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Monday Jan 13 Roll sheet, please sign Reading Quiz on 11.3-11.4 Chapter 11 11.1 Gases, Liquids, and Solids 11.2 Intermolecular Forces 11.3 Select Properties of Liquids 11.4 Phase Changes

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January 13, 2014 CHEM 121 Dr. Wanda Oehrli

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Jan13

Monday Jan 13• Roll sheet, please sign• Reading Quiz on 11.3-11.4• Chapter 11

– 11.1 Gases, Liquids, and Solids– 11.2 Intermolecular Forces– 11.3 Select Properties of Liquids– 11.4 Phase Changes

Page 2: Jan13

Office Hours

My office is Parmer 324• MWF 10:30-11:30 here in Lewis Hall• Or by appointment (e-mail me)

• Office hours will be posted on the myDU page each week (if there are changes)

Page 3: Jan13

Reading for WednesdaySections 11.5-11.6

There will be a Reading Quiz at the beginning of class.

Pre-Class Reading Assignment

Page 4: Jan13

Teams – sit class with your teams in class, you may have a different study group outside of

1 Anayeli, Emily Green, Frank, Fernando

2 Yumna, Nicole, Chrisitian, Max

3 Chandler, Alyssa Hernandez, Joseph, Brenda

4 Oliver, Arley, Valerie, Monica

5 Adrian, Jeannette, Miriam, Tezira

6 Catherine Conte, Saman, Evelina, Catherine Trempe

7 Yazmin, Kaitlyn, Jency, Veronica

8 Clayton, Alexandra, Sweta, Camila

9 Alyssa Domico, Matt Kozlowski, Ignacio, Nikita

10 Jacob, Katy, Marissa, Ryan

Page 5: Jan13

Chapter 11 Homework

Turn in today– 9, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 27

Due Wednesday in class– 33, 35, 39, 45

Due Friday in class – 7, 49, 51, 53, 55, 57, 59, 61, 73

Quiz on section 11.1-11.4 homework problems on Friday Jan. 17 in class.

Page 6: Jan13

Polar Covalent Bonds

• When two atoms share electrons unequally, a bond dipole results.

• The dipole moment, , produced by two equal but opposite charges separated by a distance, r, is calculated:

= Qr• It is measured in debyes (D).

From chapter 8

Page 7: Jan13

ElectronegativityFrom chapter 8

Page 8: Jan13

Difference in Electronegativity tells you about the polarity of the bond

F2 HF LiF

Electronegativity difference

4.0-4.0=0 4.0-2.1=1.9 4.0-1.0=3.0

Type of bond

Non polar covalent

Polar covalent

Ionic

1. If the electronegativity difference (usually called ΔEN) is < 0.5, then the bond is nonpolar covalent.2. If the ΔEN is 0.5 - 1.6, the bond is considered polar covalent3. If the ΔEN is > 2.0, then the bond is ionic.

From chapter 8

Page 9: Jan13

Intermolecular Forces Affect Many Physical Properties – example boiling pt

The strength of the attractions between particles can greatly affect the properties of a substance or solution.

Why does acetic acid boil at a higher temperature?

Page 10: Jan13

Summarizing Intermolecular Forces

Page 11: Jan13

Any questions on 11.1-11.2?

Sample Exercise 11.2

List the substances BaCl2 H2, CO, HF, Ne in order of increasing boiling point

1. Are ions present?2. Is the molecule polar?3. O,N,F bond with H and lone

pair of electrons?4. Molecular weight?

Page 12: Jan13

Main topics of 11.3-11.4

1. Viscosity

2. Surface tension

3. Enthalpy of phase changes• Phase change diagram

4. Heating Curve

5. Critical Temperature and Pressure

Page 13: Jan13

Viscosity• Resistance of a liquid to flow is

called viscosity.• It is related to the ease with

which molecules can move past each other.

• Viscosity increases with stronger intermolecular forces and decreases with higher temperature.

Page 14: Jan13

Surface Tensionresults from the net inward force experienced by the molecules on the surface of a liquid.

Page 15: Jan13

Exothermic/Endothermic

• Ice melting is endothermic

• Energy must be put into the system(ice) from surroundings to make ice go from solid to liquid phase

• Energy is need to push molecules farther apart

• Heat of Fusion, DH fus

DH is positive

energy

Page 16: Jan13

Phase Changes

DH fus

DH fus

DH vapDH vapDH sub

DH sub

Endothermic – takesEnergy to push molecules farther apart (arrow up red)

Exothermic – energy is released (arrow down blue)

DH freezingDH condensationDH deposition

DH = H final - H initial

DH is positive

DH is negative

Page 17: Jan13

Energy Changes Associated with Changes of State

It takes more heat to vaporize substances than to melt them.

DH sub = DH fus + DH vap

Page 18: Jan13

Specific heat is the amount of heat energy necessary to increase the temperature of a given mass of a particular substance by some amount

Specific heat =heat transferred

mass temperature change

Cs =q

m T

For liquid water 4.184 J/g-K

Page 19: Jan13

Heating Curves

• The heat added to the system at the melting and boiling points goes into pulling the molecules farther apart from each other.

• The temperature of the substance does not rise during a phase change.

• BC• DE

DH fus

DH vap

DH vap

DH fus

Page 20: Jan13

DH vap

DH fus

Specific heat of water

Specific heat of gas

Specific heat of ice

Page 21: Jan13

Heat added

Cooling CurvesExothermic processDT is negative

Page 22: Jan13

Heat added

Cooling CurvesExothermic processDT is negativegas

http://grade9sciencepedagogics.pbworks.com/f/1321228118/Cooling%20Curve%20elearning.png

liquid

solidGas->liquid

Liquidsolid

F

G

H

Page 23: Jan13

Sample Ex 11.3

Part A

1.00 mole of ice at -25C to steam at 125 constant pressure 1 atm

Part B

DH• 100g water cooled to

ice at -30.0 oC

Specific heat• H2O(s) 2.03J/gK

• H2O(l) 4.184J/gK

• H2O(g) 1.84J/gK

DH fus 6.01kJ/mol DH vap 40.67kJ/mol

Page 24: Jan13

Chapter 11 Homework

Due Wednesday in class– 33, 35, 39, 45

Due Friday in class – 7, 49, 51, 53, 55, 57, 59, 61, 73

Quiz on HW from 11.1-11.4 homework problems on Friday Jan. 17 in class.