How much energy is needed to change 1 g of ice at 0°C to water at 0°C?

1 Answer
Feb 18, 2016

If you think about it for a moment---and it should be intuitive, you should recognize that ice changing into water is a melting event.

Melting is the opposite of fusion, or freezing.

Hence, we should consider "latent heat of fusion", or enthalpy of fusion, #DeltaH_"fus"#. Or, the molar enthalpy of fusion, #DeltabarH_"fus"#. For that we have the reference value:

#color(green)(DeltabarH_("fus","H"_2"O") = "6.02 kJ/mol")#

A natural melting event occurs at a constant temperature and constant pressure.

At a constant pressure, #DeltaH = q_p#, where #q# is the heat flow through the system, and #q_p# is that at constant pressure.

The "energy" you speak of is #q_p#. Therefore, we should solve for #q_p#:

#\mathbf(n_("H"_2"O")DeltabarH = q_p)#

where #n# is the number of #"mol"#s and #q_p# is in #"kJ"#.

The #"H"_2"O"# in the system technically does not change in quantity while it melts, only in form, so we have:

#n_("H"_2"O") = 1 cancel("g H"_2"O") xx ("1 mol H"_2"O")/(18.015 cancel("g H"_2"O"))#

#= "0.0555 mol H"_2"O"#

Thus:

#color(blue)(q_p) = "0.0555 mol H"_2"O" xx "6.02 kJ/mol"#

#= "0.3342 kJ" = color(blue)("334.2 J")#

Since we have to supply heat energy into the system to melt the ice, the system absorbs energy. Thus, the sign of this answer should be positive.