Chemistry · 5.1 Exothermic & endothermic · Paper 5/6 practical
Energy Changes. Feel the heat.
Mix reactants in an insulated polystyrene cup and follow the temperature. A rise means the reaction is exothermic; a fall means it is endothermic. Measure Δθ, then calculate the energy released or absorbed with q = mcΔθ and the molar enthalpy change.
0620 Topic 5.1 — Exothermic & endothermic
q = mcΔθ
Paper 5/6 — Practical
00:00
θ 20.0 °C
Shortcuts Space mix · Enter record · R reset.
Variables
exo
1.00
70%
Live readouts
Temperature θ
20.0 °C
Max change Δθ
0.0 °C
Energy q = mcΔθ
0 J
ΔH (experimental)
— kJ/mol
ΔH (data book)
— kJ/mol
Type
—
m = mass of solution ≈ 50 g, c = 4.18 J/g·°C. Heat loss makes |ΔH| a little smaller than the true value.
θ vs time — read every 30 s
Mix the reactants and record θ every 30 s.
θ vs t — extrapolate to find max Δθ
📋 Method (Cambridge practical procedure)
- Measure a fixed volume of the first solution into a polystyrene cup standing in a beaker for support; record its starting temperature.
- Add the second reactant, stir with the thermometer and start the stopwatch.
- Record the temperature every 30 s for several minutes, through and beyond the peak (or trough).
- Plot temperature against time and extrapolate the cooling line back to the moment of mixing to find the true maximum Δθ.
- Calculate the heat change q = mcΔθ (m = mass of solution, c = 4.18 J/g·°C).
- Divide by the moles of the limiting reactant to find ΔH per mole; quote the sign (− exo, + endo).
⚠ Sources of error & precautions
- Heat loss to the surroundings — use a lid and a polystyrene cup; extrapolate the graph to correct for it. This is why measured |ΔH| < true value for exothermic reactions.
- Heat absorbed by the cup and thermometer is ignored — a small systematic error.
- Stir well for an even temperature before reading.
- Assume the solution has the density and specific heat capacity of water.
- Use excess of one reactant so the other is fully used up (the limiting reactant fixes the moles).
🎯 Syllabus reference (0620)
- 5.1 Exothermic and endothermic reactions — describe reactions as exothermic or endothermic from temperature change; interpret reaction pathway diagrams; state that bond breaking is endothermic and bond making is exothermic.
- 12.1 — measurement of temperature and volume; q = mcΔθ.