Ask Question
6 August, 16:55

A scientist mixed 25.00 mL of 2.00 M KOH with 25.00 mL of 2.00 M HBr. The temperature of the mixed solution rose from 22.7 oC to 31.9 oC. Calculate the enthalpy change for the reaction in kJ/mol HBr, assuming that the calorimeter loses negligible heat, that the volumes are additive, and that the solution density is 1.00 g/mL, and that its specific heat is 4.184 J/g. oC.

+2
Answers (1)
  1. 6 August, 19:45
    0
    38.493 KJ/mol

    Explanation:

    Equation of reaction; HBr + KOH - --> KBr + H2O

    Heat evolved = mass * specific heat capacity * temperature rise

    Mass of solution = density * volume

    Mass = 1.00 g/ml*50 ml = 50g

    Temperature rise = 31.9 - 22.7 = 9.2 °C

    Heat evolved = 50 * 4.184 * 9.2 = 1924.64 J

    From the equation of reaction, 1 mole of HBr reacts with 1mole of KOH to produce 1 mole of H20

    Number of moles of HBr involved in the reaction = molar concentration * volume (L)

    Molar concentration = 2.0 M, volume = 25 ml = 0.025 L

    Number of moles = 2.0 M * 0.025 L = 0.05 moles

    Therefore, 0.05 moles of HBr reacts with 0.05 moles of KOH to produce 0.05 moles of H20

    Enthalpy change per mole of HBr = 1924.64 J/0.05 moles = 38492.8 J/mol = 38.493 KJ/mol
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Get an answer to your question ✅ “A scientist mixed 25.00 mL of 2.00 M KOH with 25.00 mL of 2.00 M HBr. The temperature of the mixed solution rose from 22.7 oC to 31.9 oC. ...” in 📙 Chemistry if there is no answer or all answers are wrong, use a search bar and try to find the answer among similar questions.
Search for Other Answers