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๐ŸชซChemical Process Balances Unit 10 Review

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10.2 Heat Capacity and Enthalpy Changes

10.2 Heat Capacity and Enthalpy Changes

Written by the Fiveable Content Team โ€ข Last updated August 2025
Written by the Fiveable Content Team โ€ข Last updated August 2025
๐ŸชซChemical Process Balances
Unit & Topic Study Guides

Heat capacity is a crucial concept in thermodynamics, measuring how much heat a substance can absorb or release. It's key for understanding energy changes in chemical processes, from heating water to complex industrial reactions.

Enthalpy changes, calculated using heat capacity, help us predict energy flow in chemical systems. This knowledge is essential for designing efficient processes, whether you're brewing coffee or running a power plant.

Heat Capacity Fundamentals

Heat capacity of substances

  • Heat capacity measures heat required to raise temperature by one degree
  • Specific heat capacity quantifies heat capacity per unit mass expressed in J/(kgยทK) or cal/(gยทโ„ƒ)
  • Molar heat capacity denotes heat capacity per mole of substance measured in J/(molยทK) or cal/(molยทโ„ƒ)
  • Constant pressure heat capacity (Cp) determined at constant pressure
  • Constant volume heat capacity (Cv) measured at constant volume
  • For ideal gases, Cp=Cv+RC_p = C_v + R relates Cp and Cv
  • Mixture heat capacity calculated as weighted average of component heat capacities Cp,mix=โˆ‘xiCp,iC_{p,mix} = \sum x_i C_{p,i} (water and ethanol)
Heat capacity of substances, General Chemistry for Science Majors, Unit 1, Physical Properties: Specific Heat Capacity | OERTX

Enthalpy changes from heat capacity

  • Enthalpy change quantifies heat absorbed or released at constant pressure
  • Calculated using formula ฮ”H=mโ‹…Cpโ‹…ฮ”T\Delta H = m \cdot C_p \cdot \Delta T
  • Sensible heat involves temperature change without phase transition (heating water)
  • Latent heat associated with phase changes (ice melting)
  • Heat capacity varies with temperature Cp=a+bT+cT2+dT3C_p = a + bT + cT^2 + dT^3
  • Enthalpy change found by integrating heat capacity ฮ”H=โˆซT1T2CpdT\Delta H = \int_{T_1}^{T_2} C_p dT
Heat capacity of substances, Specific Heat | Boundless Physics

Temperature effects on enthalpy

  • Higher temperatures generally increase enthalpy changes
  • Kirchhoff's equation dฮ”HdT=ฮ”Cp\frac{d\Delta H}{dT} = \Delta C_p relates temperature and enthalpy change
  • Standard state conditions set at 25โ„ƒ (298.15 K) and 1 atm pressure
  • Reference state enthalpy defines formation enthalpy at standard state
  • Temperature correction applied using ฮ”HT=ฮ”H298+โˆซ298Tฮ”CpdT\Delta H_T = \Delta H_{298} + \int_{298}^T \Delta C_p dT

Hess's law for enthalpy calculations

  • Hess's law states enthalpy change of reaction independent of pathway
  • Applies to multi-step reactions by summing individual step enthalpy changes
  • Reversing reaction changes enthalpy change sign
  • Scaling reaction multiplies enthalpy change by same factor
  • Formation reactions form compounds from elements in standard states
  • Combustion reactions involve complete oxidation forming CO2 and H2O (methane combustion)
  • Born-Haber cycle applies Hess's law to calculate lattice energies (NaCl formation)