asked 152k views
5 votes
When 0.627 g of biphenyl (CH) combusts in a bomb calorimeter, the temperature rises from 21.9 C to 26.6 C. What is U for the reaction in kJ/mol biphenyl

asked
User Skeppet
by
7.5k points

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:


U=-6852(kJ)/(mol)

Step-by-step explanation:

Hello there!

In this case, since the heat capacity of the bomb calorimeter, we can use this found value on ethernet: 5.86 kJ/°C, thus, we can compute the heat gained by the calorimeter:


Q_(calorimeter)=C\Delta T=5.86kJ/\°C*(26.6-21.9)\°C=27.54kJ

Thus, since the heat gained by the calorimeter is actually the heat released due to the combustion of byphenyl, we compute it as the negative of that of the calorimeter:


Q_(combustion)=-Q_(calorimeter)=-27.54kJ

Finally the energy of reaction, U, in kJ/mol for the combustion of byphenyl (molar mass = 154 g/mol) is:


U=(-27.54kJ)/(0.627g*(1mol)/(156g) ) \\\\U=-6852(kJ)/(mol)

Best regards!

answered
User Parmod
by
7.3k points
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