heat of dissociation
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: - The energy required to break apart a molecule into its constituent atoms or simpler molecules: Specifically, the amount of thermal energy (heat) that must be absorbed to completely dissociate one mole of a substance in a fluid state (liquid or gas) into its simpler components. This is a type of enthalpy change associated with a dissociation reaction.
Usage
- This term is used almost exclusively in scientific contexts, particularly in chemistry and physics, to quantify the energy involved in breaking chemical bonds during dissociation.
- It is a specific, measurable thermodynamic quantity, often expressed in units like kilojoules per mole (kJ/mol) or kilocalories per mole (kcal/mol).
Examples
- Noun:
- The heat of dissociation for water vapor into hydrogen and oxygen atoms is very high.
- Scientists measured the heat of dissociation of the chlorine molecule to understand the bond strength.
- Calculating the heat of dissociation is crucial for modeling high-temperature chemical processes.
Advanced Usage
- "Molar heat of dissociation": A more precise term specifying that the energy value is per mole of substance.
- The molar heat of dissociation was listed in the thermodynamic tables.
- The concept is closely related to bond dissociation energy, though the latter typically refers to the energy for a specific bond in a gaseous molecule.
Variants and Related Words
- Dissociation energy (n): The energy required to break a particular chemical bond. Often used synonymously in the context of diatomic molecules.
- Enthalpy of dissociation (n): A more formal thermodynamic term equivalent to heat of dissociation at constant pressure.
- Dissociate (v): To break apart into simpler components.
- Dissociation (n): The general process of breaking apart.
Synonyms
- Dissociation enthalpy
- Bond dissociation energy (for a specific bond)
Notes
- This is a specialized scientific term. There are no common idioms, phrasal verbs, or colloquial uses associated with it.
- The reference context specifies "fluid substance," meaning the value applies to substances in the liquid or gaseous state, not the solid state.
Noun
- the heat required for a fluid substance to break up into simpler constituents