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🧪AP Chemistry Unit 6 Review

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6.1 Endothermic and Exothermic Processes

6.1 Endothermic and Exothermic Processes

Written by the Fiveable Content Team • Last updated June 2026
Verified for the 2027 exam
Verified for the 2027 examWritten by the Fiveable Content Team • Last updated June 2026
🧪AP Chemistry
Unit & Topic Study Guides
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Endothermic and exothermic processes describe whether a system absorbs or releases energy during a chemical or physical change. A temperature change in the surroundings signals energy transfer: if the system gains energy from its surroundings, the process is endothermic with ΔH>0\Delta H>0; if the system releases energy to its surroundings, the process is exothermic with ΔH<0\Delta H<0. For AP Chemistry, identify the system before explaining the sign of ΔH\Delta H.

Endothermic vs. Exothermic in AP Chem

In AP Chem, endothermic and exothermic processes are about energy flow from the system's point of view. An endothermic process absorbs energy into the system, so ΔH>0\Delta H > 0. An exothermic process releases energy from the system to the surroundings, so ΔH<0\Delta H < 0.

Temperature data usually tells you what happened to the surroundings. If the solution or surroundings get warmer, the system released energy and the process is exothermic. If the solution or surroundings get colder, the system absorbed energy and the process is endothermic.

Why This Matters for the AP Chemistry Exam

This topic is your entry point into Unit 6, which carries about 7-9% of the AP Chemistry exam. The skill here is explaining the relationship between what you observe in an experiment, like a temperature rise or drop, and the energy change happening inside the system. You will use this reasoning to justify claims about energy flow on free-response questions and to interpret calorimetry results later in the unit.

Getting comfortable with the system versus surroundings framework and the sign of enthalpy change now will make energy diagrams, calorimetry, bond enthalpies, and Hess's law much easier. Many later questions assume you can instantly tell whether energy is flowing into or out of a system based on observed data.

Key Takeaways

  • A temperature change in a system is direct evidence that energy is changing.
  • Endothermic processes absorb energy from the surroundings and have a positive enthalpy change (ΔH>0\Delta H > 0); the surroundings feel colder.
  • Exothermic processes release energy to the surroundings and have a negative enthalpy change (ΔH<0\Delta H < 0); the surroundings feel warmer.
  • Always reason from the point of view of the system: gaining energy means endothermic, losing energy means exothermic.
  • Heating, cooling, phase changes, and chemical reactions can all be classified as endothermic or exothermic.
  • Dissolving a substance can be either endothermic or exothermic, depending on how the strengths of the particle interactions compare before and after dissolving.

Energy, Heat, and the System

Energy is the capacity to do work or transfer heat. Matter can undergo physical and chemical changes, and both kinds of change involve energy. Chemical changes involve forming or breaking bonds between atoms, while physical changes, like melting, involve changes in how particles interact without changing the substance itself.

Melting ice is a clear example of a physical change that requires energy:

H2O(s)H2O(l)H_2O(s) \rightarrow H_2O(l)

Energy must be supplied to melt the ice into liquid water.

Kinetic and Potential Energy

Two forms of energy matter most here:

  • Kinetic energy is the energy of motion. Temperature is directly related to the average kinetic energy of particles in a substance, so as temperature increases, particles move faster. You saw this idea with the behavior of ideal gases.
  • Potential energy is stored energy based on position, including the energy stored in chemical bonds. Compounds with lower potential energy are more stable, because stable arrangements minimize bond energy.

A useful detail for sign reasoning: breaking bonds requires energy input, and forming bonds releases energy. That single idea drives whether a reaction ends up endothermic or exothermic.

Conservation of Energy

Everything in this unit rests on the law of conservation of energy: energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred or converted from one form to another. The total energy of a closed system stays constant. This is also called the first law of thermodynamics, and it is the reason energy lost by a system has to show up in the surroundings, and vice versa.

System vs Surroundings

To track energy, first define the system: the specific part of the universe you care about, usually the reacting substances (such as HCl and NaOH). Everything outside the system, like the beaker and the air around it, is the surroundings.

When you read a question, identify the system and surroundings first. Energy flowing out of the system flows into the surroundings, and energy flowing into the system comes from the surroundings.

A calorimeter is designed to limit energy exchange with the outside world so you can measure heat flow between the system and its immediate surroundings. You will use this setup in Topic 6.4.

Endothermic vs Exothermic

Before classifying a process, define enthalpy. Enthalpy (H) describes the heat content of a system at constant pressure. ΔH\Delta H (the enthalpy change) is the difference between the final and initial enthalpies, and it measures the heat absorbed or released during a chemical reaction or a physical process like a phase change.

Endothermic processes absorb heat from the surroundings into the system. This gives a positive ΔH\Delta H.

  • Endo, positive ΔH\Delta H, energy travels from surroundings to system.
  • The surroundings lose energy, so they often feel colder.

Exothermic processes release heat from the system to the surroundings. This gives a negative ΔH\Delta H.

  • Exo, negative ΔH\Delta H, energy travels from system to surroundings.
  • The surroundings gain energy, so they often feel warmer.

