Endothermic and Exothermic Reaction Worksheet
Endothermic and Exothermic Reaction Worksheet
Endothermic and Exothermic Reaction Worksheet
b) A solid burns brightly and releases heat, light and sound: _______________
d) Two chemicals will only react if you heat them continually: _______________
Is the reaction exothermic or endothermic? Use ideas about bonds to explain why.
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f) Draw diagrams to show what happens when hydrogen reacts with oxygen. Mark the bonds broken in blue
and the new bonds formed in red. The equation is:
2H2 O2 2H2O
hydrogen + oxygen water
3 ‘Make or break’
a Most reactions involve bond breaking and bond making. This equation shows what happens when methane
(CH4) burns in oxygen (O2).
Mark the bonds broken in blue and the bonds formed in red.
g) Complete the table to show the number of bonds broken and formed:
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i) The overall energy change is decided by the strength of the bonds that are broken or formed during the
reaction. The stronger the bond the larger the energy change.
Which bonds must be stronger in this reaction – the bonds broken or the new bonds formed?
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j) An energy level diagram shows the energy taken in and released during the reaction. Add the reactants,
products and their separated atoms to the correct places on the diagram.
energy
reactants
products
a Calculate each temperature rise and state which fuel releases most energy per gram.
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Another student used spirit burners for the experiment. She had to weigh them before and after each test to
find out how much fuel she had used. To make it a fair test she used each fuel to make the same amount of
water 10°C hotter. These are her results:
k) Calculate the mass of each fuel she had to use to release the same amount of energy, and state which fuel
must release more energy per gram.
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l) What could these students do to prove their results were repeatable?
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m) Results are reproducible if they lead to the same conclusions when different people do the experiments or
when different methods are used. Are the results reported on this page reproducible?
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2 Energy transfer
The energy a fuel releases is measured in joules (J) or kilojoules (kJ).
To find this value we need to know how much energy was transferred to the water.
This depends on two things: the mass of water heated and its temperature rise. Each cm3 of water has a mass
of 1 g, and each gram of water takes 4.2 J to make it 1°C hotter. So the energy transferred to the water can be
calculated using this equation:
energy mass of water temperature
= × 4.2 ×
transferred (J) heated (g) change (°C)
The results in the table below were obtained when four different fuels were used to heat 100 cm3 of water.
Calculate the amount of energy each fuel transferred.
To compare fuels fairly we need to know how much energy they release per gram.
This can be found by dividing the total energy transferred by the grams of fuel used.
energy supplied (J)
energy per gram mass
= of fuel burnt (g)
3 Rearranging equations
If you want to calculate the amount of energy transferred the equation below is ideal, but suppose you wanted
to know the mass of water heated or the temperature change.
energy mass of water temperature
= × 4.2 ×
transferred (J) heated (g) change (°C)
To make the equation more useful it can be rearranged.
a To find the temperature change, divide both sides of the equation by the ‘mass of water heated × 4.2’. Write
out the new equation.
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n) To find the mass of water heated, divide both sides of the equation by ‘4.2 × the temperature change’. Write
out the new equation.
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