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Enthalpy of fusion

In thermodynamics, the enthalpy of fusion of a substance, also known as (latent) heat of fusion, is the change in its enthalpy resulting from providing energy, typically heat, to a specific quantity of the substance to change its state from a solid to a liquid, at constant pressure.

Enthalpies of melting and boiling for pure elements versus temperatures of transition, demonstrating Trouton's rule

It is the amount of energy required to convert one mole of solid into liquid. For example, when melting 1 kg of ice (at 0 °C under a wide range of pressures), 333.55 kJ of energy is absorbed with no temperature change. The heat of solidification (when a substance changes from liquid to solid) is equal and opposite.

This energy includes the contribution required to make room for any associated change in volume by displacing its environment against ambient pressure. The temperature at which the phase transition occurs is the melting point or the freezing point, according to context. By convention, the pressure is assumed to be 1 atm (101.325 kPa) unless otherwise specified.

Overview edit

The 'enthalpy' of fusion is a latent heat, because, while melting, the heat energy needed to change the substance from solid to liquid at atmospheric pressure is latent heat of fusion, as the temperature remains constant during the process. The latent heat of fusion is the enthalpy change of any amount of substance when it melts. When the heat of fusion is referenced to a unit of mass, it is usually called the specific heat of fusion, while the molar heat of fusion refers to the enthalpy change per amount of substance in moles.

The liquid phase has a higher internal energy than the solid phase. This means energy must be supplied to a solid in order to melt it and energy is released from a liquid when it freezes, because the molecules in the liquid experience weaker intermolecular forces and so have a higher potential energy (a kind of bond-dissociation energy for intermolecular forces).

When liquid water is cooled, its temperature falls steadily until it drops just below the line of freezing point at 0 °C. The temperature then remains constant at the freezing point while the water crystallizes. Once the water is completely frozen, its temperature continues to fall.

The enthalpy of fusion is almost always a positive quantity; helium is the only known exception.[1] Helium-3 has a negative enthalpy of fusion at temperatures below 0.3 K. Helium-4 also has a very slightly negative enthalpy of fusion below 0.77 K (−272.380 °C). This means that, at appropriate constant pressures, these substances freeze with the addition of heat.[2] In the case of 4He, this pressure range is between 24.992 and 25.00 atm (2,533 kPa).[3]

 
Standard enthalpy change of fusion of period three
 
Standard enthalpy change of fusion of period two of the periodic table of elements
Substance Heat of fusion
(cal/g) (J/g)
water 79.72 333.55
methane 13.96 58.99
propane 19.11 79.96
glycerol 47.95 200.62
formic acid 66.05 276.35
acetic acid 45.90 192.09
acetone 23.42 97.99
benzene 30.45 127.40
myristic acid 47.49 198.70
palmitic acid 39.18 163.93
sodium acetate 63–69 264–289[4]
stearic acid 47.54 198.91
gallium 19.2 80.4
paraffin wax (C25H52) 47.8–52.6 200–220

These values are mostly from the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 62nd edition. The conversion between cal/g and J/g in the above table uses the thermochemical calorie (calth) = 4.184 joules rather than the International Steam Table calorie (calINT) = 4.1868 joules.

Examples edit

  • To heat 1 kg of liquid water from 0 °C to 20 °C requires 83.6 kJ (see below). However, heating 0 °C ice to 20 °C requires additional energy to melt the ice. We can treat these two processes independently and using the specific heat capacity of water to be 4.18 J/(g⋅K); thus, to heat 1 kg of ice from 273.15 K to water at 293.15 K (0 °C to 20 °C) requires:
    (1) 333.55 J/g (heat of fusion of ice) = 333.55 kJ/kg = 333.55 kJ for 1 kg of ice to melt, plus
    (2) 4.18 J/(g⋅K) × 20 K = 4.18 kJ/(kg⋅K) × 20 K = 83.6 kJ for 1 kg of water to increase in temperature by 20 K
    (1 + 2) 333.55 kJ + 83.6 kJ = 417.15 kJ for 1 kg of ice to increase in temperature by 20 K
    From these figures it can be seen that one part ice at 0 °C will cool almost exactly 4 parts water from 20 °C to 0 °C.
  • Silicon has a heat of fusion of 50.21 kJ/mol. 50 kW of power can supply the energy required to melt about 100 kg of silicon in one hour:
    50 kW = 50kJ/s = 180000kJ/h
    180000kJ/h × (1 mol Si)/50.21kJ × 28gSi/(mol Si) × 1kgSi/1000gSi = 100.4kg/h

