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Bond enthalpies

The enthalpy of a bond is the enthalpy change that occurs when 1 mole of a particular bond is broken in the gas phase. Since energy is required to break a chemical bond, bond enthalpies are always reported as positive values. For any chemical reaction, the estimated change in enthalpy is the sum of the bond enthalpies of the bonds broken minus the sum of the bond enthalpies of the bonds formed. Created by Jay.

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  • blobby green style avatar for user emilrichardwang
    At , why would the bond enthalpies be different? Does it have anything to do with bond hybridization?
    (1 vote)
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    • leaf red style avatar for user Richard
      Bond enthalpies are essentially a measure of how strong a covalent bond is. The higher the bond enthalpy the more energy is required to break that bond and hence the stronger the bond. Carbon-carbon double bonds are stronger than carbon-carbon single bonds and therefore have higher bond enthalpy values.

      Bond hybridization describes more the geometry around the central atom and the distance between the bonding atoms. But double bonds are stronger than single bonds mostly because there is more orbital overlap and electron density between the two atoms in double bonds compared to single bonds. Greater orbital overlap creates stronger chemical bonds.

      Hope that helps.
      (3 votes)
  • blobby green style avatar for user kritkrishna.kk
    Isn't the equation sum of products - sum of reactants? Why is it flipped in the video. I thought bonds broken = reactants and bonds made = products. I am very confused.
    (2 votes)
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  • duskpin sapling style avatar for user Yvette Gaius
    At shouldn't the bond enthalpies of bonds formed be negative?
    (2 votes)
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  • hopper cool style avatar for user Victor
    Shouldn't there be four moles of C-H bonds broken because there are four C-H bonds in a single methane?
    (1 vote)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user chris mcevoy
    615 for a carbon double bond breaking, plus an oxygen hydrogen bond is broken.
    then a carbon oxygen bond is formed @ 351 KJ + a carbon hydrogen bond @ 413. a carbon carbon bond isnt formed. the answer should be
    1078 -764
    the question acted like another carbon bond was broken which it wasnt.
    (1 vote)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user Bing Li
    For rxn A ---> products, suppose we have 1 mole of a bond to be broken in a reactant in its gas phase, does the bond enthalpy equal to EA?
    (1 vote)
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    • leaf red style avatar for user Richard
      Assuming you mean electron affinity for EA, no. Bond enthalpy is essentially the amount of energy we need to input to break a bond. Electron affinity is the amount of energy released when an extra electron is added to an atom/molecule. Bond enthalpy has us simply breaking bonds, electron affinity has us adding extra electrons.
      (1 vote)
  • blobby green style avatar for user iank4611
    Hey bro bro bro so uhm like that uhm so I cannot understand why bond enthalpies of bond formed is positive number. You said that the forming the bond releases energy bro. It is kind of little bit confusing bro bro man man bro man bro. Thank you bro!
    (0 votes)
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    • leaf red style avatar for user Richard
      Bond enthalpy is defined as the amount of energy required to break a certain bond. Since breaking bonds requires an input of energy, the sign is positive.

      We can use bond enthalpies do determine the change in enthalpy of an entire reaction. We use the positive bond enthalpy values for the reactants, since they are having their bonds broken, and negative bond enthalpy values, since they are forming bonds which now releases energy.

      Hope that helps.
      (2 votes)

