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based on the bond energies for the reaction below, what is the enthalpy…

Question

based on the bond energies for the reaction below, what is the enthalpy of the reaction, in kj?
h₂(g) + n₂(g) + 2 c(g) → 2 hcn(g)
bond energy table: single bond (h-h:432, h-c:411, h-n:386, h-o:459; c-c:346, c-n:305, c-o:358; n-n:167, n-o:201; o-o:142); multiple bonds (c=c:602, c≡c:835, c=n:615, c≡n:887; c=o:799, c≡o:1072; o=o:494; n≡n:942) all values in kj/mol

Explanation:

Step1: Identify bonds broken/formed

  • Bonds broken: 1 H-H (432 kJ/mol), 1 N≡N (942 kJ/mol), 2 C (no bond, but in reactants, C is atomic; wait, reactants: H₂ (1 H-H), N₂ (1 N≡N), 2 C (g) (atomic, so no bonds to break). Wait, no: H₂ has H-H, N₂ has N≡N, and C is gaseous atoms (so no bonds). Products: 2 HCN. Each HCN has H-C (single) and C≡N (triple). So for 2 HCN: 2 H-C bonds and 2 C≡N bonds.

Step2: Calculate energy for bonds broken

Bonds broken: H-H (1 mol) + N≡N (1 mol)
Energy broken = 432 + 942 = 1374 kJ/mol (for 1 mol reaction, but reaction is 1 H₂, 1 N₂, 2 C → 2 HCN. Wait, moles: H₂ is 1, N₂ is 1, C is 2. Products: 2 HCN.

Step3: Calculate energy for bonds formed

Bonds formed: 2 H-C (single) + 2 C≡N (triple)
Energy per H-C: 411 kJ/mol, per C≡N: 887 kJ/mol
Energy formed = 2×411 + 2×887 = 822 + 1774 = 2596 kJ/mol

Step4: Enthalpy (ΔH) = Bonds broken - Bonds formed

ΔH = 1374 - 2596 = -1222 kJ/mol (wait, no: ΔH = Σ(bonds broken) - Σ(bonds formed). Wait, bonds broken: energy absorbed (positive), bonds formed: energy released (negative). So ΔH = (energy to break bonds) - (energy released from forming bonds) = (432 + 942) - (2×411 + 2×887)
Calculate:
Bonds broken: 432 (H-H) + 942 (N≡N) = 1374 kJ
Bonds formed: 2×(H-C) + 2×(C≡N) = 2×411 + 2×887 = 822 + 1774 = 2596 kJ
ΔH = 1374 - 2596 = -1222 kJ (since reaction forms 2 moles of HCN, but the stoichiometry is 1 H₂, 1 N₂, 2 C → 2 HCN, so per reaction as written, ΔH = -1222 kJ? Wait, wait: wait, the reactants are H₂ (g) + N₂ (g) + 2 C (g) → 2 HCN (g). So C is gaseous atoms, so no bonds to break for C. So bonds broken: H-H (1 mol) and N≡N (1 mol). Bonds formed: in each HCN, H-C (single) and C≡N (triple). So 2 HCN: 2 H-C and 2 C≡N. So yes, above calculation. Wait, but let's check again:

Wait, H₂ has 1 H-H bond (broken: +432), N₂ has 1 N≡N bond (broken: +942). C is atomic, so no bonds. Then, forming 2 HCN: each HCN has H-C (single) and C≡N (triple). So 2 H-C bonds (each 411, so 2×411) and 2 C≡N bonds (each 887, so 2×887). So energy released (bonds formed) is 2×411 + 2×887 = 822 + 1774 = 2596. So ΔH = (bonds broken) - (bonds formed) = (432 + 942) - 2596 = 1374 - 2596 = -1222 kJ. Wait, but is that correct? Wait, maybe I messed up the stoichiometry. Wait, the reaction is 1 H₂, 1 N₂, 2 C → 2 HCN. So moles: H₂ is 1, N₂ is 1, C is 2. Products: 2 HCN. So bonds broken: 1 H-H (432), 1 N≡N (942), and 2 C (but C is atomic, so no bonds). Bonds formed: 2 H-C (each 411) and 2 C≡N (each 887). So yes, that's correct. So ΔH = 432 + 942 - (2×411 + 2×887) = 1374 - (822 + 1774) = 1374 - 2596 = -1222 kJ. Wait, but let's check the bond energies again. H-C single bond: 411 (from table: C row, H column: 411). C≡N: 887 (from multiple bonds: C≡N is 887). N≡N: 942 (correct). H-H: 432 (correct). So yes, calculation seems right.

Wait, but maybe I made a mistake in the direction. Enthalpy of reaction is ΔH = Σ(bonds broken) - Σ(bonds formed). Because breaking bonds requires energy (positive), forming bonds releases energy (negative). So ΔH = (energy absorbed) - (energy released) = (bonds broken) - (bonds formed). So if bonds formed have more energy released than bonds broken absorbed, ΔH is negative (exothermic). So in this case, 1374 (absorbed) - 2596 (released) = -1222 kJ (so exothermic, 1222 kJ released per reaction as written).

Answer:

\boxed{-1222}