of one
gram of a substance by 1˚C.
Its unit is J/g •˚C.
The specific heat of a substance is
constant.
TABLE 3-1. SPECIFIC HEAT OF COMMON PURE SUBSTANCE
SPECIFIC HEATJ/g •˚C.
SUBSTANCE
, ice 2.11
, water 4.18
, steam 2.08
0.843
0.385
0.897
0.450
2.43
A calorimetry is an insulator apparatus that contains water or
any liquid of known heat capacity.
Incalorimeter, the system of interest can be a substance (for
which heat of solution or heat of dissociation is measured) or a
chemical reaction (for which heat reaction of heat
neutralization is measured).
The system exchange heat with the water and the compounds
of the calorimeter.
The heat exchange can be mathematically expressed as