6. Bomb calorimeters are used to measure the AU of a reaction, which is equal to the heat flow at constant volume, qy. When 1.010 g of sucrose (C12H2201) undergoes combustion in a bomb calorimeter, the temperature rises from 24.92 °C to 28.33 °C. Calculate AUrxn for the combustion of sucrose (in kJ/mol sucrose). The heat capacity, Ceal, of the bomb calorimeter, determined in a separate experiment, is 4.90 kJ/°C. (You can ignore the heat capacity of the small sample of sucrose because it is negligible compared to the heat capacity of the calorimeter.) heat of (water + calorimeter) = qsoln = Ccal AT Hint: think about the heat is flow between the calorimeter + water and the combustion reaction first.

Chemistry
10th Edition
ISBN:9781305957404
Author:Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan A. Zumdahl, Donald J. DeCoste
Publisher:Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan A. Zumdahl, Donald J. DeCoste
Chapter6: Thermochemistry
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 105AE: Combustion of table sugar produces CO2(g) and H2O( l). When 1.46 g table sugar is combusted in a...
icon
Related questions
icon
Concept explainers
Question
Not Graded……
6. Bomb calorimeters are used to measure the AU of a reaction, which is equal to the heat flow at constant
volume, qy. When 1.010 g of sucrose (C12H22011) undergoes combustion in a bomb calorimeter, the
temperature rises from 24.92 °C to 28.33 °C. Calculate AUrxn for the combustion of sucrose (in kJ/mol
sucrose). The heat capacity, Ceal, of the bomb calorimeter, determined in a separate experiment, is 4.90
kJ/°C. (You can ignore the heat capacity of the small sample of sucrose because it is negligible compared to
the heat capacity of the calorimeter.)
heat of (water + calorimeter) = qsoln = Ccal AT
Hint: think about the heat is flow between the calorimeter + water and the combustion reaction first.
Transcribed Image Text:6. Bomb calorimeters are used to measure the AU of a reaction, which is equal to the heat flow at constant volume, qy. When 1.010 g of sucrose (C12H22011) undergoes combustion in a bomb calorimeter, the temperature rises from 24.92 °C to 28.33 °C. Calculate AUrxn for the combustion of sucrose (in kJ/mol sucrose). The heat capacity, Ceal, of the bomb calorimeter, determined in a separate experiment, is 4.90 kJ/°C. (You can ignore the heat capacity of the small sample of sucrose because it is negligible compared to the heat capacity of the calorimeter.) heat of (water + calorimeter) = qsoln = Ccal AT Hint: think about the heat is flow between the calorimeter + water and the combustion reaction first.
Expert Solution
steps

Step by step

Solved in 2 steps with 2 images

Blurred answer
Knowledge Booster
Thermochemistry
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, chemistry and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
Similar questions
Recommended textbooks for you
Chemistry
Chemistry
Chemistry
ISBN:
9781305957404
Author:
Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan A. Zumdahl, Donald J. DeCoste
Publisher:
Cengage Learning
Chemistry
Chemistry
Chemistry
ISBN:
9781133611097
Author:
Steven S. Zumdahl
Publisher:
Cengage Learning
Chemistry: An Atoms First Approach
Chemistry: An Atoms First Approach
Chemistry
ISBN:
9781305079243
Author:
Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan A. Zumdahl
Publisher:
Cengage Learning
Chemistry: Principles and Reactions
Chemistry: Principles and Reactions
Chemistry
ISBN:
9781305079373
Author:
William L. Masterton, Cecile N. Hurley
Publisher:
Cengage Learning
Chemistry by OpenStax (2015-05-04)
Chemistry by OpenStax (2015-05-04)
Chemistry
ISBN:
9781938168390
Author:
Klaus Theopold, Richard H Langley, Paul Flowers, William R. Robinson, Mark Blaser
Publisher:
OpenStax
General Chemistry - Standalone book (MindTap Cour…
General Chemistry - Standalone book (MindTap Cour…
Chemistry
ISBN:
9781305580343
Author:
Steven D. Gammon, Ebbing, Darrell Ebbing, Steven D., Darrell; Gammon, Darrell Ebbing; Steven D. Gammon, Darrell D.; Gammon, Ebbing; Steven D. Gammon; Darrell
Publisher:
Cengage Learning