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H: Change in chemical energy under conditions of constant pressure.
0 : Standard conditions of pressure of 1x10 Pa and stated temperature. Also, the
standard states of reactants and products in Enthalpy of Formation and Enthalpy of Combustion. Standard Enthalpy of Formation: The enthalpy change when 1 mole of a substance is formed from its elements with all reactants and products in their standard states. Standard State: The most stable form of a substance under standard conditions. Standard Enthalpy of combustion: The enthalpy change when 1 mole of a substance burns completely in oxygen with all reactants and products in their standard states. Hesss Law: The enthalpy change for a chemical reaction is independent of the route followed. Specific Heat Capacity: This is the amount, in joules, of energy required to raise the temperature of 1ml of water 1oc. H: - (4.18MassT1000)/MOLES Bond Enthalpy: The mean enthalpy change when 1 mole of covalent bonds is broken homolytically in the gaseous phase. Dynamic Equilibrium: Forwards and backwards reactions proceeding at equal rates with the concentration of reactants and products as constant. Le Chateliers Principle: If we change the external condition of a reaction at equilibrium, the position of equilibrium will move so as to oppose the external change. Activation Energy (Ea): The minimum energy the colliding particles must have for a chemical reaction to Reaction Rate: Change in concentration of a substance in a unit of time. Catalyst: What: A substance which speeds up a chemical reaction but remains chemically unchanged by the reaction. How: A catalyst provides an alternative reaction pathway of lower activation energy. Electronegativity: Ability to attract a pair of shared electrons in a covalent bond. Lattice Enthalpy of Atomisation: Enthalpy change for the formation of 1 mole of gaseous atoms from an element in its standard states. Ionisation Energy Enthalpy: Enthalpy change when 1 mole of electrons is removed from 1 mole of atoms or ions in the gas phase. Electron Affinity: Enthalpy change when 1 mole of electrons is added to 1 mole of atoms or ions in the gas phase. (1st one is EXOTHERMIC; H is -, the rest are ENDOTHERMIC; H is +) Lattice Enthalpy of Formation: Enthalpy change when 1 mole of a solid lattice if formed from gaseous ions. Lattice Enthalpy: Enthalpy change when 1 mole of a solid lattice is broken down into its isolated gaseous ions. Perfect Ionic Model: A model that assumes that ionic crystals have no covalent character and that the force of attraction is electrostatic and between ions. Ions are perfect spheres. Enthalpy of Hydration: Enthalpy change when 1 mole of gaseous ions is converted to 1 mole of aqueous ions. (EXOTHERMIC; H is -) Enthalpy of Solution: Enthalpy change when 1 mole of an ionic solid is dissolved in water and converted to aqueous ions. Entropy: A measure of the degree of disorder in a substance. Spontaneous Reaction: A reaction in which the free-energy is negative. Amphoteric: Able to neutralise acids and bases. Oxidation Number: The charge that would exist on an atom if all the bonding were completely ionic. Standard Electrode Potential: The emf of a cell in which the left-hand electrode is the standard hydrogen electrode and the right-hand electrode is the standard electrode in question. Ligand: A species which can use its lone pair of electrons to form a co-ordinate bond with a metal ion. Ligand: Electron Pair Donor. Complex Ion: A central species surrounded by co-ordinately bonded ligands. Transition Metal: An element which has an incompletely occupied d level as the element itself or one of its common oxidation states. (D level is not 0 or 10) Co-Ordination Number: The total number of co-ordinate bonds formed between the metal ion and the ligands in a complex Bidentate Ligand: A ligand which uses two lone pairs of electrons to form two coordinate bonds with a metal ion. Multidentate Ligand: A ligand which uses more than two lone pairs of electrons to form more than two co-ordinate bonds with a metal ion.
Chelate Effect: Substitution of a monodentate ligand by a multidentate ligand giving a
more stable complex. Homogenous Catalysts: A catalyst in the same physical state as the reactants. Heterogenous Catalysts: A catalyst in a different physical state to the reactants. Active Sites: Place where reactants adsorbed to allow the reaction to happen. Autocatalysis: This is when the product of the reaction is the catalyst for the reaction. Catalyst Poisoning: When a substance is adsorbed by active site, but then it is not desorbed (blocked) Lewis Acid: An electron pair acceptor. Lewis Base: An electron pair donor.