stargaze said:
ahh icic .. thanks wogboy
um just another q for anyone... never really understood how to do those ones where u have ethanol heating up water.. e.g.
Mr. X used spirit burners to compare the heats of combustion of ethanol. He burned 0.4g of ethanol using the flame to heat 100mL of water. lTemperature rose from 20 to 34C.
a) Given specific heat of water is 4.2x10^3 J kg^-1 K^-1, calculate the experimental molar heat of combustion of ethanol.
b) The experiment was repeated using methanol. If accurate values for the heats of combustion of methanol and ethanol are 727 and 1367kJ mol^-1 respectively, estimate the value this student would expect to obtain for methanol.
thanks ~
my bad.. yeah, the q was missign some stuff. edited
(a) using deltaH = -mcdelta T...
delta H =molar heat of substnace x no. of mols of substnace (if you dont believe me, try substituting the units...molar heat (kj/mol) x no of mols (mol) = just kJ, which is the units for H so we're cool
)
therefore,
(molar heat) x (0.4/46)= 0.1*4.12*(34-20)
Note: 46 is molar mass of ethanol, and 100ml is 0.1L..also, you should show the units for everything in ur calculation..could get messy typing tho
anyway....by calculation, molar heat is (0.1*4.12*14)/(0.4/46) = 663.32kJ/mol
(really the answer should be negative cos the reaction is exothermic, but the - is commonly left out..cos we normally work out the molar heat of combustion for fuels and duh fuels will release energy (in the form of heat) and hence have a - heat of reaction, and this reaction is combustion in this case!!)
As for b, i reckon if we have a difference of (1367-663)/1367*100 =51.4% error for ethanol, we should have the same for methanol. THerefore, if its heat of combustion is 727kJ/mol, the experimental one should be 51.4% of this, which is 374.4 kJ/mol.
I am 99% sure about me answer for a, but not so for b...could some genius clear it up?? thanks