1.05 g MgO is added to 110.15ml HCL with an initial temperature

In summary, 1.05 g of MgO reacted with 110.15 ml of HCL at an initial temperature of 21.5 degrees Celsius and a final temperature of 34.5 degrees Celsius. The energy released for the reaction was calculated to be 5985.55 KJ or 5.98 KJ/mol of MgO. This was found by using the equation q=mcdeltaT and converting the mass of MgO to moles using its molar mass. The final answer is 230 KJ/mol of MgO.
  • #1
haber101
6
0
1.05 g MgO is added to 110.15ml HCL with an initial temperature of 21.5 degrees Celsius and a final temperature of 34.5 degrees Celsius. calculate the KJ of energy released for the reaction. assume that 4.18 J of energy is required to change the temperature of one mL of solution to one Celsius degree.my thinking. q=mcdeltat

q=?
m=110.15ml
c=4.18kj
delta t=13

=(110.15)(4.18)(13)
=5985.55Kj
=6.0x10^3
 
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  • #2


Your thinking is not incorrect, but you are incredibly cruel to your units. Mass is not in ml, and your use of k is completely off.
 
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  • #3


Borek said:
Your thinking is not incorrect, but you are incredibly cruel to your units. Mass is not in ml, and your use of k is completely off.

thanks, so how about i transfer the 110.15ml to grams which is 110.15g and then do q=mc[tex]\delta[/tex]t
q=(110.15g)(4.18J/g^oC)(13^oC)
q=5985.551 J = 598 KJ
q=5.9x10^3 J

so the answer is q= 598 KJ or q=5.985x10^3 J ??

better?

also how can I calculate KJ/mol of MgO from this? has to do with the molar mass in guessing? which for Mg is 24.31 and oxygen 16.0 so 40.31 so 5985/40.31=148.47 Kj/mol of MgO. did i do this correctly?
 
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  • #4


haber101 said:
q=(110.15g)(4.18J/g^oC)(13^oC)

Very nice and very correct.

q=5985.551 J = 598 KJ

Nice try - but wrong. kJ is 1000 Joules.

also how can I calculate KJ/mol of MgO from this? has to do with the molar mass in guessing? which for Mg is 24.31 and oxygen 16.0 so 40.31 so 5985/40.31=148.47 Kj/mol of MgO. did i do this correctly?

No. You need molar mass, but you have to use it to calculate number of moles of MgO. Again - if you would pay attention to units it would be obvious something is wrong.
 
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  • #5


Borek said:
Very nice and very correct.
Nice try - but wrong. kJ is 1000 Joules.
No. You need molar mass, but you have to use it to calculate number of moles of MgO. Again - if you would pay attention to units it would be obvious something is wrong.

ok, thanks, i see so it must be 5.98KJ, makes sense

for the second part, hmmm how about if i did the amount of MgO which is given

(1.05g MgO)(1mol MgO)/(40.31 g MgO)=.0260

im not sure about this one
 
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  • #6


As usual you omitted units in your answer, but I guess you mean 0.0260 moles of MgO?

You know 5.98 kJ (beware: small k, not capital K) was produced by reaction of 0.0260 moles of MgO. Now just combine these numbers so that the answer is in kJ/mol.
 
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  • #7


Borek said:
As usual you omitted units in your answer, but I guess you mean 0.0260 moles of MgO?

You know 5.98 kJ (beware: small k, not capital K) was produced by reaction of 0.0260 moles of MgO. Now just combine these numbers so that the answer is in kJ/mol.

yes that is what i meant, my apologies

by combine do you just mean say that there is 5.98 kJ per 0.0260 moles of MgO

or 5.98kJ/0.0260 mol MgO= 230kJ/mol
 
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  • #8


Looks OK :smile:

Note: I have not checked numbers, but they look reasonable.
 
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  • #9


Borek said:
Looks OK :smile:

Note: I have not checked numbers, but they look reasonable.

i appreciate the help, thanks
 
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1. What is the purpose of adding 1.05 g MgO to 110.15ml HCL with an initial temperature?

The purpose of adding 1.05 g MgO to 110.15ml HCL with an initial temperature is to conduct an experiment to determine the heat of reaction between magnesium oxide and hydrochloric acid.

2. What is the chemical equation for the reaction between MgO and HCL?

The chemical equation for the reaction between MgO and HCL is MgO(s) + 2HCl(aq) → MgCl2(aq) + H2O(l).

3. How does the initial temperature affect the reaction between MgO and HCL?

The initial temperature affects the reaction between MgO and HCL by determining the rate of the reaction. A higher initial temperature will result in a faster reaction and a lower initial temperature will result in a slower reaction.

4. What is the molar concentration of HCL in the solution after adding 1.05 g MgO?

The molar concentration of HCL in the solution after adding 1.05 g MgO can be calculated by using the initial volume and concentration of the HCL solution, as well as the moles of HCL consumed in the reaction with MgO.

5. What is the expected outcome of the reaction between 1.05 g MgO and 110.15ml HCL with an initial temperature?

The expected outcome of the reaction between 1.05 g MgO and 110.15ml HCL with an initial temperature is the production of magnesium chloride and water, as shown in the chemical equation. The heat of reaction can also be calculated using the initial temperature and the final temperature of the solution.

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