The molar heat of combustion of a substance is the heat liberated when one mole of that substance undergoes complete combustion with oxygen. There's more to the definition, but that's the important part. When ethanol is burned with oxygen, the heat liberated is equal to 1367kJ per mole burned.Define the molar heat of combustion of ethanol.
uhhhhhhh that was the formula for the change in heat enthalpy, not the molar heat of combustion. however, ΔH = MCΔT is needed, with an additional equation:Dreamerish*~ said:Oh and the formula for working out the molar heat of combustion is:
ΔH = MCΔT
Where ΔH is the molar heat in joules, M is the mass of water used in grams, C is the constant of water - usually 4.18, and ΔT is the chance in temperature in degrees Celcius.
That's exactly the same formula except you divided through by the number of moles combusted. Normally for the molar heat of combustion, you work out ”H = MC”T using the change in temperature of burning one mole, anyway, so Dreamerish is right. But your formula's handy for questions looking to be tricky.molar heat of combustion = ”H / (no. moles combusted) = MC”T/(no. moles combusted), since molar heat of combustion is a rate, in kJ/mol.
It was fine for a while yesterday, and the posts before are still fine, but your quote has the "?"s.insert-username said:And is anyone else seeing funny? That equation looked right yesterday (i.e. it had triangles), but it's a mess today. Board upgrade problem?