Exothermic and endothermic reactions, ΔH notation, bond breaking and bond forming energy changes, energy profile diagrams with activation energy and catalyst effects, calculating energy changes from experimental data using q = mcΔT, heat of solution, and heat of neutralisation.
Every chemical reaction involves an energy change. Whether energy is released to the surroundings or absorbed from them depends on the balance between the energy needed to break bonds in the reactants and the energy released when new bonds form in the products.
An exothermic reaction releases heat energy to the surroundings. The temperature of the surroundings rises. The products are at a lower energy than the reactants, so the system has released energy.
An endothermic reaction absorbs heat energy from the surroundings. The temperature of the surroundings falls. The products are at a higher energy than the reactants.
| Feature | Exothermic | Endothermic |
|---|---|---|
| Energy flow | Released to surroundings | Absorbed from surroundings |
| Temperature change | Surroundings get warmer | Surroundings get cooler |
| ΔH sign | Negative (ΔH < 0) | Positive (ΔH > 0) |
| Energy of products vs reactants | Products have less energy | Products have more energy |
Examples of exothermic reactions: combustion, neutralisation (acid + alkali), respiration, the reaction of sodium hydroxide pellets with water, freezing and condensation (physical).
Examples of endothermic reactions: thermal decomposition (e.g. CaCO₃ → CaO + CO₂), photosynthesis, dissolving potassium nitrate in water, melting and evaporation (physical).
The enthalpy change (ΔH, pronounced "delta H") of a reaction is the heat energy transferred at constant pressure. It is written with the balanced equation:
A negative ΔH means heat is released (exothermic). A positive ΔH means heat is absorbed (endothermic).
All chemical reactions involve:
The overall energy change is the difference between these two:
Breaking bonds costs energy. Forming bonds releases energy. Exothermic reactions form stronger bonds than they break; endothermic reactions break stronger bonds than they form.
An energy profile diagram (reaction coordinate diagram) shows how the energy of the system changes as reactants are converted into products. The x-axis represents the progress of the reaction and the y-axis represents the potential energy of the system.
Key features:
Key features:
A catalyst provides an alternative pathway with a lower activation energy — the peak of the energy profile is lower. The reactant and product energy levels are unchanged, so ΔH is the same. Only the height of the barrier changes.
A catalyst lowers activation energy — it does NOT change ΔH (the overall energy difference between reactants and products). In a diagram question, both the catalysed and uncatalysed curves must reach the same product energy level.
The energy transferred in a reaction can be calculated from temperature changes measured in solution using simple calorimetry:
where:
For an exothermic reaction, the temperature rises ( is positive) and the reaction releases energy, so is quoted as negative (by convention, energy is released to the surroundings, which is from the reaction).
For an endothermic reaction, the temperature falls ( is positive but the reaction absorbs energy).
Standard assumptions in CSEC calculations:
Heat of neutralisation is the enthalpy change when an acid and a base react to produce one mole of water. For strong acid–strong alkali reactions, it is approximately −57 kJ mol⁻¹ regardless of which strong acid and strong alkali are used, because the net reaction is always:
Heat of solution is the enthalpy change when one mole of solute dissolves in excess solvent. Dissolving potassium nitrate in water is endothermic (the solution cools); dissolving sodium hydroxide pellets is exothermic (the solution warms significantly).
50 cm³ of 1.0 mol dm⁻³ HCl was mixed with 50 cm³ of 1.0 mol dm⁻³ NaOH. The temperature rose from 20.0 °C to 26.8 °C. Calculate the heat released and the molar enthalpy of neutralisation.
Total volume = 100 cm³; mass of solution = 100 g
Moles of water formed = moles of HCl reacted = 1.0 × 0.050 = 0.050 mol
The negative sign confirms the reaction is exothermic.
In a thermometric titration, temperature is recorded as acid is added progressively to alkali. Temperature rises as neutralisation proceeds (exothermic), reaches a maximum at the equivalence point, then falls as excess acid cools the mixture. Plotting temperature against volume of acid added produces two straight lines — the intersection identifies the exact equivalence point, without requiring a colour indicator.