Always reason from the point of view of the system. If the system gains energy, ΔH\Delta H is positive and the process is endothermic. If the system loses energy, ΔH\Delta H is negative and the process is exothermic. You will work with ΔH\Delta H in much more detail later in this unit.

Processes You Can Classify

Endothermic and exothermic labels apply to more than just reactions:

  • Heating and cooling a substance.
  • Phase changes, such as melting and boiling (energy absorbed) or freezing and condensing (energy released).
  • Chemical reactions, where the energy of the system can decrease, increase, or stay the same.
  • Dissolving a substance, which can go either way. Whether forming a solution absorbs or releases energy depends on how the strengths of the particle interactions before dissolving compare to the strengths of the interactions after dissolving.

Application: Hot and Cold Packs

Instant hot and cold packs are a real-world way to see these processes. Each pack holds water separated from a chemical; cracking the pack mixes them.

  • A hot pack uses a process that releases energy to the surroundings, so it warms up. This is an exothermic application.
  • A cold pack uses a process that absorbs energy from the surroundings, so it feels cold. Ammonium nitrate dissolving in water is a common endothermic example.

These are illustrative examples of the concept, not required AP content, but they make the sign of ΔH\Delta H easy to remember.

How to Use This on the AP Chemistry Exam

Free Response

When a question gives experimental data, connect the observation to the energy change directly. If the temperature of the surroundings drops, the system absorbed energy, so the process is endothermic with a positive ΔH\Delta H. If the temperature of the surroundings rises, the system released energy, so the process is exothermic with a negative ΔH\Delta H. State the direction of energy flow between system and surroundings clearly when justifying your claim.

Problem Solving

  • Identify the system and the surroundings before anything else.
  • Decide which direction energy is flowing based on the temperature change you are told about.
  • Match that direction to the correct sign of ΔH\Delta H.
  • Remember that breaking bonds absorbs energy and forming bonds releases energy, which previews how you will calculate enthalpy changes from bond data later in the unit.

Common Trap

In calorimetry, the thermometer reads the surroundings (often the water or solution), not the reacting system itself. A temperature increase in the solution means the reaction released energy and is exothermic, even though the reading went up. Do not flip the sign just because the number got bigger.

Common Misconceptions

  • "Endothermic means the surroundings get hotter." It is the opposite. Endothermic processes pull energy in, so the surroundings lose energy and usually feel colder.
  • "Positive ΔH\Delta H means energy was released." Positive ΔH\Delta H means energy was absorbed by the system (endothermic). Negative ΔH\Delta H means energy was released (exothermic).
  • "A temperature increase in the calorimeter means the reaction absorbed heat." A temperature increase in the solution means the system released energy to it, so the reaction is exothermic.
  • "Breaking bonds releases energy." Breaking bonds requires energy input. Forming bonds releases energy.
  • "Dissolving is always exothermic." Forming a solution can be endothermic or exothermic, depending on how the particle interactions compare before and after dissolving.
  • "Heat and temperature are the same thing." Temperature reflects the average kinetic energy of particles, while heat is energy transferred between system and surroundings. A temperature change is evidence of that energy transfer.

Vocabulary

The following words are mentioned explicitly in the College Board Course and Exam Description for this topic.

Term

Definition

chemical transformation

A process in which substances are converted into different substances through the breaking and forming of chemical bonds.

dissolution process

The process by which a solute dissolves in a solvent to form a solution, which can involve energy changes.

endothermic reaction

A chemical reaction that absorbs thermal energy from the surroundings, resulting in a positive enthalpy change.

exothermic reaction

A chemical reaction that releases thermal energy to the surroundings, resulting in a negative enthalpy change.

heat transfer

The process by which thermal energy is transferred between particles in thermal contact through collisions.

intermolecular interactions

Forces between molecules, such as hydrogen bonding, dipole-dipole forces, and London dispersion forces, that affect the physical and chemical properties of substances.

interparticle interactions

Forces between particles in a system that affect the energy changes during physical and chemical processes.

phase transition

The process by which a substance changes from one state of matter to another (solid, liquid, or gas).

physical transformation

A process in which the physical state or form of a substance changes without altering its chemical composition.

surroundings

Everything outside the system with which the system can exchange energy and matter.

system

The part of the universe being studied, which can exchange energy and matter with its surroundings.

temperature changes

Variations in the thermal energy of a substance that indicate energy changes in a system.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between endothermic and exothermic?

Endothermic processes absorb energy into the system, while exothermic processes release energy from the system to the surroundings.

Is endothermic positive or negative delta H?

Endothermic processes have a positive delta H because the system gains energy.

Is exothermic positive or negative delta H?

Exothermic processes have a negative delta H because the system loses energy to the surroundings.

How do temperature changes show endothermic or exothermic processes?

Temperature changes usually show what happens to the surroundings. If the surroundings get warmer, the system released energy and the process is exothermic. If the surroundings get colder, the system absorbed energy and the process is endothermic.

Is dissolving always endothermic or exothermic?

Dissolving can be either endothermic or exothermic. It depends on the energy needed to separate particles compared with the energy released when new interactions form in solution.

How do system and surroundings help with AP Chem 6.1?

They keep the sign reasoning straight. Classify energy flow from the system's point of view: energy into the system is endothermic, and energy out of the system is exothermic.

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