Energy Changes During Reactions

VIDEO 20

Video 20
From Reactants to Products: The Energetic Journey

Learning Objective:
Recall the Principle of conservation of energy and distinguish between endothermic and exothermic reactions.

Attribution

From Reactants to Products: The Energetic Journey by Natasha Ramroop Singh and the TRU Open Press is licensed under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.

Citation Information

Use the information listed below to generate a citation for this video.

  • Authors: Natasha Ramroop Singh, TRU Open Press
  • Publisher: TRU Open Press
  • Website: Chemistry for Biologists
  • Title: From Reactants to Products: The Energetic Journey
  • Publication Date: March 14, 2024
  • Location: Kamloops, British Columbia
  • Video URL: https://barabus.tru.ca/media/openpress/biol1110/20.mp4
  • Page URL: https://chemistryforbiologists.trubox.ca/2024/03/14/20-from-reactants-to-products-the-energetic-journey/
  • Website URL: https://chemistryforbiologists.trubox.ca/

Transcript:
The video transcripts are accessible for viewing and downloading below.

Video 20
Pre-video Activity 

Please attempt these questions BEFORE you watch the Video below and click “submit” when you are done

Which of the following is a substance that speeds up a chemical reaction without being consumed in the process?
Which of the following is a thermodynamic property which is equal to the sum of the internal energy plus the product of the pressure and the volume?
Which of the following releases energy to the environment?
Which of the following refers to the amount of energy required for a reaction to proceed?
Which of the following refers to energy of a substance due to its movement?
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Video 20

Now that you have looked at the video, and you understand everything that was explained, please attempt these same questions again to track your learning progress! Click “submit” when you are done

Which of the following releases energy to the environment?
Which of the following refers to energy of a substance due to its movement?
Which of the following refers to the amount of energy required for a reaction to proceed?
Which of the following is a thermodynamic property which is equal to the sum of the internal energy plus the product of the pressure and the volume?
Which of the following is a substance that speeds up a chemical reaction without being consumed in the process?
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Additional Learning Activity