Just doing some preparation for my SAC tomorrow on calorimetry and enthalpy and I've got a few questions hopefully you lovely folks can answer:
- We've calibrated our calorimeter using 100mL of water and found our calibration constant. Would there be an effect on the constant if we used say, 50mL of water or even 100mL of ethanol instead of water?
- We're reacting HCl and NaOH and finding the enthalpy of that, and also reacting HNO3 and KOH and finding the enthalpy of that. Would there be any similarities between the enthalpies given that both their ionic equations are H+ + OH- --> H2O
- What are some main sources of error that may have affected the calibration of our calorimeter?
- We're also trying to find the enthalpy of the dissolution of potassium nitrate, in the equation for the reaction is H2O a reactant, or does it go above the arrow?
Huge thanks in advance
1. Using 50ml of water means that it will heat of more quickly (twice as much). Remember the units for specific heat capacity are joules, per gram per degree C.
The specific heat capacity of water is 4.18 J/g/K but ethanol is only 2.44 J/g/K. HOWEVER ethanol is less dense than water so the mass of ethanol is not the same (numerical) value as the volume. The point is, that the ethanol heats up quicker (about twice as fast accounting for the density).
So the calibration factor will be around half if either of the changes are made.
2. Hmm, yes i think they would be similar so long as you add both in aq solution. That way you don't need to account for temperature change when a solid ionises in water. Also, they are all strong acid or bases so adding them (ie increasing the overall volume) doesn't favour forward or back reaction so there'd be no change in temp due to shift of POE. HOWEVER, chem can do weird things so I wouldn't be surprised if they are not similar enthalpy values
3. Incorrectly reading the voltmeter (esp if analogue not digital). losing water because you over zealously stirred the water. losing temperature due to the surrounding (inefficient insulation) butt this last one should be accounted for my the calibration factor. Although, for more detailed analysis one should account for the energy lost but doesn't really matter for pracs and stuff
4. NO NO NO

KNO
3 --> K
+ + NO
3-Good luck
