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How do you calculate enthalpy change for H-H +I-I. 2H-IWhen H-H = 436kj/mol I-I=151 kj/mol H-I=297kj/mol

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User Kesi
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8.1k points

1 Answer

6 votes

To calculate enthalpy change, what we do is to use the following formula:


\Delta H^o_(Rxn)=\sum ^{}_{}(B.E,Reactants)-\sum ^{}_{}(B.E,Products)

Where B.E represents the bonds energy.

Replacing, we got:


\begin{gathered} \Delta H^o_(Rxn)=\sum ^{}_{}(B.E,Reactants)-\sum ^{}_{}(B.E,Products) \\ \Delta H^o_(Rxn)=(H-H)+(I-I)-2(H-I) \\ \Delta H^o_(Rxn)=436+151-2(297) \\ \Delta H^o_(Rxn)=-(7KJ)/(mol) \end{gathered}

So that's the enthalpy change.

answered
User Blazs
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8.7k points
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