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Icse Calorimetry

Combustion & Flame — Icse Calorimetry

Icse Calorimetry

Calorimetry — Measuring Heat from Fuels

What is Calorimetry?

Calorimetry is the science of measuring the heat released or absorbed during a chemical or physical process.

In the context of fuels: it measures how much heat energy a fuel produces when it burns completely.

Calorific Value

Calorific value = heat energy released by complete combustion of 1 kg of a fuel.

Unit: kJ/kg (kilojoules per kilogram) or kJ/g

FuelApproximate Calorific Value
Wood17,000 kJ/kg
Charcoal33,000 kJ/kg
Coal25,000–33,000 kJ/kg
Kerosene45,000 kJ/kg
LPG55,000 kJ/kg
Petrol47,000 kJ/kg
Hydrogen150,000 kJ/kg (highest of any fuel)
Biogas35,000–40,000 kJ/kg

LPG > Petrol > Kerosene > Coal > Charcoal > Wood

How a Calorimeter Works

  1. A known mass of fuel burns in a sealed chamber (bomb calorimeter)
  2. Heat released warms a known mass of water surrounding the chamber
  3. Temperature rise of water is measured
  4. Heat energy = mass of water × specific heat capacity × temperature rise

    Q = mcΔT (where c for water = 4.2 J/g°C)

Ideal Fuel Properties

A good fuel should have:

  1. High calorific value — more energy per kg
  2. Low ignition temperature — easy to start
  3. No harmful products — safe combustion
  4. Easy to store and transport — practical
  5. Low cost — affordable
  6. Smokeless — environmentally friendly
FuelAdvantageDisadvantage
LPGHigh CV, cleanCostly, storage risk
CNGClean, low CO₂Infrastructure needed
CoalCheap, availableHigh pollution, CO₂
WoodRenewableLow CV, smoke
HydrogenHighest CV, cleanExpensive, storage risk

Combustion Equation Reminder

Complete combustion of a hydrocarbon:

Hydrocarbon + O₂ → CO₂ + H₂O + heat energy

Incomplete combustion (insufficient O₂):

Hydrocarbon + O₂ → CO + C (soot) + H₂O (less heat, more pollution)

Efficiency Concept

Not all heat from combustion does useful work. Efficiency:

η = (useful heat output / total heat released) × 100%

Modern gas stoves are ~65% efficient; traditional chulhas are ~10–20% efficient.

ICSE Focus Points

  • Calorific value = kJ/kg; higher = better fuel
  • LPG has highest practical calorific value among common fuels
  • Hydrogen has highest calorific value but is impractical due to storage
  • Q = mcΔT is the fundamental calorimetry equation
  • Complete vs incomplete combustion: CO₂/H₂O vs CO/soot

Quick Check

  1. What does "calorific value" mean?
  2. Arrange in order: wood, LPG, coal, kerosene (lowest to highest CV).
  3. Why is hydrogen not commonly used as a fuel despite its high calorific value?
  4. A fuel releases 50 kJ of heat when 1 g burns. What is its calorific value in kJ/kg?
  5. Stretch: Why does incomplete combustion produce less heat than complete combustion?

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What is Calorimetry?
  • Calorific Value
  • How a Calorimeter Works
  • Ideal Fuel Properties

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