English, asked by shubhangiupadhyay232, 2 months ago

what is enthalphy change?​

Answers

Answered by smosan75
23

An enthalpy change is approximately equal to the difference between the energy used to break bonds in a chemical reaction and the energy gained by the formation of new chemical bonds in the reaction. It describes the energy change of a system at constant pressure. Enthalpy change is denoted by ΔH.

{\large{\mathcal{\blue{Have \:  a \:  nice \:  day \:  ahead}}}}

Answered by tarunkiranp
1

Answer:

The standard enthalpy of reaction is the difference between total reactant and total product molar enthalpies due to a chemical reaction, from reactants in their standard states to products in their standard states. Wikipedia

Explanation:

Use the formula ∆H = m x s x ∆T to solve.

Once you have m, the mass of your reactants, s, the specific heat of your product, and ∆T, the temperature change from your reaction, you are prepared to find the enthalpy of reaction. Simply plug your values into the formula ∆H = m x s x ∆T and multiply to solve.

symbol ΔH

Thus, the heat of reaction determined at constant pressure is also designated the enthalpy of reaction, represented by the symbol ΔH.

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

For a chemical reaction, the enthalpy of reaction (ΔHrxn) is the difference in enthalpy between products and reactants; the units of ΔHrxn are kilojoules per mole. Reversing a chemical reaction reverses the sign of ΔHrxn.

I HOPE IT WILL HELPFUL TO YOU

Similar questions