For the first question, do they give you a change in enthalpy? Because if they do, all you probs have to do is find the number of moles through
n = V/Vm (at STP, it is 22.4)
As it asks for heat of combustion, you only want to find the energy released (assuming its exothermic) by 1 mole. Once you do this and find the number of KJ released for each mole, you can calculate the number of g this equates to. (n= m/Mr) Simplify this, and you get the KJ/g
(while change in enthalpy relates directly to the equation, heat of combustion is only for one mole)
a) A calorimeter should be well insulated in order to ensure that no heat is lost to the surroundings. In calorimetry, we want to find the energy released or absorbed (depending on the experiment), and a loss of heat will cause the energy to be lower than expected.
b) It is necessary to calibrate a calorimeter in order to maintain consistency for the next reaction. While we assume that there are no heat losses, calibration takes the heat losses into account, and provides a more accurate answer