Using Hess’s Law to Calculate Net Reaction Enthalpy Calculator
Enter the enthalpies (ΔH) of the known reactions and the coefficients by which they are multiplied to sum to the target reaction.
Calculation Results
Contribution from Reaction 1: 0.0 kJ/mol
Contribution from Reaction 2: 0.0 kJ/mol
Contribution from Reaction 3: 0.0 kJ/mol
Summary Table of Inputs and Contributions
| Reaction | Enthalpy (ΔH kJ/mol) | Coefficient (c) | Contribution (cΔH kJ/mol) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | -393.5 | 1 | -393.5 |
| 2 | -285.8 | 0 | 0.0 |
| 3 | -110.5 | -1 | 110.5 |
What is Using Hess’s Law to Calculate Net Reaction Enthalpy?
Using Hess’s Law to calculate net reaction enthalpy is a fundamental principle in thermochemistry. Hess’s Law of Constant Heat Summation states that the total enthalpy change for a chemical reaction is the same, regardless of whether the reaction occurs in one step or in a series of steps. This law is incredibly useful because it allows us to calculate the enthalpy change (ΔH) for reactions that are difficult or impossible to measure directly in a calorimeter.
Essentially, if a chemical change can be represented as the sum of several other chemical changes, the enthalpy change of the overall process is the sum of the enthalpy changes of the individual steps. When using Hess’s Law to calculate net reaction enthalpy, we combine known thermochemical equations (with their known ΔH values) algebraically to obtain the target reaction and its ΔH.
This method is widely used by chemists, chemical engineers, and students studying thermodynamics to determine heats of reaction, formation, or combustion without performing complex experiments for every reaction. Common misconceptions include thinking Hess’s Law only applies to standard conditions (it applies generally, but standard enthalpies are often used) or that the pathway taken matters for the total enthalpy change (it does not).
Using Hess’s Law to Calculate Net Reaction Enthalpy Formula and Mathematical Explanation
The mathematical basis for using Hess’s Law to calculate net reaction enthalpy is straightforward. If a target reaction can be expressed as a linear combination of other reactions with known enthalpy changes, the enthalpy change of the target reaction (ΔHnet) is the same linear combination of the enthalpies of the known reactions (ΔHi).
The formula is:
ΔHnet = Σ (ci * ΔHi)
Where:
- ΔHnet is the net enthalpy change of the target reaction.
- ΔHi is the enthalpy change of the i-th known reaction.
- ci is the coefficient (which can be positive, negative, or fractional) by which the i-th reaction is multiplied to contribute to the target reaction. If a reaction is reversed, its coefficient is negative, and the sign of its ΔH is flipped.
For example, if the target reaction is obtained by adding reaction 1 and reversing reaction 2, then c₁ = 1 and c₂ = -1.
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| ΔHnet | Net enthalpy change of the target reaction | kJ/mol or kcal/mol | -5000 to +5000 |
| ΔHi | Enthalpy change of the i-th known reaction | kJ/mol or kcal/mol | -5000 to +5000 |
| ci | Coefficient for the i-th reaction | Dimensionless | -3 to +3 (often integers or halves) |
Practical Examples (Real-World Use Cases)
Example 1: Formation of Carbon Dioxide from Carbon Monoxide
Suppose we want to find the enthalpy change for the reaction: CO(g) + ½ O₂(g) → CO₂(g)
We have the following known reactions:
- C(s) + O₂(g) → CO₂(g) ΔH₁ = -393.5 kJ/mol
- C(s) + ½ O₂(g) → CO(g) ΔH₂ = -110.5 kJ/mol
To get the target reaction, we take reaction 1 as it is (c₁=1) and reverse reaction 2 (c₂=-1):
(C(s) + O₂(g) → CO₂(g)) + (CO(g) → C(s) + ½ O₂(g))
Summing these gives: CO(g) + ½ O₂(g) → CO₂(g)
So, ΔHnet = (1 * ΔH₁) + (-1 * ΔH₂) = (1 * -393.5) + (-1 * -110.5) = -393.5 + 110.5 = -283.0 kJ/mol.
Example 2: Formation of Methane (CH₄)
Target reaction: C(s, graphite) + 2H₂(g) → CH₄(g)
Known reactions:
- C(s, graphite) + O₂(g) → CO₂(g) ΔH₁ = -393.5 kJ/mol
- H₂(g) + ½O₂(g) → H₂O(l) ΔH₂ = -285.8 kJ/mol
- CH₄(g) + 2O₂(g) → CO₂(g) + 2H₂O(l) ΔH₃ = -890.3 kJ/mol
We need: reaction 1 as is (c₁=1), reaction 2 multiplied by 2 (c₂=2), and reaction 3 reversed (c₃=-1).
