In order to measure this potential energy...you have to release it. What better way then blow it up? The instrument used to do this is...yes...called a bomb. Some chemist decided that his job was so exceptionally boring that he decided to name a piece of equipment in his lab something daring and exciting to increase the..."romantic" appeal. So, he named a cup in a bucket with a 200 dollar thermometer a bomb. Sigh. Basically, the bomb, the pic to the right, is placed in a tin bucket full of water. This assembly is then placed in a bigger bucket so as to best simulate a closed thermodynamic system. A dried, compressed pellet of sample is placed under O2 pressure in the bomb contacting a small piece of ignition wire.
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When the time comes, high current is passed through the wire and the pellet is combusted. As the heat moves out of the bomb it passes into the water surrounding it. This temperature change is measured very precisely and can be used to determine the total energy content of the sample. It doesn't even really blow up...it doesn't even sound cool. You get all psyched up for something cause your pushing the go button on a peice of equipment called an Oxygen BOMB calorimeter and then....nothing. Besides the emotional let down you may be wondering what's so bad about this lab.[Me and the ~200 dollar thermometer.] In the four hours we were in lab, we were only able to complete one of our 3 trials.
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If this isn't frustrating I don't even know what is. By the end I was about ready to take the whole darn thing and throw it down the fire escape. If one of our runs is an incomplete combustion so help me...I hope there isn't anyone actually using the fire escape right about then.
Don't get me wrong...it is kind of amusing that I can now tell you exactly how much energy is in this piece of pizza but....
I made a realization today. I have finally crossed the line from biology to chemistry. Many of my chem classes prior to this semester have been occupied by biologists from various disciplines. This class, P-chem, is the first class not at all designed to be somewhat condusive to a biological student. The wierd part of it is...I'm not so sure I like it. It's a fact that I am not happy with physical chemistry...this much I know. No one in their right mind needs a thermometer that you read through a magnifying class. You couldn't find a biologist within a mile of this thing. Except of course my lab partner who is the psychotic double m
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2 comments:
Hehehe...daab is not a real biology major...he couldnt be. You're right. I wouldnt go near that class...unless of course you offered to pay for my semester while I was in it. It would be a wasted semester anyways. -Jn
Can't imagine that you would have really thought that last 3.5 years would have been a waste. You don't quite seem the kind who is last seen trailing off into the sunset to go bumbling over the cliff. Think of all you know now that you didn't know then and the try and figure out how you would have known all that had you not traveled the path you did. Of course laying at the bottom of the cliff looking up is also a great time to reflect and ask some deep questions. By the way...how much energy is in that pizza anyway...?'Cause man I'd hate to think I just wasted ten bucks on eight slices of dud! TC
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