chemical energy

(noun)

The net potential energy liberated or absorbed during the course of a chemical reaction.

Related Terms

  • potential energy
  • kinetic energy

Examples of chemical energy in the following topics:

  • Types of Energy

    • The various types of energy include kinetic, potential, and chemical energy.
    • On a chemical level, the bonds that hold the atoms of molecules together have potential energy.
    • This type of potential energy is called chemical energy, and like all potential energy, it can be used to do work.
    • For example, chemical energy is contained in the gasoline molecules that are used to power cars.
    • The molecules in gasoline (octane, the chemical formula shown) contain chemical energy.
  • Energy Changes in Chemical Reactions

    • Due to the absorption of energy when chemical bonds are broken, and the release of energy when chemical bonds are formed, chemical reactions almost always involve a change in energy between products and reactants.
    • By the Law of Conservation of Energy, however, we know that the total energy of a system must remain unchanged, and that oftentimes a chemical reaction will absorb or release energy in the form of heat, light, or both.
    • The energy change in a chemical reaction is due to the difference in the amounts of stored chemical energy between the products and the reactants.
    • This stored chemical energy, or heat content, of the system is known as its enthalpy.
    • Describe the types of energy changes that can occur in chemical reactions
  • The Role of Energy and Metabolism

    • All organisms require energy to complete tasks; metabolism is the set of the chemical reactions that release energy for cellular processes.
    • Metabolism is the set of life-sustaining chemical processes that enables organisms transform the chemical energy stored in molecules into energy that can be used for cellular processes.
    • Plants convert light energy from the sun into chemical energy stored in molecules during the process of photosynthesis.
    • Some of these chemical reactions are spontaneous and release energy, whereas others require energy to proceed.
    • For every action that requires energy, many chemical reactions take place to provide chemical energy to the systems of the body, including muscles, nerves, heart, lungs, and brain.
  • Transforming Chemical Energy

    • Cellular respiration is the process of transforming chemical energy into forms usable by the cell or organism.
    • An electrical energy plant converts energy from one form to another form that can be more easily used .
    • For example, geothermal energy plants start with underground thermal energy (heat) and transform it into electrical energy that will be transported to homes and factories.
    • ATP is the principle form of stored energy used for cellular functions and is frequently referred to as the energy currency of the cell.
    • This geothermal energy plant transforms thermal energy from deep in the ground into electrical energy, which can be easily used.
  • The First Law of Thermodynamics

    • Thermodynamics is the study of heat energy and other types of energy, such as work, and the various ways energy is transferred within chemical systems.
    • For instance, light bulbs transform electrical energy into light energy, and gas stoves transform chemical energy from natural gas into heat energy.
    • Plants perform one of the most biologically useful transformations of energy on Earth: they convert the energy of sunlight into the chemical energy stored within organic molecules.
    • Humans can convert the chemical energy in food, like this ice cream cone, into kinetic energy by riding a bicycle.
    • Plants can convert electromagnetic radiation (light energy) from the sun into chemical energy.
  • Other Forms of Energy

    • Thermal, chemical, electric, radiant, nuclear, magnetic, elastic, sound, mechanical, luminous, and mass are forms that energy can exist in.
    • Chemical Energy: This is energy due to the way that atoms are arranged in molecules and various other collections of matter.
    • An example of something that stores chemical energy is food.
    • When your body digests and metabolizes food it utilizes its chemical energy.
    • For example, luminous energy is radiant energy.
  • Metabolism of Carbohydrates

    • These large polysaccharides contain many chemical bonds and therefore store a lot of chemical energy.
    • When these molecules are broken down during metabolism, the energy in the chemical bonds is released and can be harnessed for cellular processes.
    • Inside the cell, each sugar molecule is broken down through a complex series of chemical reactions.
    • As chemical energy is released from the bonds in the monosaccharide, it is harnessed to synthesize high-energy adenosine triphosphate (ATP) molecules.
    • During photosynthesis, plants convert light energy into chemical energy by building carbon dioxide gas molecules (CO2) into sugar molecules like glucose.
  • Free Energy

    • Since chemical reactions release energy when energy-storing bonds are broken, how is the energy associated with chemical reactions quantified and expressed?
    • Gibbs free energy specifically refers to the energy associated with a chemical reaction that is available after accounting for entropy.
    • Every chemical reaction involves a change in free energy, called delta G (∆G).
    • If a chemical reaction requires an input of energy rather than releasing energy, then the ∆G for that reaction will be a positive value.
    • An important concept in the study of metabolism and energy is that of chemical equilibrium.
  • Energy Transformations

    • Energy transformation occurs when energy is changed from one form to another.
    • For example, an internal combustion engine converts the potential chemical energy in gasoline and oxygen into heat energy.
    • The process of photosynthesis is able to transform the light energy of the sun into chemical energy that can be used by a plant with an efficiency of conversion of a mere 6%.
    • This corresponds to zero kinetic energy and thus all of the energy of the pendulum is in the form of potential energy.
    • These figures illustrate the concepts of energy loss and useful energy output.
  • Activation Energy

    • This small amount of energy input necessary for all chemical reactions to occur is called the activation energy (or free energy of activation) and is abbreviated EA.
    • During chemical reactions, certain chemical bonds are broken and new ones are formed.
    • Heat energy (the total bond energy of reactants or products in a chemical reaction) speeds up the motion of molecules, increasing the frequency and force with which they collide.
    • The higher the activation energy, the slower the chemical reaction will be.
    • The Arrhenius equations relates the rate of a chemical reaction to the magnitude of the activation energy:
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