The amino acid glycine, C2H5NO2, is one of the compounds used by the body to make proteins. The

equation for its combustion is
4C2H5NO2(s) + 9O2(g) -------------> 8CO2(g) + 10H2O(l) + 2N2(g)
For each mole of glycine that burns, 973.49 kJ of heat is liberated. Use this information plus values of Hof for the products of combustion to calculate Hof
for glycine.

To calculate the standard enthalpy of formation (∆Hof) for glycine (C2H5NO2), you need to use the equation:

∆Hof(glycine) = ∑∆Hof(Products) - ∑∆Hof(Reactants)

First, you need to find the ∆Hof values for the products and reactants using data from standard reference tables or a reliable source. The ∆Hof values represent the enthalpy change when 1 mole of a compound is formed from its constituent elements under standard conditions (25°C and 1 atm pressure).

Using the given equation for combustion:

4C2H5NO2(s) + 9O2(g) -> 8CO2(g) + 10H2O(l) + 2N2(g)

The reactants are 4 moles of glycine and 9 moles of oxygen gas. The products are 8 moles of carbon dioxide, 10 moles of water, and 2 moles of nitrogen gas.

Next, look up the ∆Hof values for each of the products and reactants. For example:

∆Hof(CO2) = -393.51 kJ/mol (standard enthalpy of formation of carbon dioxide)
∆Hof(H2O) = -285.83 kJ/mol (standard enthalpy of formation of water)
∆Hof(N2) = 0 kJ/mol (standard enthalpy of formation of nitrogen gas)

Note: The values given for ∆Hof are negative because the combustion products are more stable than the reactants.

Now, substitute these values into the equation:

∆Hof(glycine) = [8 * ∆Hof(CO2)] + [10 * ∆Hof(H2O)] + [2 * ∆Hof(N2)] - [4 * ∆Hof(glycine)] - [9 * ∆Hof(O2)]

∆Hof(glycine) = [8 * (-393.51 kJ/mol)] + [10 * (-285.83 kJ/mol)] + [2 * 0 kJ/mol] - [4 * ∆Hof(glycine)] - [9 * 0 kJ/mol]

∆Hof(glycine) = -3148.08 kJ/mol - 2858.3 kJ/mol - 0 kJ/mol - [4 * ∆Hof(glycine)] - 0 kJ/mol

Now, rearrange the equation to solve for ∆Hof(glycine):

[4 * ∆Hof(glycine)] = -3148.08 kJ/mol - 2858.3 kJ/mol

[4 * ∆Hof(glycine)] = -6006.38 kJ/mol

∆Hof(glycine) = (-6006.38 kJ/mol) / 4

∆Hof(glycine) = -1501.6 kJ/mol

Therefore, the ∆Hof for glycine is approximately -1501.6 kJ/mol.

dHrxn = 973.49 kJ/mol x 4 = ?

dHrxn = (n*dHof products) - (n*dHof reactants)
You know dHrxn dHo of all but glycine. Substitute and solve for dHof glycine.