State Property
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Re: State Property
State properties are the same as state functions. The path that is taken to get from one point to another is not important. An example Professor Lavelle gave in class was altitude. Enthalpy is another example.
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Re: State Property
Of course! a state property is a value that isn't affected by how the system arrived at that state. At equilibrium, enthalpy describe the state of the system without considering how it got there. In contrast, heat doesn't describe a system but is instead a value that shows how a system changes. It depends on a change or path.
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Re: State Property
A state property is a quantity that is independent of how the substance was prepared
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Re: State Property
Chantel_2I wrote:Could someone also explain why heat is not a state property? Thanks!
If it's heat given off under constant pressure, then it's basically enthalpy so yes, it would be a state property because the path DOES matter as you take into account what intermediate steps where needed to get to the final temperature. But if you're just talking about the overall heat being released in a reaction, it's not a state property.
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Re: State Property
State property is like the distance between UCLA and downtown. The state property distance will be different from the actual route to take their as you can't go through buildings when driving.
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