Explaining the terms
Bond dissociation enthalpy and mean bond enthalpy
Simple diatomic molecules
A diatomic molecule is one that only contains two atoms. They
could be the same (for example, Cl2) or different (for example,
HCl).
The bond dissociation enthalpy is the
energy needed to break one mole of the bond to give separated atoms -
everything being in the gas state.
Important! The point about everything
being in the gas state isessential. You cannot use bond
enthalpies to do calculations directly from substances starting in the liquid
or solid state.
As an example of bond dissociation enthalpy, to break up 1 mole
of gaseous hydrogen chloride molecules into separate gaseous hydrogen and
chlorine atoms takes 432 kJ. The bond dissociation enthalpy for the H-Cl bond
is +432 kJ mol-1.
More complicated molecules
What happens if the molecule has several bonds, rather than just
1?
Consider methane, CH4. It contains four identical C-H
bonds, and it seems reasonable that they should all have the same bond
enthalpy.
However, if you took methane to pieces one hydrogen at a time,
it needs a different amount of energy to break each of the four C-H bonds.
Every time you break a hydrogen off the carbon, the environment of those left
behind changes. And the strength of a bond is affected by what else is around
it.
In cases like this, the bond enthalpy quoted is an average
value.
In the methane case, you can work out how much energy is needed
to break a mole of methane gas into gaseous carbon and hydrogen atoms. That
comes to +1662 kJ and involves breaking 4 moles of C-H bonds. The average
bond energy is therefore +1662/4 kJ, which is +415.5 kJ per mole of bonds.
That means that many bond enthalpies are actually quoted asmean
(or average) bond enthalpies, although it might not actually say so.
Mean bond enthalpies are sometimes referred to as "bond enthalpy
terms".
In fact, tables of bond enthalpies give average values in
another sense as well, particularly in organic chemistry. The bond enthalpy
of, say, the C-H bond varies depending on what is around it in the molecule.
So data tables use average values which will work well enough in most cases.
That means that if you use the C-H value in some calculation,
you can't be sure that it exactly fits the molecule you are working with. So
don't expect calculations using mean bond enthalpies to give very reliable
answers.
You may well have to know the difference between a bond
dissociation enthalpy and a mean bond enthalpy, and you should be aware that
the word mean (or average) is used in two slightly different
senses. But for calculation purposes, it isn't something you need to worry
about. Just use the values you are given.
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