Q. 14 The standard enthalpy of the reaction, C (graphite) + H2O (g) → CO (g) + H2 (g) is found to be +131.3 kJ mol-1 and the ∆𝑓𝐻0 value for CO (g) is ‒110.5 kJ mol-1. The value of ∆𝑓𝐻0 (in kJ mol-1) for H2O (g) is (The standard enthalpies of formation of elements in their reference states are zero at all temperatures) (A) +241.8 (B) 0.0 (C) −241.8 (D) +20.8

Q. 14 The standard enthalpy of the reaction,
C (graphite) + H2O (g) CO (g) + H2 (g) is found to be +131.3 kJ mol1

and the 𝑓𝐻0 value for CO (g) is 110.5 kJ mol1.

The value of 𝑓𝐻0 (in kJ mol1) for H2O (g) is

(The standard enthalpies of formation of elements in their reference states are zero
at all temperatures)

(A)
+241.8
(B)
0.0
(C)
241.8
(D)
+20.8

The standard enthalpy of formation (∆fH⁰) for H₂O(g) is -241.8 kJ/mol, calculated using the given reaction enthalpy and known values. This matches option (C) in the CSIR NET Life Sciences/Biochemistry question.

Reaction Analysis

The given reaction is C(graphite) + H₂O(g) → CO(g) + H₂(g) with ∆rH⁰ = +131.3 kJ/mol. Standard enthalpy of formation equals the reaction enthalpy for forming 1 mol of compound from elements in standard states, and elements like C(graphite) and H₂(g) have ∆fH⁰ = 0 kJ/mol.

The reaction enthalpy equation becomes: ∆rH⁰ = [∆fH⁰(CO) + ∆fH⁰(H₂)] – [∆fH⁰(C(graphite)) + ∆fH⁰(H₂O(g))]. Substituting known values: +131.3 = [-110.5 + 0] – [0 + ∆fH⁰(H₂O(g))].

Rearranging gives ∆fH⁰(H₂O(g)) = -110.5 – 131.3 = -241.8 kJ/mol.

Option Breakdown

  • (A) +241.8: Incorrect; positive value implies endothermic formation, but water formation is exothermic (negative ∆fH⁰).

  • (B) 0.0: Incorrect; only elements in standard states have zero ∆fH⁰—compounds like H₂O(g) do not.

  • (C) −241.8: Correct, as derived from Hess’s law application above.

  • (D) +20.8: Incorrect; no logical derivation yields this—possibly from misadding values.

Introduction to Standard Enthalpy of Formation H2O(g)

In thermochemistry for CSIR NET preparation, the standard enthalpy of formation H2O(g) (∆fH⁰) measures heat change when 1 mol H₂O(g) forms from elements under standard conditions. For the water-gas shift reaction C(graphite) + H₂O(g) → CO(g) + H₂(g) with ∆rH⁰ = +131.3 kJ/mol and ∆fH⁰(CO(g)) = -110.5 kJ/mol, calculate ∆fH⁰(H₂O(g)). Elements C(graphite) and H₂(g) have ∆fH⁰ = 0.

Step-by-Step Calculation

Apply Hess’s law: ∆rH⁰ = Σ∆fH⁰(products) – Σ∆fH⁰(reactants).
+131.3 = [-110.5 + 0] – [0 + ∆fH⁰(H₂O(g))].
∆fH⁰(H₂O(g)) = -110.5 – 131.3 = -241.8 kJ/mol.

This endothermic reaction (+∆H) occurs because breaking H₂O(g) bonds requires more energy than forming CO(g) and H₂(g) bonds releases.

Why -241.8 kJ/mol Matches Literature

Standard value for H₂O(g) is consistently -241.8 kJ/mol (vs. -285.8 for H₂O(l)), confirming the calculation.

CSIR NET Exam Tips

Practice similar problems using formation enthalpies for biochemistry reactions. Memorize: H₂O(g) ≈ -242 kJ/mol, CO(g) ≈ -110 kJ/mol.

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