What is Kirchoff's law in thermochemistry?
Answers
Answered by
1
Answer:
Kirchhoff's Law. Kirchhoff's Law describes the enthalpy of a reaction's variation with temperature changes. In general, enthalpy of any substance increases with temperature, which means both the products and the reactants' enthalpies increase.
Explanation:
Is that OK
Mark as Brainliest if correct
Hope it helps
Have a good time
anirudh961:
Thank u
Answered by
0
HeRe Is Your Ans ⤵
*****
Kirchhoff's current law (1st Law) states that current flowing into a node (or a junction) must be equal to current flowing out of it. This is a consequence of charge conservation
Kirchhoff's voltage law (2nd Law) states that the sum of all voltages around any closed loop in a circuit must equal zero
*****
Follow Me
Similar questions
Computer Science,
6 months ago
English,
6 months ago
Hindi,
6 months ago
Social Sciences,
11 months ago
English,
11 months ago
English,
1 year ago
Science,
1 year ago
Social Sciences,
1 year ago