I recently heard that, for an upcoming thermodynamics test, I must learn to draw Hess cycles. Not merely solve Hess's Law, mind you; draw the cycles themselves, with questions saying "draw Hess cycles". Up till this point I had been perfectly happy using my own numerical method to solve the problems but now I must learn to draw the cycles themselves or lose marks.
So can anyone explain to me how to draw the cycles - once I have the final answer? After that, it should just be an exercise in drawing and labelling correctly, but I don't know how to draw the cycles.
Let's take a problem like the following, just for example's sake:
I am given the enthalpy changes of the following reactions (since they shouldn't be relevant for drawing the cycle itself, I've left them in symbolic form, e.g. ΔH1, ΔH2, etc.):
2 NaCl (s) + H2O (l) → Na2O (s) + 2 HCl (g) ... ΔH1
NO (g) + NO2 (g) + Na2O (s) → 2 NaNO2 (s) ... ΔH2
NO (g) + NO2 (g) → N2O (g) + O2 (g) ... ΔH3
2 HNO2 (l) → N2O (g) + O2 (g) + H2O (l) ... ΔH4
And I have to find the enthalpy change for the reaction:
HCl (g) + NaNO2 (s) → HNO2 (l) + NaCl (s) ... ΔHr
Now, using my numerical method I can easily solve the problem:
ΔHr=ΔH3-ΔH1-ΔH2-ΔH4
But now, the question is, now that I know how to transform the equations to get my final value for ΔHr, how do I draw the cycle to show this? Please bear in mind simply producing the final answer cycle will not help me much; I'd rather you explained how you arrived at it, i.e. how you decided what to write, what order, what to write over the connecting line, etc.
I have no knowledge of Hess cycles, except that the path Reactants → Products is equivalent to Reactants → Intermediates → Products. My guess is that this means the top line of the cycle is where I write HCl (g) + NaNO2 (s) → HNO2 (l) + NaCl (s) (my desired reaction) and below that I will transform the reactants one by one to reach the desired products, but how do I work out how to do this from the final answer (ΔHr=ΔH3-ΔH1-ΔH2-ΔH4)?