I'm studying practice problems for an AP Chem test tomorrow, and I would really appreciate some help with this.
I'm not sure what I'm supposed to plug in for mass (m) in the formula [delta H = m x c x delta T]. Is it the mass of the solvent? Of the solution?
Ex: When a 9.55-g sample of solid NaOH dissolves in 100.0 g of water in a coffee-cup calorimeter, the temperature rises from 23.6*C to 47.4*C. Calculate Delta H (in kJ/mol NaOH) for the solution process
NaOH(s) -> Na+(aq) + OH-(aq)
Assume that the specific heat of the solution is the same as that of pure water.
So, I've got:
Delta H = 100.0 g x 4.18 J/g*C x 23.8*C = 9950 J
To convert to kJ/mol NaOH:
(9.95 kJ / 9.55 g) x (40.00 g / 1 mol) = 4.17 kJ/mol -> -41.7 kJ/mol (exothermic)
But the answer in the back of the textbook is -45.7 kJ/mol. Aaaaahhhh!!!!
Thank you so, so much.