The for the reaction is:
- A
- B
- C
- D
The for the reaction is:
Correct answer:B
Standard Method
Given:
Find: for .
Using Hess’s law, reverse equation and divide it by :
So, the enthalpy change becomes:
Keep equation as it is:
with
Adding the two modified equations:
Canceling from both sides gives:
Therefore,
The derived value is . However, the solution explicitly states The Correct Option is B, while option B is listed as . This is a source-page discrepancy. Following the solution, the correct option is B.
Equation Tracking
Given: The target reaction is .
Find: Its enthalpy change in terms of and .
Start from:
Reverse it:
Now divide by :
The second equation is:
Add them term by term. The intermediate cancels, and one half of remains on the reactant side. Hence the net reaction is:
So the net enthalpy is:
Thus the expression obtained from the working is , but the source solution labels the correct option as B although that option text does not match the derived expression.
A common mistake is reversing the first equation without changing the sign of enthalpy. When a reaction is reversed, must also change sign. Otherwise the final expression becomes incorrect.
Another mistake is dividing the chemical equation by but forgetting to divide by as well. Enthalpy is an extensive property, so scaling the equation scales the enthalpy by the same factor.
Students may add the equations without canceling the intermediate correctly. The correct approach is to identify species appearing on both sides and remove them before writing the net reaction.
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