Hello all,
I have a question from a quiz I am correcting and I believe the key may be wrong. Please set me straight if I am messing up thermodynamics right now.
Question:
Two solutions originally at 24.6 deg C are mixed in a calorimeter. When 100.0 mL of 0.1M silver nitrate (aq) is mixed with excess NaCl (aq), the temperature of the solution rises to 28.3 deg C. Determine Delta H rxn for the reaction as written below:
AgNO3(aq) + NaCl(aq)
AgCl (aq) + NaNO3 (aq)
assume d = 1.015 g/ml for both solutions and specific heat of each solution is 4.195 J/g°C.
Since the solutions are both the same temperature does the ΔH rxn not only come from the limiting reactant silver nitrate?
using MW AgNO3= 169.87 g/mol; you have 1.69 g of silver nitrate reacting in the reaction.
so plugging into q = mcΔT; you get -26.37 J (exothermic makes it negative). Divide by moles of silver nitrate, 0.01 gives, after conversion, -2.64 kJ/mol for ΔH rxn.
My teacher used 100 mL of solution and multiplied by density to get 101.5 g and plugged that into q = mcΔT. But the reaction depends on the heat from the reaction not water. Does he use the mass of the water as well because of the heat capacities? I have read that the m in the equation if the reactants + water + calorimeter....
I am a little confused as to if I have assumed wrong.
Much appreciated!
Cheers!