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v0.1.1436
NotesChemistryTopic 4.1Calorimetry and calculating enthalpy change
Back to Chemistry Topics
4.1.22 min read

Calorimetry and calculating enthalpy change

IB Chemistry • Unit 4

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Contents

  • Measuring heat with a thermometer
  • Step 1 — heat absorbed by the water
  • Step 2 — convert Q into ΔH per mole
  • Exam-style question
The big idea: You cannot read enthalpy off a meter — so chemists measure the temperature change of the surroundings instead. This is calorimetry.

A reaction releases (or absorbs) heat, and that heat warms (or cools) a known mass of water. Measure how much the water's temperature changes and you can work out the heat transferred.
Two key terms: - Specific heat capacity, c — the energy needed to raise 1 g of a substance by 1 K (1 °C). For water, c = 4.18 J g⁻¹ K⁻¹. - Temperature change, ΔT — the final temperature minus the initial temperature. A 1 °C change is the same size as a 1 K change, so ΔT is the same number in either unit.
Watch the sign: If the water gets warmer, the reaction released heat → exothermic → ΔH is negative.

If the water gets cooler, the reaction absorbed heat → endothermic → ΔH is positive.

Getting this sign right is worth a mark on its own.

The first step of every calorimetry calculation is the same: find the heat that flowed into (or out of) the water using the given equation. Almost always the substance heated is water, so use c = 4.18 J g⁻¹ K⁻¹, and take the mass of water in grams (1 cm³ of water ≈ 1 g).

Given in the data booklet (Section 1). For water, c = 4.18 J g⁻¹ K⁻¹.
heat energy transferred (J)
mass of the substance heated, usually water (g)
specific heat capacity (J g⁻¹ K⁻¹); for water c = 4.18
temperature change, T_{final} − T_{initial} (K or °C)

Worked example — heat gained by the water

Burning a fuel raises the temperature of 100.0 g of water from 21.5 °C to 46.5 °C. Calculate the heat energy gained by the water.

Solution

  1. Find ΔT — final minus initial:
  2. Formula first — write the given equation:
  3. Substitute (m = 100.0 g, c = 4.18, ΔT = 25.0):
  4. Work it out — convert to kJ by dividing by 1000:

Final answer

Q = 1.05 × 10⁴ J (10.45 kJ) of heat is gained by the water.

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Q is the heat for the actual amount reacted. Enthalpy change ΔH is quoted per mole, so divide Q by the amount in moles, n, and attach the sign: exothermic = negative.

Derived rule
Not a booklet equation — it is Q (in kJ) shared out per mole. The minus sign makes a temperature rise give a negative (exothermic) ΔH.
enthalpy change per mole (kJ mol⁻¹)
heat transferred (kJ)
amount of the substance that reacted (mol)

Worked example — ΔH per mole

In the experiment above, the heat released (10.45 kJ) came from burning 0.0250 mol of the fuel. Calculate the enthalpy of combustion, ΔHc, in kJ mol⁻¹.

Solution

  1. The water warmed up, so the reaction is exothermic → ΔH will be negative.
  2. Formula first — heat per mole:
  3. Substitute (Q = 10.45 kJ, n = 0.0250 mol):
  4. Work it out — keep the negative sign and the unit:

Final answer

ΔHc = −418 kJ mol⁻¹ (negative because the reaction is exothermic).

Order of operations: Always: ΔT → Q = mcΔT → ÷ 1000 for kJ → ÷ n for per mole → add the sign. Use the mass of water, not the mass of fuel, in Q = mcΔT.
How this is tested: Calorimetry is a guaranteed quantitative question.

- Paper 1A (MCQ): a one-step 'find ΔH per mole from the temperature change'. - Paper 2: a multi-part calculation — often 'find the temperature rise', then 'calculate ΔH', then 'state an assumption or source of error'.

Markers reward the right sign and the correct per-mole step, and they love to ask why the measured value is less exothermic than the data-booklet value (heat loss).

IB-style question — combustion of propan-1-ol (a)

A spirit burner of propan-1-ol, C3H7OH, is used to heat 150.0 g of water. The temperature of the water rises from 19.0 °C to 41.0 °C. (a) Calculate the heat energy, in kJ, transferred to the water. (c(water) = 4.18 J g⁻¹ K⁻¹.)

Solution

  1. Find ΔT:
  2. Formula first:
  3. Substitute:
  4. Convert to kJ:

Final answer

Q = 13.8 kJ transferred to the water.

IB-style question — combustion of propan-1-ol (b)

(b) The mass of propan-1-ol burned was 0.360 g (M = 60.10 g mol⁻¹). Calculate the enthalpy of combustion, ΔHc, in kJ mol⁻¹.

Solution

  1. Find the amount burned:
  2. The water warmed, so combustion is exothermic → ΔH negative. Formula first:
  3. Substitute (Q = 13.8 kJ):
  4. Work it out — keep the sign:

Final answer

ΔHc = −2.30 × 10³ kJ mol⁻¹.

IB-style question — combustion of propan-1-ol (c)

(c) The data-booklet value for the enthalpy of combustion of propan-1-ol is more exothermic than the value found above. Outline two reasons for this difference. [2]

How to score the marks

  1. Heat loss to the surroundings: not all the heat released reaches the water — some warms the air, the beaker and the apparatus, so the measured temperature rise (and ΔH) is too small.
  2. Incomplete combustion / evaporation of fuel: soot (incomplete combustion) and some unburned fuel evaporating mean less than the assumed amount releases heat to the water.
  3. (Either two distinct, valid reasons score the 2 marks; both make the measured ΔH less exothermic than the true value.)

Final answer

Heat is lost to the surroundings and the apparatus, and combustion is incomplete (soot) / some fuel evaporates — so the measured value is less exothermic.

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A 2.50 g sample of a fuel is burned completely and the heat released raises the temperature of 250.0 g of water from 18.0 °C to 47.4 °C.

the heat energy, in kJ, transferred to the water.

(c(water) = 4.18 J g⁻¹ K⁻¹.)
[2 marks]

Related Chemistry Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

4.1.1Exothermic and endothermic reactions
4.2.1Bond enthalpies
4.2.2Hess's law and energy cycles
4.2.3Enthalpies of formation and combustion
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