Endothermic Heat Reaction

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Endothermic heat/Exothermic heat Reaction

Endothermic reactions are chemical reactions in which the reactants absorb heat energy from the
surroundings to form products. These reactions lower the temperature of their surrounding area,
thereby creating a cooling effect. Physical processes can be endothermic as well – Ice cubes absorb heat
energy from their surroundings and melt to form liquid water (no chemical bonds are broken or
formed).
Endothermic Reaction

When a chemical bond is broken, it is usually accompanied by a release of energy. Similarly, the
formation of chemical bonds requires an input of energy. The energy supplied/released can be of
various forms (such as heat, light, and electricity). Endothermic reactions generally involve the
formation of chemical bonds through the absorption of heat from the surroundings. On the other hand,
exothermic reactions involve the release of heat energy generated from bond-breakage.

How are Endothermic and Exothermic Reactions Different?

The terms ‘Endo’ and ‘Exo’ have Greek roots, meaning ‘within’ and ‘out’ respectively. As the names
suggest, the primary difference between endothermic and exothermic reactions is that the former
absorbs heat from the surroundings whereas the latter involves a release of heat.

Endothermic and Exothermic Reactions

Some other differences between these types of chemical reactions are tabulated below.

Endothermic Reaction Exothermic Reaction

The system absorbs heat from the surroundings The system releases heat into the surroundings

The entropy of the surrounding decreases (ΔS <0) The entropy of the surrounding increases (ΔS>0)

Enthalpy change (ΔH) is positive ΔH is negative


Endothermic Process v/s Endothermic Reaction

The human body exploits the endothermic nature of evaporation to cool itself. This is done through the
process of sweating. The sweat (produced on the surface of the skin) absorbs heat from the skin to
evaporate, thereby creating a cooling effect.

However, sweating is not an exothermic reaction. Chemical reactions can involve the breaking of
existing chemical bonds, the formation of new bonds, or both. The evaporation of sweat does not
involve any chemical changes but it does involve a change in physical phase (from liquid to vapour).
Therefore, evaporation is said to be a physical endothermic process rather than an endothermic
reaction.

Any process that absorbs heat from its surroundings is an endothermic process. Therefore, all
endothermic reactions are endothermic processes. However, the opposite is not true. Many
endothermic processes involve physical changes rather than chemical changes.

Examples

Endothermic Reaction Examples

 When ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) is dissolved in water, an endothermic reaction takes place.
The salt dissociates into ammonium (NH4+) and chloride (Cl–) ions. The chemical equation can
be written as follows: NH4Cl (s) + H2O (l) ⟶ NH4Cl (aq) – Heat
 Ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3), an important component in instant cold packs, dissociates into
the ammonium cation (NH4+) and the nitrate anion (NO3–) when dissolved in water. These ions
go on to form ammonium hydroxide (NH4OH) and nitric acid (HNO3) respectively (by reacting
with the OH– and H+ ions in water). This reaction is endothermic in nature since it cools the
surroundings by absorbing heat from it.
 The formation of nitric oxide from the reaction between nitrogen and oxygen is endothermic
since it involves the absorption of approximately 180.5 kilojoules of heat for every mole of N2
and O2.

Other Endothermic Processes

 The melting of ice to form water.


 Evaporation of liquid water, forming water vapour.
 Sublimation of solid CO2
 The baking of bread.

Energy Level Diagram of an Endothermic Reaction

The simple energy level diagram of endothermic and exothermic reactions are illustrated below. The
activation energy is the energy that must be provided to the reactants so that they can overcome the
energy barrier and react.
For exothermic reactions, the potential energy of the product is generally lower than that of the
reactant. On the other hand, the potential energy of the product in an endothermic reaction is higher
than that of the reactants. This gap in the potential energy accounts for the energy that was absorbed
by the system during the chemical reaction.
The ancient Greeks believed that fire was one the four basic elements that composed all things in the
universe. In the mythology of virtually every culture, fire is a sacred substance that gives life or power.
Fire is not, in fact, a substance. When you gaze at the leaping flames of a campfire, you’re observing not
an object, but a process – a chemical reaction. It’s the same chemical reaction that occurs when a cut
apple left on the counter turns brown, when silver tarnishes or when an iron nail rusts.

That process is oxidation: combining oxygen with another substance. The defining difference between a
fire and your half-eaten apple is speed: fire is an oxidation process that happens very fast, so that light,
heat and sound are released — often with enough force and majesty to justify the ancients’
reverence.The sudden release of energy causes temperatures to rise, sometimes by thousands of
degrees. And it also results in smoke, the toxic waste of fire’s leftovers.

The fire triangle and the fire tetrahedron

Fire TetrahedronThe fire triangle identifies the three needed components of fire:

 fuel (something that will burn)


 heat (enough to make the fuel burn)
 and air (oxygen)

All three components must be present to have a fire. Fire will burn until one or more of the components
are removed. Traditional fire extinguishing methods involve removing the fuel, heat, or oxygen.

