CHEM101: General Chemistry I

Read this text, which offers more detailed definitions of these topics. Do not focus on the chart that shows different energy units. In chemistry, we almost exclusively use the joule as our energy unit. The other somewhat commonly used energy unit is the calorie.

All chemical changes are accompanied by the absorption or release of heat. The intimate connection between matter and energy has been a source of wonder and speculation from the most primitive times; it is no accident that fire was considered one of the four basic elements (along with earth, air, and water) as early as the fifth century BCE. In this unit we will review some of the fundamental concepts of energy and heat and the relation between them.

We will begin the study of thermodynamics, which treats the energetic aspects of change in general, and we will finally apply this specifically to chemical change. Our purpose will be to provide you with the tools to predict the energy changes associated with chemical processes. This will build the groundwork for a more ambitious goal: to predict the direction and extent of change itself.


What is Energy?

Energy is one of the most fundamental and universal concepts of physical science, but one that is remarkably difficult to define in way that is meaningful to most people. This perhaps reflects the fact that energy is not a thing that exists by itself, but is rather an attribute of matter (and also of electromagnetic radiation) that can manifest itself in different ways. It can be observed and measured only indirectly through its effects on matter that acquires, loses, or possesses it.

The concept that we call energy was very slow to develop; it took more than a hundred years just to get people to agree on the definitions of many of the terms we use to describe energy and the interconversion between its various forms. But even now, most people have some difficulty in explaining what it is; somehow, the definition we all learned in elementary science (the capacity to do work) seems less than adequate to convey its meaning.

Although the term energy was not used in science prior to 1802, it had long been suggested that certain properties related to the motions of objects exhibit an endurance which is incorporated into the modern concept of conservation of energy. René Descartes (1596-1650) stated it explicitly:

When God created the world, He, "caused some of its parts to push others and to transfer their motions to others. " and thus, "He conserves motion."

In the 17th Century, the great mathematician Gottfried Leibniz (1646-1716) suggested the distinction between vis viva (live force) and vis mortua (dead force), which later became known as kinetic energy (1829) and potential energy (1853).


Kinetic Energy and Potential Energy

Whatever energy may be, there are basically two kinds.

Kinetic energy is associated with the motion of an object, and its direct consequences are part of everyone's daily experience; the faster the ball you catch in your hand, and the heavier it is, the more you feel it. Quantitatively, a body with a mass m and moving at a velocity v possesses the kinetic energy mv 2 /2.

Problem Example 1

A rifle shoots a 4.25 g bullet at a velocity of 965 m s –1 . What is its kinetic energy?

Solution: The only additional information you need here is that

1 J = 1 kg m 2 s –2 :

KE = ½ × (.00425 kg) (965 m s –1 ) 2 = 1980 J

Potential energy is energy a body has by virtue of its location. But there is more: the body must be subject to a restoring force of some kind that tends to move it to a location of lower potential energy. Think of an arrow that is subjected to the force from a stretched bowstring; the more tightly the arrow is pulled back against the string, the more potential energy it has.

More generally, the restoring force comes from what we call a force field – a gravitational, electrostatic, or magnetic field. We observe the consequences of gravitational potential energy all the time, such as when we walk, but seldom give it any thought.

If an object of mass m is raised off the floor to a height h, its potential energy increases by mgh, where g is a proportionality constant known as the acceleration of gravity; its value at the earth's surface is 9.8 m s –2 .

Problem Example 2

Find the change in potential energy of a 2.6 kg textbook that falls from the 66-cm height of a table top onto the floor.

Solution: PE = m g h = (2.6 kg)(9.8 m s –2 )(0.66 m) = 16.8 kg m 2 s –2 = 16.8 J

Similarly, the potential energy of a particle having an electric charge q depends on its location in an electrostatic field.


Chemical Energy

Electrostatic potential energy plays a major role in chemistry; the potential energies of electrons in the force field created by atomic nuclei lie at the heart of the chemical behavior of atoms and molecules.

Chemical energy usually refers to the energy that is stored in the chemical bonds of molecules. These bonds form when electrons are able to respond to the force fields created by two or more atomic nuclei, so they can be regarded as manifestations of electrostatic potential energy.

In an exothermic chemical reaction, the electrons and nuclei within the reactants undergo rearrangement into products possessing lower energies, and the difference is released to the environment in the form of heat.


Interconversion of Potential and Kinetic Energy

Transitions between potential and kinetic energy are such an intimate part of our daily lives that we hardly give them a thought. It happens in walking as the body moves up and down.

Image of the cartoon character Mr. Natural

Our bodies utilize the chemical energy in glucose to keep us warm and to move our muscles. In fact, life itself depends on the conversion of chemical energy to other forms.


Energy is conserved:
it can neither be created nor destroyed. So when you go uphill, your kinetic energy is transformed into potential energy, which gets changed back into kinetic energy as you coast down the other side. And where did the kinetic energy you expended in peddling uphill come from? By conversion of some of the chemical potential energy in your breakfast cereal.

Image of a water wheel creating energy to light a lightbulb


Thermal Energy

Kinetic energy is associated with motion, but in two different ways. For a macroscopic object such as a book or a ball, or a parcel of flowing water, it is simply given by ½ mv 2 .

