QUESTION IMAGE
Question
h−c≡c−h(g) + 2hi(g) → (h₃c−c−i with h atoms) (g) using the table of average bond energies below, the δh for the reaction is ____ kj. options: -160, +160, +217, -217, -63
To calculate the enthalpy change ($\Delta H$) for a reaction using bond energies, we use the formula:
$\Delta H = \sum (\text{bond energies of bonds broken}) - \sum (\text{bond energies of bonds formed})$
Step 1: Identify bonds broken and formed
- Bonds broken:
- 1 $\ce{C\equiv C}$ triple bond (in $\ce{HC\equiv CH}$)
- 1 $\ce{C-H}$ bond (in $\ce{HC\equiv CH}$)
- 2 $\ce{H-I}$ bonds (in $2\ce{HI}$)
- Bonds formed:
- 1 $\ce{C-C}$ single bond (in the product)
- 2 $\ce{C-H}$ bonds (new, in the product)
- 2 $\ce{C-I}$ bonds (in the product)
Step 2: Recall average bond energies (standard values)
- $\ce{C\equiv C}$: $837\ \text{kJ/mol}$
- $\ce{C-H}$: $413\ \text{kJ/mol}$
- $\ce{H-I}$: $299\ \text{kJ/mol}$
- $\ce{C-C}$: $348\ \text{kJ/mol}$
- $\ce{C-I}$: $240\ \text{kJ/mol}$
Step 3: Calculate energy for bonds broken
Sum of bond energies for bonds broken:
Step 4: Calculate energy for bonds formed
Sum of bond energies for bonds formed:
Step 5: Calculate $\Delta H$
Using $\Delta H = \text{bonds broken} - \text{bonds formed}$:
Wait, re-examining the reaction:
Reactant: $\ce{HC\equiv CH}$ (has 2 $\ce{C-H}$ bonds? Wait, $\ce{HC\equiv CH}$ is ethyne: $\ce{H-C\equiv C-H}$, so 2 $\ce{C-H}$ bonds! Oh, I made a mistake earlier. Let’s correct:
Step 1 (corrected): Bonds broken
- 1 $\ce{C\equiv C}$
- 2 $\ce{C-H}$ (in $\ce{HC\equiv CH}$)
- 2 $\ce{H-I}$
Step 3 (corrected): Bonds broken energy
Step 4 (corrected): Bonds formed
Product: $\ce{I-CH2-CH2-I}$ (ethane derivative with 2 $\ce{C-I}$ and 4 $\ce{C-H}$? Wait, no: the product is $\ce{I-C-C-I}$ with four $\ce{C-H}$ bonds? Wait, the structure is $\ce{H2C-I - I-CH2}$? Wait, the given product is $\ce{H H | | I-C-C-I | | H H}$, so it’s $\ce{CH2I-CH2I}$? Wait, no: the structure shows $\ce{H H}$ on each $\ce{C}$, so $\ce{CH2I-CH2I}$? Wait, no, the structure is $\ce{H H | | I-C-C-I | | H H}$, so each $\ce{C}$ has two $\ce{H}$ and one $\ce{I}$? Wait, no: $\ce{C}$ has four bonds. So $\ce{C}$ is bonded to two $\ce{H}$, one $\ce{C}$, and one $\ce{I}$. So each $\ce{C}$ has: 2 $\ce{C-H}$, 1 $\ce{C-C}$, 1 $\ce{C-I}$. So for two $\ce{C}$ atoms:
- 1 $\ce{C-C}$
- 4 $\ce{C-H}$ (2 per $\ce{C}$)
- 2 $\ce{C-I}$ (1 per $\ce{C}$)
Step 4 (corrected): Bonds formed energy
Step 5 (corrected): $\Delta H$
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