Respuesta :
dE = dH - PdV
2 H2O(g) → 2 H2(g) + O2(g)
You can see that there are 2 moles of gas in the reactants and 3 moles of gas in the products.
1 moles of ideal gas occupies the same volume as 1 mole of any other ideal gas under the same conditions of temp and pressure.
Since it is done under constant temp and pressure that means the volume change will be equal to the volume of 1 mole of gas
2 moles reacts to form 3 moles
The gas equation is
PV = nRT
P = pressure
V = volume (unknown)
n = moles (1)
R = gas constant = 8.314 J K^-1 mol^-1
- the gas constant is different for different units of temp and pressure (see wikki link) in this case temp and pressure are constant, and we want to put the result in an equation that has Joules in it, so we select 8.314 JK^-1mol^-1)
T = temp in Kelvin (kelvin = deg C + 273.15
So T = 403.15 K
Now, you can see that PV is on one side of the equation, and we are looking to put PdV in our dE equation. So we can say
dE = dH -dnRT (because PV = nRT)
Also, since the gas constant is in the unit of Joules, we need to convert dH to Joules
dH = 483.6 kJ/mol = 483600 Joules/mol
dE = 483600 J/mol - (1.0 mol x 8.314 J mol^-1K-1 x 403.15 K)
dE = 483600 J/mol - 3351.77 J
dE = 480248.23 J/mol
dE = 480.2 kJ/mol
2 H2O(g) → 2 H2(g) + O2(g)
You can see that there are 2 moles of gas in the reactants and 3 moles of gas in the products.
1 moles of ideal gas occupies the same volume as 1 mole of any other ideal gas under the same conditions of temp and pressure.
Since it is done under constant temp and pressure that means the volume change will be equal to the volume of 1 mole of gas
2 moles reacts to form 3 moles
The gas equation is
PV = nRT
P = pressure
V = volume (unknown)
n = moles (1)
R = gas constant = 8.314 J K^-1 mol^-1
- the gas constant is different for different units of temp and pressure (see wikki link) in this case temp and pressure are constant, and we want to put the result in an equation that has Joules in it, so we select 8.314 JK^-1mol^-1)
T = temp in Kelvin (kelvin = deg C + 273.15
So T = 403.15 K
Now, you can see that PV is on one side of the equation, and we are looking to put PdV in our dE equation. So we can say
dE = dH -dnRT (because PV = nRT)
Also, since the gas constant is in the unit of Joules, we need to convert dH to Joules
dH = 483.6 kJ/mol = 483600 Joules/mol
dE = 483600 J/mol - (1.0 mol x 8.314 J mol^-1K-1 x 403.15 K)
dE = 483600 J/mol - 3351.77 J
dE = 480248.23 J/mol
dE = 480.2 kJ/mol
Answer : The value of [tex]\Delta E[/tex] of the reaction is, 480.29 KJ.
Explanation :
Formula used :
[tex]\Delta E=\Delta H-\Delta n_g\times RT[/tex]
where,
[tex]\Delta E[/tex] = internal energy of the reaction = ?
[tex]\Delta H[/tex] = enthalpy of the reaction = 483.6 KJ/mole = 483600 J
[tex]\Delta n_g[/tex] = change in the moles of the reaction = Moles of product - Moles of reactant = 3 - 2 = 1 mole
R = gas constant = 8.314 J/mole.K
T = temperature = [tex]125^oC=273+125=398K[/tex]
Now put all the given values in the above formula, we get:
[tex]\Delta E=483600J-(1mole\times 8.314J/mole.K\times 398K)[/tex]
[tex]\Delta E=480291.028J[/tex]
[tex]\Delta E=480.29KJ[/tex]
Therefore, the value of [tex]\Delta E[/tex] of the reaction is, 480.29 KJ.