Chemical reactions, such as those that occur when you light a match, involve changes in energy as well as matter.
Chemical changes and their accompanying …
Energy Conservation
Energy can be converted from one form into another, but all of the energy present before a change occurs always exists in some form …
Chemists ordinarily use a property known as enthalpy (H) to describe the thermodynamics of chemical and physical processes. Enthalpy is defined as the sum …
Calorimetry is a technique used to measure the amount of heat involved in a chemical or physical process or to measure the heat transferred to or from a …
Calorimeters are useful to determine the heat released or absorbed by a chemical reaction. Coffee cup calorimeters are designed to operate at constant …
There are two ways to determine the amount of heat involved in a chemical change: measure it experimentally, or calculate it from other experimentally …
Enthalpy changes are typically tabulated for reactions in which both the reactants and products are at the same conditions. A standard state is a commonly …
Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) is a well-described technique that measures the heat released or absorbed during a chemical reaction, using it as …
The computational study of the formation and growth of atmospheric aerosols requires an accurate Gibbs free energy surface, which can be obtained from gas …