- Joined
- Mar 11, 2011
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This is my understanding of enthalpy:
The greater the negative change in enthalpy, delta H, the more stable the product. Therefore a reaction where delta H = -396 is more stable than one with delta H = -394. How is it that diamond has a delta H of -396 and graphite is -394 if graphite is more stable than diamond?
Am I thinking of enthalpy wrong?
Here's another example: liquid water has delta H = -285.8, water vapor has delta H = -241.8. This makes sense to me because liquid water is more stable than vapor at 25C, therefore liquid water has to have a greater negative delta H than water vapor. The more positive the delta H, the more energy it has. Therefore it's leas stable, right?
Also, how do you post a thread using the sdn app? I can only read and reply, but can't create new threads like this one.
The greater the negative change in enthalpy, delta H, the more stable the product. Therefore a reaction where delta H = -396 is more stable than one with delta H = -394. How is it that diamond has a delta H of -396 and graphite is -394 if graphite is more stable than diamond?
Am I thinking of enthalpy wrong?
Here's another example: liquid water has delta H = -285.8, water vapor has delta H = -241.8. This makes sense to me because liquid water is more stable than vapor at 25C, therefore liquid water has to have a greater negative delta H than water vapor. The more positive the delta H, the more energy it has. Therefore it's leas stable, right?
Also, how do you post a thread using the sdn app? I can only read and reply, but can't create new threads like this one.