90 2 Work, Heat, and Energy: The First Law of Thermodynamics
Process 2: Isothermal reaction at temperature T 2
Process 1: Isothermal reaction at temperature T 1
Reactants
T
T 1
T 2
Products
Process 3: Temperature change of
reactants from
T^2
to
T^1
Process 4: Temperature change of
products from
T^1
to
T^2
Figure 2.10 The Process to Calculate∆H(T 2 )from∆H(T 1 ).
T 1 toT 2. According to Hess’s law∆H(T 2 ) is equal to the sum of the enthalpy changes
of processes 1, 2, and 3:
∆H(T 2 )∆H 3 +∆H 1 +∆H 4 ∆H 3 +∆H(T 1 )+∆H 4 (2.7-16)
For 1 mol of reaction, process 3 consists of changing the temperature of an amount
of each reactant equal to the magnitude of its stoichiometric coefficient, so that
∆H 3
∫T 1
T 2
∑s
i 1
|νi|CP, m(i)dT
(reactants only in sum)
∫T 2
T 1
∑s
i 1
νiCP, m(i)dT
(reactants only in sum)
(2.7-17)
whereCP, m(i) is the molar heat capacity of substancei. The second equality comes from
interchanging the limits of integration and realizing that the stoichiometric coefficients
of reactants are negative. Process 4 is the change in temperature of the products from
T 1 toT 2 , so that
∆H 4
∫T 2
T 1
∑s
i 1
νiCP, m(i)dT
(products only in sum)
(2.7-18)
The sums in Eqs. (2.7-17) and (2.7-18) can be combined to give the expression
∆H(T 2 )∆H(T 1 )+
∫T 2
T 1
∆CPdT (2.7-19)
where
∆CP
∑s
i 1
νiCP, m(i) (2.7-20)