Lesson Plans
Chemistry: The Central Science 9th Edition ©2003
by Brown, LeMay, and Bursten
Week 5: Thermochemistry
Chapter 5: Thermochemistry
This lesson builds the basics of chemical thermodynamics, which will be dealt with more completely later in the course.
College Board Performance Objectives:
- Understand what the system, the surroundings, and the universe mean.
- Be familiar with the units of energy.
- Understand what the First Law of Thermodynamics means.
- Be familiar with how the internal energy of a system is affected by exchanges of heat and work between the system and the surroundings.
- Understand what a state function is.
- Define enthalpy, and explain how heat transfer from or to the system at constant pressure changes it.
- Know what the sign of the enthalpy indicates about the reaction.
- Be able to sketch an enthalpy diagram for reactions given their enthalpy changes.
- Be able to calculate the amount of heat released or absorbed by a reaction, knowing the quantity of the reactants and the enthalpy of the reaction on a mole basis.
- Define heat capacity and specific heat (capacity).
- Be able to work problems on calorimetry.
- State and apply Hess's Law of Constant Heat Summation in calculating enthalpies of reaction from enthalpies of other reactions.
- Know what the standard state of an element or compound is.
- Define and illustrate what is meant by standard enthalpy of formation.
- Calculate the enthalpy change of a reaction using a table of standard enthalpies of formation.
College Board Lab Objectives:
- Become familiar with the use of a calorimeter to measure the enthalpy change during a chemical reaction.
- Compare the molar enthalpy change for the neutralization of a strong and a weak acid.
Suggested Labs:
- Experiment 26, Heat of Neutralization, p. 299
Resources:
- Instructor's Resource Manual, p. 55–65
- Student's Guide, p. 80–101
- Test Bank, p. 169–210
- Instructor's Resource CD, Chapter 5
Pacing Guide:
- Energy and Its Conservation—.5 day
- q, w,
E—.5 day
- Enthalpy,
H—.5 day
- Calorimetry—1 day
- Hess's Law—1 day
H°;
Hf°—1.5 days
- Block Scheduling
Don't spend much time on Energy and Its Conservation or q, w, and
E. The really important concepts begin with Enthalpy. Calorimetry, Hess's Law,
H°, and
Hf° need two solid blocks of time. Suggested exercises are critical to student learning.
Key Words:
- thermodynamics, p. 153
- thermochemistry, p. 153
- potential energy, p. 154
- kinetic energy, p. 154
- joule, p. 155
- calorie, p. 155
- system, p. 155
- surroundings, p. 155
- work, p. 156
- heat, p. 156
- energy, p. 157
- first law of thermodynamics, p. 158
- internal energy, p. 158
- endothermic, p. 160
- exothermic, p. 161
- state function, p. 162
- pressure-volume work, p. 163
- enthalpy, p. 163
- enthalpy of reaction, p. 166
- calorimeter, p. 169
- heat capacity, p. 169
- molar heat capacity, p. 169
- specific heat, p. 169
- bomb calorimeter, p. 171
- Hess's law, p. 174
- enthalpy of formation, p. 176
- standard enthalpy, p. 177
- standard enthalpy of formation, p. 177
Suggested Exercises:
Critical thinking questions and end-of-chapter activities are included in these exercises.
- pp. 188–197, # 1, 3, 11, 13, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 31, 33, 35, 39, 41, 43, 45, 47, 49, 51, 53, 55, 57, 59, 61, 63, 65, 67, 69, 71, 73, 75, 77, 90, 96.
- eMedia Exercises: pp. 196–197, # 115, 116, 119, 122.
Troubleshooting Tips/Error Traps:
- Section 5.8, Food and Fuels, is not essential for the exam.
- Don't spend much time on
E, q, and w.
- Spend more time on enthalpy.
- Get students used to remembering that standard enthalpies of formation are molar.
- Balancing chemical reactions is essential and so are the physical states of all species in thermochemistry.