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Question 3
The energy content of food can be determined by completely burning a sample of the food in a bomb calorimeter and then calculating the energy released. a. The calor... show full transcript
Step 1
Answer
To find the calibration factor of the calorimeter, we can use the formula:
Where:
Substituting the values:
To convert joules to kilojoules, we divide by 1000:
E = rac{1358.1}{1000} = 1.3581 ext{ kJ}
Next, we calculate the calibration factor in kJ °C⁻¹:
ext{Calibration Factor} = rac{E}{ ext{Temperature Rise}} = rac{1.3581 ext{ kJ}}{1.15} ext{ °C} ext{ } = 1.1792 ext{ kJ °C⁻¹}
Step 2
Answer
The temperature increase is calculated as follows:
Using the calibration factor obtained previously, we can calculate the energy released:
To find the molar heat of combustion of glucose (1.324 g), we convert the mass to moles using the molar mass of glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆ ≈ 180.18 g/mol):
ext{Moles of Glucose} = rac{1.324 g}{180.18 g/mol} ext{ } ext{ } ext{ ≈ 0.00734 mol}
Now we calculate the molar heat of combustion:
ext{Molar Heat of Combustion} = rac{E}{ ext{Moles}} = rac{20.327 ext{ kJ}}{0.00734 ext{ mol}} = 2761.81 ext{ kJ mol⁻¹}
Step 3
Answer
Sucrose is composed of two glucose molecules, therefore, the molar heat of combustion of sucrose can be approximated as double that of glucose. Hence:
ext{Approximate Ratio} = rac{ ext{Molar Heat of Combustion Sucrose}}{ ext{Molar Heat of Combustion Glucose}} ext{ } ext{ } ext{ ≈ 2 }
This means the molar heat of combustion for sucrose is around double that of glucose because of the additional carbon and hydrogen atoms contributing to the enthalpy of combustion.
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