Ok fair enough. Cheers nliu.
Also two things:
1 - whats the chemical basis behind the connection of two blocks of metal (say copper and nickel) and putting them in an acidic solution where only hydrogen forms on one metal (copper in this example) whilst if the 2 blocks were separate, the other metal block would oxidise (nickel)? Ive come across this sort of situation in a company exam and i dont feel as if the solutions properly explained this.
2 - there was a question in a company paper where 2 compounds are combusted (Hydogen gas and i think methanol). The q asked to compare the efficiency of them in terms of energy released per gram. Shouldnt they have asked for per mol? Doesnt energy released per mol make more sense as a measure of efficiency??
This question was answered before somewhere but I'll answer it again.
If you connect the two blocks of metal, they become electrically connected too. Put them in acidic solution and the nickel will react with the acid hydrogens. However, when the nickel reacts, it forms nickel cations, which repel the hydrogen ions. As the two blocks of metal are electrically connected, the hydrogen ions can grab electrons from any part of the metal surface. In this case, the positive hydrogen ions go towards the neutral copper metal and grab electrons from the copper, which are really provided by the nickel. The net result? Nickel is still oxidised, but the oxidation takes place at the copper surface.
If the blocks were separated, nickel is still reactive enough to react with protons, but copper isn't, so gas only evolves at the nickel surface; there is no electrical connection anywhere this time.
As for your second question, think about a rocket; every gram of fuel carried costs money. Also, energy released per mole makes LESS sense because some molecules are larger. Are you telling me that glucose is a more efficient fuel source simply because its molar heat of combustion is of higher magnitude than that of hydrogen? To adequately compare different fuel sources, energy per gram is used as now we're really measuring the energy output per atom (the atomic masses don't change noticeably). Isn't that what fuel efficiency is?