Skirmish
Chemical
- Feb 18, 2016
- 9
Supposedly the enthalpy would only depend on the temperature and pressure "h (T, P)" or at least this is how commonly enthalpy is expressed in partial derivatives...
So why in an isothermal and isobaric transformation is it different from 0?
*We are taliking of real subtances here, nor ideal gases.
*We know that is non zero!, beacuse we see it all the time on state changes and some chemical reactions.
That equation must be incomplete... or just misleading.
Maybe i'm failing to grasp a mathematical concept that I do not remember.
Please help or guidance.
So why in an isothermal and isobaric transformation is it different from 0?
*We are taliking of real subtances here, nor ideal gases.
*We know that is non zero!, beacuse we see it all the time on state changes and some chemical reactions.
That equation must be incomplete... or just misleading.
Maybe i'm failing to grasp a mathematical concept that I do not remember.
Please help or guidance.