Chemistry, asked by prerna10089, 4 months ago

how to know that how much heat is involved when new compound is formed????...​

Answers

Answered by gaurivirat
1

Answer:

Heat of formation, also called standard heat of formation, enthalpy of formation, or standard enthalpy of formation, the amount of heat absorbed or evolved when one mole of a compound is formed from its constituent elements, each substance being in its normal physical state (gas, liquid, or solid). Usually the conditions at which the compound is formed are taken to be at a temperature of 25 °C (77 °F) and a pressure of 1 atmosphere, in which case the heat of formation can be called the standard heat of formation. The heat of formation of an element is arbitrarily assigned a value of zero. By using Hess’s law of heat summation, one can calculate the heat absorbed or evolved in any chemical reaction by summing the known heats of formation or combustion for the steps in that reaction.

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Answered by kanishkagupta1234
7

Answer:

The Heat of Reaction (also known and Enthalpy of Reaction) is the change in the enthalpy of a chemical reaction that occurs at a constant pressure. It is a thermodynamic unit of measurement useful for calculating the amount of energy per mole either released or produced in a reaction. Since enthalpy is derived from pressure, volume, and internal energy, all of which are state functions, enthalpy is also a state function.

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