But as we mentioned above, when an object is dropped onto the floor, or when an exothermic chemical reaction heats surrounding matter, the kinetic energy gets dispersed into the molecular units in the environment. This microscopic form of kinetic energy, unlike that of a speeding bullet, is completely random in the kinds of motions it exhibits and in its direction. We refer to this as thermalized kinetic energy, or more commonly simply as thermal energy. We observe the effects of this as a rise in the temperature of the surroundings. The temperature of a body is direct measure of the quantity of thermal energy is contains.


Conversion of Thermal Energy to Heat is Never Completely Recoverable

Once kinetic energy is thermalized, only a portion of it can be converted back into potential energy. The remainder simply gets dispersed and diluted into the environment, and is effectively lost.

To summarize, then:


Some Examples of Potential-Kinetic Energy Interconversion Processes

Photo of a roller coaster

Elastic potential energy

Image of a bungee jumper hanging from a bridge

Image of a 4-stroke gas engine

Four-stroke gas engine (Free Engineering Database)

Photo of a child on a swing

Pendulum (Image by Rian Castillo)

Photo of fireworks


Schematic diagram of a large hydroelectric plant (How Stuff Works)

Photo of a turbine

Turbine being installed at Grand Coulee dam, 1974. (History Link.org)

Hydroelectric power constitutes one of the major engineering accomplishments that exploits the conversion of potential energy into kinetic– and thence into electrical energy.


Energy Scales and Units


Energy Scales are Always Arbitrary

You might at first think that a book sitting on the table has zero kinetic energy since it is not moving. But if you think about it, the earth itself is moving; it is spinning on its axis, it is orbiting the sun, and the sun itself is moving away from the other stars in the general expansion of the universe. Since these motions are normally of no interest to us, we are free to adopt an arbitrary scale in which the velocity of the book is measured with respect to the table; on this so-called laboratory coordinate system, the kinetic energy of the book can be considered zero.

We do the same thing with potential energy. If the book is on the table, its potential energy with respect to the surface of the table will be zero. If we adopt this as our zero of potential energy, and then push the book off the table, its potential energy will be negative after it reaches the floor.


Energy Units in Chemistry and Engineering

Energy is measured in terms of its ability to perform work or to transfer heat. Mechanical work is done when a force f displaces an object by a distance d : w = f × d.

The basic unit of energy is the joule. One joule is the amount of work done when a force of 1 newton acts over a distance of 1 m; thus 1 J = 1 N-m. The newton is the amount of force required to accelerate a 1-kg mass by 1 m/sec 2 , so the basic dimensions of the joule are kg m 2 s –2 . The other two units in wide use. the calorie and the BTU (British thermal unit) are defined in terms of the heating effect on water. Because of the many forms that energy can take, there are a correspondingly large number of units in which it can be expressed, a few of which are summarized below.

One calorie will raise the temperature of 1 g of water by 1 C°. The dietary calorie is actually 1 kcal. An average young adult expends about 1800 kcal per day just to stay alive. (you should know this definition)

Heat and work are both measured in energy units, so they must both represent energy. How do they differ from each other, and from just plain energy itself?


Heat and Work are Processes and Cannot be Stored

In our daily language, we often say that "this object contains a lot of heat," but this kind of talk is a no-no in thermodynamics! It is ok to say that the object is hot, meaning that its temperature is high.

The term heat has a special meaning in thermodynamics: it is a process in which a body (the contents of a tea kettle, for example) acquires or loses energy as a direct consequence of its having a different temperature than its surroundings (the rest of the world).

Cartoon image of a flame walking toward an igloo.

Thermal energy can only flow from a higher temperature to a lower temperature. It is this flow that constitutes heat.

Use of the term flow of heat recalls the 18th-century notion that heat is an actual substance called caloric that could flow like a liquid.


Heat is the Transfer of Energy by Conduction or Radiation

Image of a pot over a gas flame.

Transfer of thermal energy can be accomplished by bringing two bodies into physical contact (the kettle on top of the stove, or through an electric heating element inside the kettle). Another mechanism of thermal energy transfer is by radiation; a hot object will convey energy to any body in sight of it via electromagnetic radiation in the infrared part of the spectrum. In many cases, a combination of modes will be active:

Thus when you place a can of beer in the refrigerator, both processes are operative: the can radiates heat to the cold surfaces around it, and absorbs it by direct conduction from the ambient air.


So What is Work?

Work refers to the transfer of energy some means that does not depend on temperature difference.

Photo of a weight lifter

Image from Ben Wiens Energy site.

Work, like energy, can take various forms, the most familiar being mechanical and electrical. Mechanical work arises when an object moves a distance Δx against an opposing force f: w = f Δx N-m; 1 N-m = 1 J.

Electrical work is done when a body having a charge q moves through a potential difference Δ V.

Work, like heat, exists only when energy is being transferred.

When two bodies are placed in thermal contact and energy flows from the warmer body to the cooler one, we call the process heat. A transfer of energy to or from a system by any means other than heat is called work.


Heat Can Only Partially be Converted into Work

Work can be completely converted into heat (by friction, for example), but heat can only be partially converted to work. Conversion of heat into work is accomplished by means of a heat engine, the most common example of which is an ordinary gasoline engine. The science of thermodynamics developed out of the need to understand the limitations of steam-driven heat engines at the beginning of the Industrial Age. A fundamental law of Nature, the Second Law of Thermodynamics, states that the complete conversion of heat into work is impossible. Something to think about when you purchase fuel for your car!

What You Should Be Able to Do

Make sure you thoroughly understand the following essential concepts that have been presented above.