chapter 10 energy 10.1 the nature of energy energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

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Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy- the ability to do work or produce heat Potential energy- energy due to position or composition Kinetic energy- energy due to motion of the object; determined by mass & velocity Law of Conservation of Energy- energy can be converted from one form to another but can neither be created nor destroyed Work- force acting over a distance (W = F x d)

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Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat Potential energy- energy due to position or composition Kinetic energy- energy due to motion of the object; determined by mass & velocity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Chapter 10 Energy

10.1 The Nature of Energy

Energy- the ability to do work or produce heat

Potential energy- energy due to position or composition

Kinetic energy- energy due to motion of the object; determined by mass & velocity

Law of Conservation of Energy- energy can be converted from one form to another but can neither be created nor destroyed

Work- force acting over a distance (W = F x d)

State Function- property of a system that changes independently of its pathway

Page 2: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

10.2 Temperature & HeatTemperature- measure of the random motions of the components of a substanceHeat- flow of energy due to temperature difference

Temperature is measured in degrees Celsius in lab; the metric system unit for temperature is Kelvin.

Heat is measured in calories; 1 calorie is the amount of heat necessary to heat 1 gram of water by 1 degree Celsius. The metric system unit for heat is Joules.1 calorie = 4.184 J

Page 3: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Figure 10.2: Equal masses of hot and cold water.

Page 4: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Figure 10.3: H2O molecules in hot and cold water.

Page 5: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Figure 10.4: H2O molecules in same temperature water.

Page 6: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

10.3 Exothermic & Endothermic ProcessesSystem- part of the universe on which we wish to focus attentionSurroundings- everything else in the universe (see next slide)*Exothermic- heat is evolved; heat exits*Endothermic- process that absorb energy from the surroundings

The energy gained by the surroundings must be equal to the energy lost by the system.

Page 7: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat
Page 8: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Figure 10.5: The energy changes accompanying the burning of a

match.

Page 9: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

10.4 ThermodynamicsThermodynamics- study of energy1st Law of Thermodynamics- the energy of the universe is constant.E- internal energy; sum of kinetic and potential energies of all particles in the system.

/\E = q + w

q is heatw is work

Sample problem:

Page 10: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

10.5 Measuring Energy ChangesUnits of HeatCalorie- amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water by one degree Celsius (or 1 Kelvin)Joule- metric system unit of heat; 1 calorie = 4.184 jouleIt takes 4.184 joules to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water by 1 degree CelsiusExample 10.1, p. 295: Express 60.1 cal in joules?Problem 10.1, p. 295: How many calories of energy correspond to 28.4 J?

Page 11: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Specific heat capacity- amount of energy required to change the temperature of 1 gram of a substance by 1 degree Celsius

Water: specific heat = 1 cal/g oC or 4.184 J/g oCq = mc/\T (/\T = Tfinal – Tinitial)

Page 12: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Figure 10.6: A coffee-cup calorimeter.

Page 13: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Problem 10.2, p. 296: Calculate joules required to heat 454 grams of water from 5.4oC to 98.6oC.

Note Table 10.1, p. 297Problem 10.3, p. 299: A 5.63 gram sample of solid gold is heated from 21oC to 32oC. How much energy (in joules and in calories) is required?

Page 14: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Problem 10.4, p. 300: A 2.8 gram sample of pure metal requires 10.1 J of heat to change its temperature from 21oC to 36oC. What is this metal? (Use Table 10.1)

Page 15: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

10.6 Thermochemistry (Enthalpy)Enthalpy- heat that is produced or absorbed in a reaction. For most reactions, /\Hp = heat

Problem 10.5, p. 302: The reaction that occurs in heat packs used for sports injuries is 4Fe(s) + 3O2(g) 2Fe2O3(s) /\H = -1652 kJ

How much heat is released when 1.00 gram of iron is reacted with excess oxygen gas?

Page 16: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

10.7 Hess’s LawThe change in enthalpy is the same whether the reaction takes place in

one step or in a series of steps.1. If a reaction is reversed, the sign of /\H is changed.2. The magnitude of /\H is directly proportional to the quantities of

reactants and products

Page 17: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

10.8 Quality v. Quantity of Energy

10.9 Energy and Our World

(read carefully; questions on the test)

Page 18: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Figure 10.7: Energy sources used in the United States.

Page 19: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Figure 10.8: The earth’s atmosphere.

Page 20: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Figure 10.9: The atmospheric CO2 concentration over the past 1000 years.

Page 21: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

10.10 Energy as a Driving ForceEnergy spread- concentrated energy is dispersed widelyMatter spread- molecules are spread out and occupy a larger volumeEntropy (S) = chaosThe entropy of the universe is increasing. (2nd Law of Thermodynamics)Example: (NH4)2CO3(s) 2NH3(g) + H2O(g) + CO2(g)

H2O(s) H2O(l) H2O(g)

Page 22: Chapter 10 Energy 10.1 The Nature of Energy Energy - the ability to do work or produce heat

Figure 10.10: Comparing the entropies of ice and steam.