Module 5 Chapter 22 Flashcards

(56 cards)

1
Q

What are features of ionic compounds

A

They are very stable with high melting points

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2
Q

What are ionic bonds

A

They are the strong electrostatic forces of attraction between oppositely - charged ions in the ionic lattice structure

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3
Q

What is a feature of the energy that is required to break the lattice

A

There is a substantial energy barrier that has to be broken down in the lattice

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4
Q

What is lattice enthalpy

A

A measure of the strength of ionic bonding in a giant ionic lattice

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5
Q

What is lattice enthalpy

A

The enthalpy change due to the formation of 1mol of ionic lattice from gaseous ions (under standard conditions)

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6
Q

What are features of lattice enthalpy

A

It provides a measure of ionic bonding strength
-It is always exothermic

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7
Q

What is the standard enthalpy change of atomisation

A

It is the enthalpy change of forming 1mol of gaseous atoms from the element in its standard state under standard conditions

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8
Q

What is a feature of standard enthalpy change of atomisation

A

It is always endothermic

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9
Q

What is a feature of the standard enthalpy change of atomisation

A

If the elements is a gas this value is related to bond enthalpy

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10
Q

What is first electron affinity

A

Is the enthalpy change when an electron is added to each atom in 1mol of gaseous atoms of -1 gaseous ions

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11
Q

What is a feature of first electron affinity

A

It is always exothermic
Successive electron affinities are needed for greater charges

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12
Q

Why are successive electron affinities endothermic

A

As the electron is repelled by the negative ion

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13
Q

What is a feature of measuring lattice enthalpy

A

Lattice enthalpy can’t be measured directly, must be calculated - indirectly using known enthalpy changes in an energy cycle

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14
Q

What is the standard enthalpy change of solution

A

It is the enthalpy change due to 1 mole of a solute dissolving in a solvent

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15
Q

What is a feature of the enthalpy change of solution

A

It can be exothermic or endothermic

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16
Q

What is the enthalpy change of hydration

A

It is the enthalpy change due to dissolving gaseous ions in water to form 1 mole of aqueous ions

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17
Q

How the the enthalpy change of solution be calculated experimentally

A

BY recording the temperature change when adding an ionic compound to water

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18
Q

What is the method for working out the enthalpy change of solution

A
  1. Take the mass of one of the salts
  2. Measure 50cm^3 of distilled water and add to a polystyrene cup and take its temperature
  3. Add the salt to water and stir with the thermometer
  4. Record the greatest temperature change
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19
Q

What is the equation to calculate the enthalpy change of solution

A

Mass x specific heat capacity x change in temperature/ 1000 x moles

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20
Q

What is the mass in the equation

A

It is the mass of the solute + the mass of the solvent

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21
Q

What happens when an ionic compound dissolves

A

The ionic lattice breaks to form separate ions
—> therefore is opposite change from lattice enthalpy

The gaseous ions are attracted tot the polar water to become hydrated aqueous ions
—> energy change = enthalpy change of hydration

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22
Q

How can you categorise whether the enthalpy change of solution is exothermic or endothermic

A

If the lattice enthalpy change is greater than the enthalpy change of hydration - endothermic

If the lattice enthalpy change is less than the enthalpy change of hydration - exothermic

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23
Q

What determines whether an ionic compound is soluble or insoluble

A

The relative magnitude of lattice and hydration enthalpies helps to explain this variety.

24
Q

What do lattice enthalpy values depend on

A

ionic size and ionic charge

25
What is the effect of ionic size
Ionic radius increases Attraction between ions decreases Lattice energy less negative Melting point decreases
26
What is the effect of cation charge for similar sized cations on lattice enthalpy
Ionic charge increases Attraction between ions increases Lattice enthalpy becomes more negative Melting point increases
27
What does the magnitude of lattice enthalpy tell you
It hints at the melting point of the ionic compound
28
What does an exothermic lattice enthalpy tell you
It indicates a very high melting point —> the compound is therefore very stable —> useful as industrial materials
29
How does ionic radius affect hydration enthalpy
As ionic radius increases the hydration enthalpy becomes less negative as the attraction between ions and water decreases.
30
How does ionic charge affect hydration enthalpy
As ionic charge increases the hydration enthalpy becomes more negative as the attraction between ions and water increases
31
What happens if hydration enthalpy is greater than lattice enthalpy
Then dissolving is likely to happen
32
What is required for an ionic compound to dissolve
The attraction between ions within the lattice needs to be overcome The needs energy that is equivalent to the lattice enthalpy
33
How can you determine if a substance is likely to dissolve from lattice
If the sum of the hydration enthalpies is larger than the magnitude of the lattice enthalpy —> enthalpy change is exothermic —> should dissolve
34
Is this rule for dissolving always true
Some compounds have an endothermic change and are soluble
35
Why is this rule for dissolving not always true
As solubility depends on temperature
36
What is entropy
It is a measure of the dispersal of energy in a system, which increases as the system is more disorder
37
What is ^S and its units
the change in entropy in J/KMol
38
What do physical states have different levels of
Entropy due to the amount of ‘randomness’ of the particles
39
What are the state changes when ^S is greater than 0
Solid —> liquid —> gase
40
What are the state changes when ^S is less than 0
Gas —> liquid —> solid
41
What occurs at 0K
there is no energy within the system, so entropy will have a value of 0 J/Kmol. All the system above 0K will have some energy dispersed within it, entropy will always have a positive value.
42
What are the signs accompanying the different entropy changes
+S = increasing the disorder -S = decreasing the disorder
43
What is the standard entropy
Is the entropy of one mole of a substance under standard conditions
44
What is a feature of standard entropy
It always has a positive value and units of J/KMol
45
How can the entropy change of a reaction be calculated
using standard entropies ^S = sum of S of products - sum of S of reactants
46
What is the feasibility of a reaction used for
To determine if a reaction will be able to happen and is energetically feasible/spontaneous
47
What is teh free energy change
It is the overall energy change
48
What is the free energy change caused by (1)
Heat transfer between the system and surroundings (^H) (enthalpy change)
49
What is the free energy change caused by (2)
Dispersal of energy within the system at the temperature of the reaction (T^S) (the entropy change at the temperature of the reaction)
50
What is the gibbs equation
^G = ^H - T^S
51
When is a reaction feasible
When ^G < 0
52
What does the feasibility of a reaction depend on
The balance between ^H and T^S
53
Why is the Gibbs equation not an accurate way to predict whether a reaction will take place (1)
As a negative G doesn’t mean that the reaction will take place As some reactions require a massive activation energy —> slow rate
54
Why is the Gibbs equation not an accurate way to predict whether a reaction will take place (2)
^G indicates thermodynamic feasibility but does not take into account the kinetics or rate of reaction
55
Draw the cycle for the enthalpy change of hydration, solution and lattice enthalpy
DRAW IT
56
DRAW the born-haber enthalpy change cycle