A student is asked to calculate the amount of heat involved in changing 10.0 g of liquid bromine at room temperature (22.5°C) to vapor at 59.0°C.To do this, one must use Tables 8.1 and 8.2 for information on the specific heat, boiling point, and heat of vaporization of bromine. In addition, the following step-wise process must be followed. (a) Calculate Δ H for: Br 2 ( l , 22.5 ° C ) → Br 2 ( l , 59.0 ° C ) (b) Calculate Δ H for: Br 2 ( l , 59.0 ° C ) → Br 2 ( g , 59.0 ° C ) (c) Using Hess's law, calculate ΔH for: Br 2 ( l , 22.5 ° C ) → Br 2 ( g , 59.0 ° C )
A student is asked to calculate the amount of heat involved in changing 10.0 g of liquid bromine at room temperature (22.5°C) to vapor at 59.0°C.To do this, one must use Tables 8.1 and 8.2 for information on the specific heat, boiling point, and heat of vaporization of bromine. In addition, the following step-wise process must be followed. (a) Calculate Δ H for: Br 2 ( l , 22.5 ° C ) → Br 2 ( l , 59.0 ° C ) (b) Calculate Δ H for: Br 2 ( l , 59.0 ° C ) → Br 2 ( g , 59.0 ° C ) (c) Using Hess's law, calculate ΔH for: Br 2 ( l , 22.5 ° C ) → Br 2 ( g , 59.0 ° C )
Solution Summary: The author explains that the enthalpy change, H, for a reaction is essentially the heat flow of the reaction taking place at constant pressure.
A student is asked to calculate the amount of heat involved in changing 10.0 g of liquid bromine at room temperature (22.5°C) to vapor at 59.0°C.To do this, one must use Tables 8.1 and 8.2 for information on the specific heat, boiling point, and heat of vaporization of bromine. In addition, the following step-wise process must be followed.
(a) Calculate ΔH for:
Br
2
(
l
,
22.5
°
C
)
→
Br
2
(
l
,
59.0
°
C
)
(b) Calculate ΔH for:
Br
2
(
l
,
59.0
°
C
)
→
Br
2
(
g
,
59.0
°
C
)
(c) Using Hess's law, calculate ΔH for:
Br
2
(
l
,
22.5
°
C
)
→
Br
2
(
g
,
59.0
°
C
)
Dr. Mendel asked his BIOL 260 class what their height was and what their
parent's heights were. He plotted that data in the graph below to determine if
height was a heritable trait.
A. Is height a heritable trait? If yes, what is the heritability value? (2 pts)
B. If the phenotypic variation is 30, what is the variation due to additive alleles?
(2 pts)
Offspring Height (Inches)
75
67.5
60
52.5
y = 0.9264x + 4.8519
55
60
65
MidParent Height (Inches)
70
75
12pt v
V
Paragraph B IUA
>
AT2 v
V
Experiment:
Each team will be provided with 5g of a mixture of acetanilide and salicylic acid. You will divide it into three 1.5 g portions in separate 125 mL Erlenmeyer flasks savıng some for melting point analysis. Dissolve the mixture in each flask in ~60mL of DI water by heating to boiling on a hotplate. Take the flasks off the hotplate once you have a clear solution and let them stand on the bench top for 5 mins and then allow them to cool as described below.
Sample A-Let the first sample cool slowly to room temperature by letting it stand on your lab bench, with occasional stirring to promote crystallization.
Sample B-Cool the second sample 1n a tap-water bath to 10-15 °C
Sample C-Cool the third sample in an ice-bath to 0-2 °C
Results:
weight after recrystalization and melting point temp.
A=0.624g,102-115°
B=0.765g, 80-105°
C=1.135g, 77-108
What is the percent yield of A,B, and C.
Chapter 8 Solutions
OWLv2 for Masterton/Hurley's Chemistry: Principles and Reactions, 8th Edition, [Instant Access], 1 term (6 months)
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, chemistry and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
Calorimetry Concept, Examples and Thermochemistry | How to Pass Chemistry; Author: Melissa Maribel;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSh29lUGj00;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY