Lecture 3 Enthalpy and Heat Capacity
Lecture 3 Enthalpy and Heat Capacity
ENTHALPY
AND
HEAT CAPACITY
Enthalpy Changes
So far we have discussed the INTERNAL ENERGY of a
system. A less familiar property of a system is its
ENTHALPY (H), which is defined as the internal energy
plus the product of pressure and volume:
H = U + PV
2
Enthalpy Changes
∆H = q + V∆P
If we carry out a process at constant pressure,
∆P = 0, then
∆H = qp
The subscript ‘p’ denotes that the expression
is valid only at constant pressure.
3
∆U = q + w
∆U = q – P∆V
∆U = q – P∆V = q
∆U = qv
∆H = q + V∆P = q
∆H = qp
∆U calculated from
∆U = ∆H – ∆(PV)
= ∆H – ∆(nRT)
= ∆H – ∆ng (RT)
where
∆ng = no. of moles of product gases – no. of moles of reactant gases
6
Change of State
Let say, a system changes from state 1 to state 2
State 1: T1, p1, V1, H1 State 2: T2, p2, V2, H2
From ∆H = ∆U + ∆(pV)
For a reaction involving liquid and solid phases, the
difference in density of the system is small.
At normal pressure of 1 atm, ∆(pV) ≈ 0
∆H ≈ ∆U (reaction involving solid and liquid)
8
Class Assignment
Problem:
When 1 mol of zinc is dissolved in excess dilute hydrochloric acid in an
OPEN beaker, we find that 152.3 kJ of heat is given out (at 25°C).
Zn(s) + 2 HCl (aq) → ZnCl2 (aq) + H2(g)
What is the change in enthalpy (∆H) and what is the change in internal
energy (∆U) for this reaction?
9
Class Assignment
Problem:
10
Calorimetry:
Laboratory Measurement of Heats of Reaction
12
The heat capacity is the quantity of heat required to raise the
temperature of an object by 1 K.
q
Heat capacity [in units of J/K]
T
13
SOME PHYSICS INSIGHT TO INTERNAL ENERGY
15
Heat capacity of
dihydrogen as a
function of
temperature.
dq
Heat capacity
dT
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Heat Capacities (Continued)
U U
dU dT dV
T V V T
U
Change in internal energy due to the T change alone.
T V
U
Change in internal energy due to the V change alone.
V T
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Since dU = đq – Pext dV, if only PV work is involved,
U U
dq Pext dV dT dV
T V V T
U U
dq dT
ext
P dV
T V V T
U
dqV dT
T V
19
U
dqV dT
T V
dqV U
CV CV
dT hence T V
partial derivative
20
The internal energy of a
system increases as the
temperature is raised.
This graph shows its
variation as the system is
heated at constant volume.
The slope of the tangent to
the curve at any temperature
is the heat capacity at
constant volume at that
temperature.
Note that, for the system
illustrated, the heat capacity
is greater at B than A.
In this case, the internal
energy varies with the
temperature of the sample.
21
But, we are interested only in its variation with the temperature,
the volume being held constant.
T2
U V
T1
CV dT qV
UV CV T2 T 1
UV CV T
22
Heat Capacities (Continued)
dq p dH
23
Since the change in T and the heat transferred are readily measured, heat
capacity at constant pressure, Cp defined as
dq p
Cp
dT
H
T p
Since the heat capacity at constant P is readily measured, the change in
enthalpy for a finite change in T at constant P:
T2
H p
T1
C p dT
For gases, at a given temperature, the slope of H vs. T is steeper than that of
U vs. T
Cp,m is larger than CV,m
Cp,m : Molar heat capacity at constant P ; Unit J K-1 mol-1
CV,m : Molar heat capacity at constant V ; Unit J K-1 mol-1
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The relation between Cp and CV
U U
dq dT pext dV
T V V T
At constant P (P = Pext),
U
dq p Cv dT P V dV
T
Dividing by dT and setting,
U V
C p CV p
V T T p
For ideal gas
U V nR
0 and
V T T p p
Therefore,
C p CV nR or C p,m CV ,m R
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For monoatomic ideal gas,
3
- The molar translational energy, Ut = 2 RT
U 3
CV , m R
T V 2
5
- The molar enthalphy, H t RT
2
H 5
C p ,m R
T p 2
26
Class Assignment
Problem:
For CH4(g) at 2000 K and 1 bar, Cp,m = 94.4 J mol-1 K-1. Find Cp
of 586 g of CH4 at 2000K and 1 bar.
Solution:
27
Refresh!! HEAT CAPACITY CM
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HEAT CAPACITY CM
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Summary
We calculate ΔH of a process by measuring the heat at
constant pressure (qp).
To do this, we determine ΔT of the surroundings and
relate it to qp through the mass of the substance and
its specific heat capacity (qp= c x mass x ΔT).
Specific heat capacity is the quantity of energy
needed to raise the temperature of 1 g of the substance
by 1 K.
Calorimeters measure the heat released from a system
either at constant pressure (qp= ΔH) or at constant
volume (qv= ΔU).
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UDEC 1132 – Physical Chemistry I
REVERSIBLE
EXPANSION/
COMPRESSION
In thermodynamic, a reversible change is a change that can be
reversed by an infinitesimal modification of a variable.
E.g.: A gas is confined by a piston and that the external
pressure, Pext, is set equal to the pressure, P, of the confined
gas.
For a reversible expansion,
pext p
dw pext dv
p dv
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REVERSIBLE ISOTHERMAL COMPRESSION/ EXPANSION
If the expansion is carried out reversibly at constant T for an ideal gas, the
external P is given by
nRT
p
So, V
V2
wrev p dV
V1
V2 nRT
wrev dV
V1 V (since the T is constant)
V2
wrev nRT n
V1
V2 V1 (expansion), n V2 0 and w 0
If V
1
System has done work on the surroundings and internal energy ↓
V2
If V2 V1 (compression), n 0 and w 0
V1
Work done on the system and internal energy ↑
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Since for an ideal gas at constant T,
P1V1 P2V2
V2 P1
V1 P2
P1
wrev nRT n
P2
P2
nRT n
P1
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Class Assignment
Problem:
One mole of an ideal gas expands from 5 to 1 bar at 298K.
Calculate w for
a) A reversible expansion and
b) An expansion against a constant external pressure of 1 bar.
Solution:
35
Class Assignment
Problem:
A piston filled with 0.0400 mole of an ideal gas expands reversibly from 50
mL to 375 mL at a constant temperature of 37oC. It absorbs 208 J of heat
during the process. Calculate q, w, ∆U, and ∆H for the process.
Solution:
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ADIABATIC PROCESS
dq 0
dU dq dw
dU pex dV
Intergrate,
U2 V2
U1
dU pex dV
V1
U U 2 U1 w
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For an ideal gas, the internal energy is a function only of
temperature and so,
dU CV dT
U2 T2
U1
dU CV T1
dT
U U 2 U1 CV (T2 T1 )
Since q 0 , U w
w CV (T2 T1 )
∆ T = -ve
w = -ve
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In reversible adiabatic expansion T2 V1
CV ,m n R n
p pex T1 V2
dU p dv T
CV ,m
V1 R
n 2 n
CV dT p dV T1 V2
CV dT
nRT
dV Since C p, m CV , m R
V CV ,m C p ,m CV ,m
dT dV T2 V1
CV nR n n
T V T1 V2
C p ,m
If CV is independent of T, 1
T2 V1 CV ,m
T2dT dV
v2
CV nR T1 V2
T1 T v1 V
1
T V
nR n 2 T2 V1
CV n 2
T1 V1
T1 V2
T V
CV n 2 nR n 1 C p ,m 5
T1 V2 where
CV ,m 3 39
By using ideal gas law,
T2 P2V2
T1 P1V1
We can obtain,
p1 V1 p2V2
1
T2 p2
T1 p1
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Class Assignment
Problem:
When 1 mole of an ideal monoatomic gas is allowed to expand adiabatically
and reversibly from 22.7 L mol-1 at 1 bar and 0oC to 45.4 L mol-1, the pressure
drop to 0.315 bar.
(a) Confirm this pressure.
(b) Calculate the final temperature.
(c) How much work is done in the adiabatic expansion?
Solution:
42
Class Assignment
When 1 mole of an ideal monoatomic gas is allowed to expand adiabatically
and reversibly from 22.7 L mol-1 at 1 bar and 0oC to volume of 45.4 Lmol-1,
the pressure drop to 0.315 bar.
(a) Confirm this pressure.
(b) Calculate the final temperature.
(c) How much work is done in the adiabatic expansion?
Solution (cont.):
43
Irreversible or reversible process?
The shaded areas are
proportional to the amount of
work that must be done on the
gas to compress it, or that is
done on the surroundings
when the gas expands.
The work obtained in the
surrounding in the single-step
expansion is clearly not great
enough to compress the gas
back to its initial state in
single-step compression. The
net work done is not zero. The
process is irreversible.
The irreversible expansion/
compression can be changed
to reversible process by having
the process done in
infinitesimal steps (increase
the number of step to infinity).
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A reversible expansion or
compression requires: