You must construct a Hess cycle, or manipulate the equations to give you the equation you require.
What is the definition of bond enthalpy?
Write out an equation to represent it and then construct this equation from the ones you are given.
How can you construct a Hess cycle for this though? It would be C + S2 ---> CS2? And the elements at the bottom would be the same: C + S2? I am so confused...
How can you construct a Hess cycle for this though? It would be C + S2 ---> CS2? And the elements at the bottom would be the same: C + S2? I am so confused...
No, you must be more rigorous and take into account the states of matter...
You can't read that post in isolation... What I'm saying is that you must construct your required equation using the equations given...
OK, so the equation you actually want is:
C(g) + 2S(g) --> CS2(g)
so construct it one step at a time from the other equations.
1. You want C(g). Is there any equation that uses it?
2. Then you want to add 2S(g). Is there any equation that contains S(g)? Well double it and add...
Until you eventually end up with the required equation (doing the same to all of the enthalpy changes)
1) Right, and this equation uses it: C(s) --> C(g) (which is 715 kJ mol-1) 2) This one: S(s) --> S(g) (which is 223 kJ mol-1), so 223 x 2 = 446 kJ mol-1.
1) Right, and this equation uses it: C(s) --> C(g) (which is 715 kJ mol-1) 2) This one: S(s) --> S(g) (which is 223 kJ mol-1), so 223 x 2 = 446 kJ mol-1.
why not multiply the sulphur equation by 2 and then add them?
But that will give you the reverse of what you want....
OK so reverse the equation and change the sign...
do you get the drift?
Did I not say to x2 to the sulfur? It says in what I just wrote
Anyways so you would then reverse the sign to get -1161, and then add 88 to get -1073, then divide by 2 to get -563.5 which is the answer? Still doesn't seem right because I didn't use the value of 27 kJ mol-1...
Did I not say to x2 to the sulfur? It says in what I just wrote
Anyways so you would then reverse the sign to get -1161, and then add 88 to get -1073, then divide by 2 to get -563.5 which is the answer? Still doesn't seem right because I didn't use the value of 27 kJ mol-1...
Because what you are making is CS2(g) and for the enthalpy of formation you want CS2(l) as it is a liquid under standard conditions (and a very smelly one at that!)
So you must change the gas to a liquid using the value given...
Because what you are making is CS2(g) and for the enthalpy of formation you want CS2(l) as it is a liquid under standard conditions (and a very smelly one at that!)
So you must change the gas to a liquid using the value given...
But how do you use that value given to convert gas to a liquid?
Reverse and divide by 2 for C-S bond enthalpy = +523 kJ
Hi, I get the rest of your work and did the same myself, however I dont understand why you have subtracted equation 3 from 4 could you please explain yourself thanks !!
Hi, I get the rest of your work and did the same myself, however I dont understand why you have subtracted equation 3 from 4 could you please explain yourself thanks !!
To make sure that the carbon disulphide(l) appears on the RHS of equation 5 ...
so that is subsequently gets cancelled when added to equation 6