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Topic: Adding standard enthalpy change question  (Read 2642 times)

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Offline salocime

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Adding standard enthalpy change question
« on: September 12, 2008, 08:46:18 AM »
I want to make sure I'm doing the right thing.

I'm doing questions that are asking me to calculate the enthalpy change of a reaction based on 2 or 3 thermochemical equations. In this one question, two of the equations have ΔH˚ with kJ, but then one ΔH˚  with kJ/mol. They aren't the same units. Can I still add all the numbers?

The full question in case it's helpful:

2N2(g) + 5O2(g) --> 2N2O5(g)

(1) 2H2(g) + O2(g) --> 2H2O(l)   ΔH˚ =-572 kJ
(2) N2O5(g) + H2O(l) --> 2HNO3(l)  ΔH˚ =-77 kJ
(3) ½N2(g) + 3/2 O2(g) + 1/2 H2(g) --> HNO3(l)   ΔH˚ =-174 kJ/mol


My solution:
(1) 2H2O(l) --> 2H2(g) + O2(g) ΔH˚ =572 kJ
2x(2) 4HNO3(l) --> 2N2O5(g) + 2H2O(l)  ΔH˚ = 154 kJ
4x(3) 2N2(g) + 6O2(g) + 2H2(g) --> 4HNO3(l)  ΔH˚ = -696 kJ/mol

------------------------------------------------
2N2(g) + 5O2(g) --> 2N2O5(g)    ΔH˚= ???

Offline cliverlong

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Re: Adding standard enthalpy change question
« Reply #1 on: September 12, 2008, 12:10:20 PM »
Interesting question.

My books are tantalisingly contradictory on this.

I have always worked on the basis that standard enthalpy changes are for the formation of one mole of product and the units are kJ mol-1. The number of moles of the reactants are adjusted to ensure one mole of product is formed. e.g. H2 + 1/2 O2 -> H2O . How one handles multiple products I have never got my head around

However, the big Housecroft textbook says if one produces 2 moles of product then the standard enthalpy change (delta H) is double that of the one mole case yet the units are still kJ mol-1

Looking at your example I would go for the kJ mol-1 unit indicating one mole of product and the kJ unit indicating the moles as in the version of the equation given  (i.e. scaled to avoid fractions).

But I may be wrong and will definitely interested if anyone can come up with a robust reference on how to handle this.

Clive

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