Users' questions

How do you explain enthalpy of formation?

How do you explain enthalpy of formation?

The enthalpy of formation is the standard reaction enthalpy for the formation of the compound from its elements (atoms or molecules) in their most stable reference states at the chosen temperature (298.15K) and at 1bar pressure.

What is enthalpy of formation with example?

For example, the standard enthalpy of formation of carbon dioxide would be the enthalpy of the following reaction under the above conditions: C(s, graphite) + O2(g) → CO2(g) All elements are written in their standard states, and one mole of product is formed. This is true for all enthalpies of formation.

How are heats of formation calculated in enthalpy?

Standard heat of formation or standard enthalpy change of formation. How heats of formation are calculated. Created by Sal Khan. This is the currently selected item. Posted 10 years ago.

How are heats of formation calculated by Sal Khan?

How heats of formation are calculated. Created by Sal Khan. This is the currently selected item. Posted 10 years ago. Direct link to Jonathanhuey’s post “At 11:28, I just wanted to confirm that heats of f…” , I just wanted to confirm that heats of formation are measured in kJ. Is that what I can assume for most problems?

How to calculate the enthalpy of a bond?

– [Voiceover] We’re gonna be talking about bond enthalpy and how you can use it to calculate the enthalpy of reaction. Bond enthalpy is the energy that it takes to break one mole of a bond. So one mole of a bond. So different types of bonds will have different bond enthalpies.

Is the enthalpy the same as the pressure?

Direct link to Jennifer Jain’s post “Calorimetry is the science of measuring heat and E…” Calorimetry is the science of measuring heat and Enthalpy is the internal energy in the system added to the product of the pressure and volume. At a constant pressure the heat is the same as the enthalpy.