Study Guide for Content Mastery Answer Key Chemistry: Matter and Change T203 16 Energy 1000 joules/1 kilojoule. 13. To convert kilojoules to joules, divide the number of kilojoules by lost as heat. 12. When a fuel is burned, some of its chemical potential energy is 11. One calorie equals 4.184 joules. 10. One nutritional Calorie is equal to 100 calories. potential energy. 9. Chemicals participating in a chemical reaction contain only 8. Kinetic energy is energy of motion. raise the temperature of one gram of that substance by one degree Celsius. 7. The specific heat of a substance is the amount of heat required to 6. A calorie is the SI unit of heat and energy. of one gram of pure water by one degree Celsius. 5. A calorie is the amount of energy required to raise the temperature cooler object. 4. Heat is a form of energy that flows from a warmer object to a of its composition. 3. Chemical potential energy is energy stored in a substance because created and destroyed. 2. The law of conservation of energy states that energy can be 1. Energy is the ability to do work or produce heat. Study Guide for Content Mastery q c m T q 4.184 J/(g°C) (5 102 g) 2.00°C q 4.184 103 J 4.18 kJ Chemistry: Matter and Change • Chapter 16 absorbed by the water? The specific heat of liquid water is 4.184 J/(g°C). 14. If the temperature of a 500.0-g sample of liquid water is raised 2.00°C, how much heat is Answer the following question. Show all your work. multiply true true 1000 calories both potential and kinetic energy true true joule true true true cannot be true In the space at the left, write true if the statement is true; if the statement is false, change the italicized word or phrase to make it true. In your textbook, read about the nature of energy. Section 16.1 Class STUDY GUIDE FOR CONTENT MASTERY Date Energy and Chemical Change CHAPTER Name Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 91 STUDY GUIDE FOR CONTENT MASTERY Class Heat in Chemical Reactions and Processes 16 Date studied Solution of Ba(OH)2 and NH4NO3 7. Everything in the universe except the system being 6. The heat content of a system at constant pressure 5. A system plus its surroundings 4. The change in enthalpy in a chemical reaction or process you wish to study 3. The specific part of the universe that contains the reaction reactions and phase changes 2. The study of heat changes that accompany chemical absorbed or released during a chemical or physical process 1. An insulated device used to measure the amount of heat Column A 92 Chemistry: Matter and Change • Chapter 16 The universe is the solution plus the surroundings. 10. What is the universe? The surroundings include everything except the solution. 9. What are the surroundings? The system is the solution of Ba(OH)2 and NH4NO3. 8. A scientist is studying the solution in the flask. What is the system? Use the illustration to answer the following questions. g e d f a c b g. f. surroundings enthalpy (heat) of reaction e. enthalpy d. universe c. thermochemistry b. calorimeter a. system Column B Study Guide for Content Mastery For each item in Column A, write the letter of the matching item in Column B. In your textbook, read about measuring heat and about chemical energy and the universe. Section 16.2 CHAPTER Name T204 Chemistry: Matter and Change Study Guide for Content Mastery Answer Key Class molar enthalpy of fusion heat molar enthalpy of vaporization cool absorbs . thermochemical equation released heat from your body. to the . . Chemistry: Matter and Change • Chapter 16 is absorbed in the reaction. H 600 kJ, the positive value for H means that heat cool Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Study Guide for Content Mastery heat 12. In the equation H2O(s) 0 H2O(l) must be absorbed by the ice. 11. If it takes 100 joules to melt a piece of ice, ice to melt, and the soda pop will become 10. If you put an ice cube in a glass of soda pop, the heat absorbed by the ice will cause the absorbs 9. Sweating makes you feel cooler because, as it evaporates, the water on your skin surroundings. 8. When a gas condenses to a liquid, heat is 7. The conversion of a gas to a liquid involves the molar enthalpy of vaporization . H 572 kJ is a(n) molar enthalpy of fusion 6. 2H2(g) O2(g) 0 2H2O(g) the solid substance. . 93 94 11. The standard state of mercury is solid. Study Guide for Content Mastery enthalpies of reactions under standard conditions using Hess’s law. 10. Standard enthalpies of formation provide data for calculating the 9. The standard state of oxygen is gas. that energy is absorbed during the reaction. 8. A standard enthalpy of formation that has a negative value means standard state is 0.0 kJ. 7. The standard enthalpy of formation of a free element in its substance at 0 K and one atmosphere pressure. 6. The standard state of a substance is the normal state of the Hf°. 5. The symbol used to represent standard enthalpy of formation is atmosphere. 4. For a pure gas, the standard state is the gas at a pressure of one 3. The standard state of iron is solid. accompanies the formation of one gram of a compound in its standard state from its constituent elements in their standard states. 2. The standard enthalpy of formation is the change in enthalpy that Chemistry: Matter and Change • Chapter 16 liquid true true positive true 5. Converting two moles of a liquid to a solid requires an amount of energy that is twice 4. The 298K true true true one mole can be added to produce a final equation for a reaction, then the sum of all the enthalpy changes for the individual reactions is the enthalpy change for the final reaction. 1. Hess’s law states that if two or more thermochemical equations In the space at the left, write true if the statement is true; if the statement is false, change the italicized word or phrase to make it true. true Class STUDY GUIDE FOR CONTENT MASTERY Calculating Enthalpy Change 16 Date In your textbook, read about Hess’s law and standard enthalpy (heat) of formation. Section 16.4 CHAPTER Name is the heat required to melt one mole of a molar enthalpy of fusion of a liquid. 3. The molar enthalpy of vaporization is the heat required to vaporize one mole enthalpy of combustion 2. The enthalpy change for the complete burning of one mole of a substance is the thermochemical equation 1. A(n) is a balanced chemical equation that includes the physical states of all reactants and products and the energy change that accompanies the reaction. enthalpy of combustion thermochemical equation Use the following terms to complete the statements. Some terms will be used more than once. released STUDY GUIDE FOR CONTENT MASTERY Thermochemical Equations 16 Date In your textbook, read about writing thermochemical equations and about changes of state. Section 16.3 CHAPTER Name