Okay, so I had a test on organic chemistry today, and one question involved coming up with the equation for the complete combustion of hexane, and then calculating the energy change and coming up with a thermochemical equation for one mole of hexane. I spent 15 minutes trying to get it to come out exothermic like I knew it should, but I just COULDN'T get it. It's bothering me now, so hopefully someone can spot some kind of obvious mistake I'm making... here's what I had:
Equation:
C6H14 + 9.5 O2 ----> 6 CO2 + 7 H2O
Bonds Broken:
14 H-C bonds
= 14 * 413kJ
= 5782kJ
5 C-C bonds
= 5 * 348kJ
= 1740kJ
9.5 O=O bonds
= 9.5 * 498kJ
= 4731kJ
Bonds Formed:
12 C=O bonds [2 for each mol of carbon dioxide, correct?]
= 12 * 804kJ
= 9648kJ
14 H-O bonds [2 for each mol of water]
= 14 * 464kJ
= 6496kJ
Total energy released in reaction = 12253kJ
Total energy in bonds formed = 16144kJ
For a difference of 3891kJ
Therefore, thermochemical equation is:
C6H14 + 9.5 O2 + 3891kJ ----> 6 CO2 + 7 H2O
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It just doesn't make SENSE to me... I mean, I understand the calculations and what they're saying, but come on! We're blowing up HEXANE! This is bothering me like you wouldn't believe.