ΔHnet = (1 * -393.5) + (2 * -285.8) + (-1 * -890.3) = -393.5 – 571.6 + 890.3 = -74.8 kJ/mol.
This demonstrates using Hess’s Law to calculate net reaction enthalpy for the formation of methane.
How to Use This Using Hess’s Law to Calculate Net Reaction Enthalpy Calculator
This calculator simplifies the process of using Hess’s Law to calculate net reaction enthalpy.
- Identify Known Reactions: You need a set of balanced chemical equations with known enthalpy changes (ΔH) that can be combined to give your target reaction.
- Determine Coefficients: Figure out how to manipulate the known reactions (reverse them, multiply by a factor) so that when added together, they yield the target reaction. The factors you multiply by are the coefficients (c₁, c₂, c₃…). If you reverse a reaction, the coefficient is negative.
- Enter Enthalpies: Input the known ΔH values (in kJ/mol) for up to three reactions into the “Enthalpy of Reaction” fields (ΔH₁, ΔH₂, ΔH₃).
- Enter Coefficients: Input the corresponding coefficients (c₁, c₂, c₃) determined in step 2 into the “Coefficient for Reaction” fields.
- View Results: The calculator instantly displays the “Net Reaction Enthalpy” (ΔHnet) and the individual contributions from each reaction.
- Analyze Table and Chart: The table summarizes your inputs and their contributions, while the chart visually represents these contributions.
- Reset or Copy: Use the “Reset” button to clear inputs to default values or “Copy Results” to copy the main result and intermediate values.
Understanding the results helps you see how each step contributes to the overall enthalpy change of the target reaction.
Key Factors That Affect Using Hess’s Law to Calculate Net Reaction Enthalpy Results
Several factors are crucial for accurately using Hess’s Law to calculate net reaction enthalpy:
- Accuracy of Known ΔH Values: The precision of the calculated net enthalpy directly depends on the accuracy of the enthalpy values of the known reactions. These are usually obtained from experimental data or standard tables.
- Correct Stoichiometric Coefficients: The coefficients used to multiply the known reactions must be correct to ensure the reactants and products sum up to the target reaction perfectly. Any error here directly impacts the result.
- State of Reactants and Products: Enthalpy is state-dependent. The physical states (gas (g), liquid (l), solid (s), aqueous (aq)) of all substances in the known reactions and the target reaction must be consistent and correctly accounted for.
- Standard Conditions: While Hess’s Law applies generally, ΔH values are often tabulated for standard conditions (298.15 K and 1 atm or 1 bar). If your reactions are not under standard conditions, the ΔH values might differ, although Hess’s Law itself still holds.
- Correct Reversal of Reactions: When a reaction is reversed to fit the target equation, the sign of its ΔH must be flipped. Forgetting this is a common error.
- Completeness of Known Reactions: You need a set of known reactions that can fully combine to form the target reaction, with all intermediate species canceling out.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
A1: Hess’s Law states that the total enthalpy change during a chemical reaction is the same whether the reaction is completed in one step or in several steps. It’s a consequence of enthalpy being a state function.
A2: It allows us to find the enthalpy changes for reactions that are difficult or dangerous to measure directly, by using data from easily measurable reactions.
A3: Hess’s Law itself is valid at any constant temperature. However, the ΔH values of the individual reactions are temperature-dependent (described by Kirchhoff’s Law), so the ΔH values used should all be for the same temperature.
A4: Yes, as long as the ΔH values for the known reactions are also for those non-standard conditions. However, standard enthalpy changes are most commonly used.
A5: You may need to look for different known reactions or use other methods like bond enthalpies or standard enthalpies of formation in conjunction with Hess’s Law.
A6: The main limitation is the availability and accuracy of thermochemical data for the known reactions. Also, it assumes the initial and final conditions (temperature and pressure) are the same for all steps and the overall reaction.
A7: When you add up the manipulated known reactions, all intermediate species should cancel out, leaving you with only the reactants and products of your target reaction with the correct stoichiometry.
A8: Enthalpy of reaction is the heat change for any reaction. Enthalpy of formation is a specific type of reaction enthalpy: the heat change when one mole of a compound is formed from its elements in their standard states. We often use enthalpies of formation when using Hess’s Law to calculate net reaction enthalpy. Check out our enthalpy of formation calculator for more.