Video transcript

- [Instructor] Bond enthalpy is the change in enthalpy or delta H for breaking a particular bond in one mole of a gaseous substance. If we think about the diatomic chlorine molecule, so Cl2, down here is a little picture of Cl2, each of the green spheres is a chlorine atom and they're bonded together by a single covalent bond. It would take energy to break this bond in diatomic chlorine gas and turn diatomic chlorine gas, Cl2 in to two individual chlorine atoms. So we're going from Cl2 in the gaseous state to 2Cl. Bond enthalpy can be symbolized by the letters BE. So the bond enthalpy of the chlorine-chlorine single bond is equal to +242 kilojoules per mole. And what this means is, if we have one mole of chlorine-chlorine bonds, it takes +242 kilojoules of energy to break those bonds. Bond enthalpies are always positive because it takes energy to break bonds. Another name for bond enthalpy is bond dissociation energy. So you might see this symbolized as BDE or just simply the letter D. Bond enthalpies are often found in the appendices of chemistry textbooks. For example, we just saw the chlorine-chlorine single bond, the bond enthalpy is 242 kilojoules per mole. Whereas to break a carbon-carbon single bond takes 348 kilojoules of energy per mole of carbon-carbon single bonds. A carbon-carbon double bond has a bond enthalpy of 614 kilojoules per mole. Since the carbon-carbon double bond is stronger than a carbon-carbon single bond, it takes more energy to break the double bond. And that's why the carbon-carbon double bond has a high higher bond enthalpy. So the higher the value for the bond enthalpy, the stronger the bond. Notice that these are average bond enthalpies. So the average bond enthalpy for a carbon-carbon single bond is around 348 kilojoules per mole. You might see slightly different values for this, depending on which textbook you're looking in, but they're all pretty close to the same value. The reason why these are average bond enthalpies is because if we look at two different molecules down here, this is ethane on the left and propane on the right, if we break a carbon-carbon single bond in ethane, the bond enthalpy is slightly different from breaking a carbon-carbon single bond in propane. And that's why we use average bond enthalpies. We've already seen that it takes energy to break bonds. So to break the chlorine-chlorine single bond in diatomic chlorine gas takes +242 kilojoules per mole. If it takes energy to break bonds, that means energy is given off when bonds form. So when two individual chlorine gas atoms come together to form a chlorine-chlorine bond, so let's go into highlight that in here. So this bond is forming, energy is given off. The magnitude of energy is still 242 kilojoules per mole, however, now we have this negative sign in here to indicate the energy is given off when bonds form. Bond enthalpies can be used to estimate enthalpies of reactions. So to find the change in the enthalpy for a chemical reaction, you take the sum of the bond enthalpies of the bonds broken. And from that you subtract the sum of the bond enthalpies of the bonds formed. The minus sign is in there because energy is given off when bonds form. A good way to remember this equation is to remember that B comes before F in the alphabet. So B before F therefore it's bonds broken minus bonds formed. Let's use bond enthalpies to estimate the enthalpy of reaction for the following reaction here, methane with chlorine gas to form chloro methane and hydrogen chloride gas. It's often helpful to draw dot structures for these kinds of problems. If we look at the methane dot structure, we would need to break one carbon-hydrogen single bond in order to get to our products. We would also need to break a chlorine-chlorine single bond. Next, one of the chlorine goes over to the CH3 to form CH3Cl. So therefore we are forming one carbon-chlorine single bonds, and the other Cl goes with the hydrogen. So we also need to form one hydrogen-chlorine single bond. The next step is to sum the bond enthalpies of the bonds broken. So let's think about this. For our reactants we're breaking bonds. So we have one mole of methane reacting with one mole of chlorine. And since we're breaking one carbon-hydrogen single bond for every one molecule of methane, since we have one mole of methane molecules, we're breaking one mole of carbon-hydrogen single bonds. Therefore we can write down here, one mole of carbon-hydrogen bonds, and the bond enthalpy for a carbon-hydrogen single bond is 413 kilojoules per mole. Since there's one chlorine-chlorine single bond for every Cl2 molecule, and we have one mole of chlorine molecules, we're breaking one mole of chlorine-chlorine single bonds. So to this we're gonna add one mole of chlorine-chlorine single bonds. And the bond enthalpy for a chlorine-chlorine single bond is 242 kilojoules per mole. Moles cancel out and we get that the sum of the bond enthalpies of the bonds broken is equal to 655 kilojoules. Next, we need to sum the bond enthalpies of the bonds formed. So we're forming one mole of chloro methane and one mole of hydrogen chloride gas. And since we're forming one carbon-chlorine single bond for every molecule of chloro methane, since we're forming one mole of chloral methane, we're reforming one mole of carbon-chlorine single bonds. So let's write down here, we're forming one mole of carbon-chlorine bonds and the bond enthalpy for a carbon-chlorine single bond is equal to 328 kilojoules per mole. And since we form one hydrogen-chlorine single bond for every molecule of hydrogen chloride, since we're making one mole of hydrogen chloride, we're forming one mole of hydrogen-chlorine single bonds. So to this we add one mole of hydrogen-chlorine single bonds and the bond enthalpy for a hydrogen-chlorine single bond is 431 kilojoules per mole. Moles cancel and we get that the sum of the bond enthalpies of the bonds formed is equal to 759 kilojoules. Next, we're ready to find the change in enthalpy for our chemical reaction. The sum of the enthalpy of the bonds broken, we found that was equal to 655 kilojoules. And from that we subtract the sum of the bond enthalpies of the bonds formed, which we found was 759 kilojoules. So 655 minus 759 gives -104 kilojoules. Sometimes we see kilojoules or kilojoules per mole or kilojoules per mole of reaction. Kilojoules per mole of reaction just means how the balanced equation is written. And let's see how we can look at the units to get kilojoules per mole of reaction when we do the calculations. If you go back to breaking the carbon hydrogen bond over here, we've seen there's one mole of carbon-hydrogen bonds that we need to break for how the equation is written. Therefore, we can write a conversion factor of one mole of carbon-hydrogen bonds per one mole of reaction as it's written. And then we multiply that by the bond enthalpy as 413 kilojoules per mole for a carbon-hydrogen bond, this cancels out moles of carbon-hydrogen bonds and this gives us kilojoules per mole of reaction as our units. So it's more time consuming to write it this way but we could do that for all of our different bond enthalpies to get kilojoules per mole of reaction for the units for our final answer. When everything is under standard conditions, we need to add a superscript of note. So this would be the standard change in enthalpy for a chemical reaction. So for the value we just calculated, - 140 kilojoules per mole of reaction, this is under standard of conditions. So this is actually the standard change in enthalpy for this chemical reaction. Remember that bond enthalpies are only averages. And so this value that we calculated is only an estimate for the standard change in enthalpy for this chemical reaction. A more accurate way of finding this standard change in enthalpy for a chemical reaction is to use standard enthalpies of formation. And when you use standard enthalpies of formation to find the standard change in enthalpy for this particular chemical reaction, you get -99.8 kilojoules per mole of reaction. So -104 is pretty close to -99.8.