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Hess's law of constant heat summation, also known as Hess's law (or
Hess' law), is a relationship in physical chemistry named after Germain
Hess, a Swiss-born Russian chemist and physician who published it in
1840. The law states that the total enthalpy change during the complete
course of a chemical reaction is the same whether the reaction is made in
one step or in several steps.
Hess's law is now understood as an expression of the principle of
conservation of energy, also expressed in the first law of
thermodynamics, and the fact that the enthalpy of a chemical process is
independent of the path taken from the initial to the final state (i.e.
enthalpy is a state function). Reaction enthalpy changes can be
determined by calorimetry for many reactions. The values are usually
stated for processes with the same initial and final temperatures and
pressures, although the conditions can vary during the reaction. Hess's
law can be used to determine the overall energy required for a chemical
reaction, when it can be divided into synthetic steps that are individually
easier to characterize. This affords the compilation of standard enthalpies
of formation, that may be used as a basis to design complex syntheses.
Hess's law states that the change of enthalpy in a chemical reaction (i.e.
the heat of reaction at constant pressure) is independent of the pathway
between the initial and final states.
In other words, if a chemical change takes place by several different
routes, the overall enthalpy change is the same, regardless of the route by
which the chemical change occurs (provided the initial and final
condition are the same).
Hess's law allows the enthalpy change (ΔH) for a reaction to be
calculated even when it cannot be measured directly. This is
accomplished by performing basic algebraic operations based on
the chemical equations of reactions using previously determined values
for the enthalpies of formation.
Addition of chemical equations leads to a net or overall equation. If
enthalpy change is known for each equation, the result will be the
enthalpy change for the net equation. If the net enthalpy change is
negative (ΔHnet < 0), the reaction is exothermic and is more likely to be
spontaneous; positive ΔH values correspond
to endothermic reactions. Entropy also plays an important role in
determining spontaneity, as some reactions with a positive enthalpy
change are nevertheless spontaneous.
Hess's law states that enthalpy changes are additive. Thus the ΔH for a
single reaction
Hess's law is a relationship in physical chemistry named after Germain
Hess, a Swiss-born Russian chemist and physician. This law states that if
a reaction takes place in several steps, then the standard reaction enthalpy
for the overall reaction is equal to the sum of the standard enthalpies of
the intermediate reaction steps, assuming each step takes place at the
same temperature.
Hess's law derives directly from the law of conservation of energy, as
well as its expression in the first law of thermodynamics. Since enthalpy
is a state function, the change in enthalpy between products
and reactants in a chemical system is independent of the pathway taken
from the initial to the final state of the system. Hess's law can be used to
determine the overall energy required for a chemical reaction, especially
when the reaction can be divided into several intermediate steps that are
individually easier to characterize. Negative enthalpy change for a
reaction indicates exothermic process, while positive enthalpy change
corresponds to endothermic process.
Calculating Standard Enthalpies of Reaction Using Hess's Law
C(s){graphite}→C(s){diamond}ΔHrxn=?
Turning graphite into diamond requires extremely high temperatures
and pressures, and therefore is impractical in a laboratory setting. The
change in enthalpy for this reaction cannot be determined experimentally.
However, because we know the standard enthalpy change for
the oxidation for these two substances, it is possible to calculate the
enthalpy change for this reaction using Hess's law. Our intermediate steps
are as follows:
C(s){graphite}+O2(g)→CO2(g)ΔH∘=−393.41kJ/mol
C(s){diamond}+O2(g)→CO2(g)ΔH∘=−395.40kJ/mol
In order to get these intermediate reactions to add to our net overall
reaction, we need to reverse the second step. Keep in mind that when
reversing reactions using Hess's law, the sign of ΔH will change.
Sometimes, you will need to multiply a given reaction intermediate
through by an integer. In such cases, you need always multiply your ΔH
value by that same integer. Restating the first equation and flipping the
second equation, we have:
C(s){graphite}+O2(g)→CO2(g)ΔH∘=−393.41kJ/mol
CO2(g)→C(s){diamond}+O2(g)ΔH∘=+395.40kJ/mol
Adding these equations together, carbon dioxides and oxygens cancel,
leaving us only with our net equation. By Hess's law, we can sum the ΔH
values for these intermediate reactions to get our final value, ΔHrxn∘.
C(s){graphite}→C(s){diamond}ΔHrxn∘=1.89kJ/mol