If "85 mL" of "0.900 M" "HCl" is combined with "85 mL" of "0.900 M" "KOH" in a coffee-cup calorimeter, and the heat capacity of the calorimeter is "0.325 kJ/"^@ "C", what is the final temperature if the initial temperature was 18.24^@ "C"?

1 Answer
Jan 4, 2017

I got "31.80"^@ "C".


The reaction occurring is:

"HCl"(aq) + "KOH"(aq) -> "H"_2"O"(l) + "KCl"(aq)

The final solution has a volume assumed equal to the combined initial volumes:

V = (85 + 85) cancel"mL" xx "1 L"/(1000 cancel"mL") = "0.170 L"

and a common error is to assume the concentration of "KCl" is "0.900 M" (when it's really not).

But we don't even know what the enthalpy of reaction is. We just have to look it up, I guess (you shouldn't have to calculate it in this context).

DeltaH_"rxn" = -"57.6 kJ/mol"

At constant pressure,

DeltaH_"rxn" = q_"rxn"

whereas given a calorimeter's heat capacity:

q_"cal" = C_"cal"DeltaT = ulul(-q_"rxn"),

where C_"cal" is the heat capacity of the calorimeter in "J/"^@ "C", and DeltaH and q are both in units of "J".

The reaction is exothermic since DeltaH_"rxn" < 0, so the solution absorbs the heat. Thus, we expect it to increase in temperature, so that T_f > T_i (i.e. DeltaT > 0).

So, to solve for the final temperature, we first need to figure out the "mol"s of "KCl" product. Pick one reactant and go with it, since the reactants are both going to react 1:1 (one "H"^(+) to one "OH"^(-)):

"0.900 mol/L" xx "0.085 L" = n_("KOH") = n_("HCl") = n_"KCl"

= "0.0765 mols"

So, the heat absorbed by the solution is (where the units are all made to be in "kJ"):

q_"cal" = -q_"rxn" = -n_"KCl"DeltaH_"rxn"

= -(-"57.6 kJ"/"mol")("0.0765 mols")

= "4.406 kJ"

Since q_"cal" = C_"cal"(T_f - T_i), the final temperature is:

color(blue)(T_f) = (q_"cal")/(C_"cal") + T_i

= ("4.406 kJ")/("0.325 kJ/"^@ "C") + "18.24"^@ "C"

= color(blue)("31.80"^@ "C")