In more recent years, a fourth component – the uninhibited chain reaction – has been added to explain
fire. This chain reaction is the feedback of heat to the fuel to produce the gaseous fuel used in the flame.
In other words, the chain reaction provides the heat necessary to maintain the fire. The addition of this
fourth component (which forms what is called the "fire tetrahedron ") more accurately describes the
mechanism for fire suppression by clean agent halon replacements which break up the uninhibited chain
reaction of combustion.
Stages Of Fire

Ignition: Fuel, oxygen and heat join together in a sustained chemical reaction. At this stage, a fire
extinguisher can control the fire.

 Growth: With the initial flame as a heat source, additional fuel ignites. Convection and radiation
ignite more surfaces. The size of the fire increases and the plume reaches the ceiling. Hot gases
collecting at the ceiling transfer heat, allowing all fuels in a room to come closer to their ignition
temperature at the same time.
 Fully developed: Fire has spread over much if not all the available fuel; temperatures reach their
peak, resulting in heat damage. Oxygen is consumed rapidly.
 Decay (Burnout): The fire consumes available fuel, temperatures decrease, fire gets less intense.

How fire spreads

Fire spreads by transferring the heat energy from the flames in three different ways.

 Conduction: The passage of heat energy through or within a material because of direct contact,
such as a burning wastebasket heating a nearby couch, which ignites and heats the drapes
hanging behind, until they too burst into flames.
 Convection: The flow of fluid or gas from hot areas to cooler areas. The heated air is less dense,
and rises, while cooler air descends. A large fire in an open area produces plume or column of
hot gas and smoke high into the air. But inside a room, those rising gases encounter the ceiling.
They travel horizontally along the ceiling forming a thick layer of heated air, which then moves
downward.
 Radiation: Heat traveling via electromagnetic waves, without objects or gases carrying it along.
Radiated heat goes out in all directions, unnoticed until it strikes an object. Burning buildings
can radiate heat to surrounding structures, sometimes even passing through glass windows and
igniting objects inside.

Four ways to put out a fire

1. Cool the burning material


2. Exclude oxygen
3. Remove the fuel
4. Break the chemical reaction

Special circumstances

 Rollover occurs when ignited fire gases, or incompletely burned fuels, rise to the ceiling, and
spread out horizontally. Then smoke appears to suddenly start burning. If nothing is done to
ventilate the room or cool the air, this condition leads to flashover.
 Flashover is the sudden, simultaneous ignition of everything in a room. This is how it happens:
o Hot gases rise to the ceiling and spread out across to the walls.
o Heat radiates downward and intensifies until all combustible items reach their ignition
temperatures and burst into flames.
o Temperatures soar to as much as 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit in a few seconds. Even a
firefighter in full protective gear is unlikely survive a flashover.
oFirefighters are trained to recognize the signs that flashover is about to occur: dense
black smoke with tightly packed curls ("black fire"); dense, black smoke that pushes out
of a doorway or window opening; smoke that has accumulated as low as a doorknob,
with the fire seen below.
 Backdraft is an explosion that occurs when oxygen is introduced into a room full of hot gases.
o A fire burning in a confined area consumes all the oxygen.
o Visible flames disappear. Solid fuels smolder, and hot flammable gases accumulate and fill
the room.
o The temperature increases, the gases expand, and pressure builds, pulsing against doors and
windows. From outside, the building may look like it is breathing or throbbing.
o If an opening is made to admit oxygen, the hot vaporized fuel bursts into flames, and the
pressurized gases explode through the opening, resulting in a rolling fireball.

Classifying fire

Fire classifications based on fuel type:

 Class A: Ordinary combustible materials, such as wood, cloth, paper, rubber and many plastics.
They burn with an ember and leave an ash. Extinguish by cooling the fuel to a temperature that
is below the ignition temp. Water and other extinguishing agents are effective.
 Class B: Flammable liquids (burn at room temperature) and combustible liquids (require heat to
ignite). Petroleum greases, tars, oils, oil-based paints, solvents, lacquers, alcohols, and
flammable gases. High fire hazard; water may not extinguish. Extinguish by creating a barrier
between the fuel and the oxygen, such as layer of foam.
 Class C: Fuels that would be A or B except that they involve energized electrical equipment.
Special techniques and agents required to extinguish, most commonly carbon dioxide or dry
chemical agents. Use of water is very dangerous because water conducts electricity.
 Class D: Combustible metals, such as magnesium, titanium, zirconium, sodium, lithium and
potassium. Most cars contain numerous such metals. Because of extremely high flame
temperatures, water can break down into hydrogen and oxygen, enhancing burning or
exploding. Extinguish with special powders based on sodium chloride or other salts; also clean
dry sand.
 Class K: Fires in cooking appliances that involve combustible cooking media (vegetable or animal
oils and fats).
CDI 6
FIRE PROTECTION AND ARSON
INVESTIGATION

De Vera, Arjhilyn Mae O.


BS-Criminology 3-D

PROF. Villegas, Oscar

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