Solubility prediction edit

The heat of fusion can also be used to predict solubility for solids in liquids. Provided an ideal solution is obtained the mole fraction   of solute at saturation is a function of the heat of fusion, the melting point of the solid   and the temperature   of the solution:

 

Here,   is the gas constant. For example, the solubility of paracetamol in water at 298 K is predicted to be:

 

Since the molar mass of water and paracetamol are 18.0153gmol−1 and 151.17gmol−1 and the density of the solution is 1000gL−1, an estimate of the solubility in grams per liter is:

 
1000 g/L * (mol/18.0153g) is an estimate of the number of moles of molecules in 1L solution, using water density as a reference;
0.0248 * (1000 g/L * (mol/18.0153g)) is the molar fraction of substance in saturated solution with a unit of mol/L;
0.0248 * (1000 g/L * (mol/18.0153g)) * 151.17g/mol is the solute's molar fraction equivalent mass conversion;
1-0.0248 will be the fraction of the solution that is solvent.

which is a deviation from the real solubility (240 g/L) of 11%. This error can be reduced when an additional heat capacity parameter is taken into account.[5]

Proof edit

At equilibrium the chemical potentials for the solute in the solution and pure solid are identical:

 

or

 

with   the gas constant and   the temperature.

Rearranging gives:

 

and since

 

the heat of fusion being the difference in chemical potential between the pure liquid and the pure solid, it follows that

 

Application of the Gibbs–Helmholtz equation:

 

ultimately gives:

 

or:

 

and with integration:

 

the end result is obtained:

 

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Atkins & Jones 2008, p. 236.
  2. ^ Ott & Boerio-Goates 2000, pp. 92–93.
  3. ^ Hoffer, J. K.; Gardner, W. R.; Waterfield, C. G.; Phillips, N. E. (April 1976). "Thermodynamic properties of 4He. II. The bcc phase and the P-T and VT phase diagrams below 2 K". Journal of Low Temperature Physics. 23 (1): 63–102. Bibcode:1976JLTP...23...63H. doi:10.1007/BF00117245. S2CID 120473493.
  4. ^ Ibrahim Dincer and Marc A. Rosen. Thermal Energy Storage: Systems and Applications, page 155
  5. ^ Measurement and Prediction of Solubility of Paracetamol in Water-Isopropanol Solution. Part 2. Prediction H. Hojjati and S. Rohani Org. Process Res. Dev.; 2006; 10(6) pp 1110–1118; (Article) doi:10.1021/op060074g

References edit

  • Atkins, Peter; Jones, Loretta (2008), Chemical Principles: The Quest for Insight (4th ed.), W. H. Freeman and Company, p. 236, ISBN 978-0-7167-7355-9
  • Ott, BJ. Bevan; Boerio-Goates, Juliana (2000), Chemical Thermodynamics: Advanced Applications, Academic Press, ISBN 0-12-530985-6

enthalpy, fusion, thermodynamics, enthalpy, fusion, substance, also, known, latent, heat, fusion, change, enthalpy, resulting, from, providing, energy, typically, heat, specific, quantity, substance, change, state, from, solid, liquid, constant, pressure, enth. In thermodynamics the enthalpy of fusion of a substance also known as latent heat of fusion is the change in its enthalpy resulting from providing energy typically heat to a specific quantity of the substance to change its state from a solid to a liquid at constant pressure Enthalpies of melting and boiling for pure elements versus temperatures of transition demonstrating Trouton s ruleIt is the amount of energy required to convert one mole of solid into liquid For example when melting 1 kg of ice at 0 C under a wide range of pressures 333 55 kJ of energy is absorbed with no temperature change The heat of solidification when a substance changes from liquid to solid is equal and opposite This energy includes the contribution required to make room for any associated change in volume by displacing its environment against ambient pressure The temperature at which the phase transition occurs is the melting point or the freezing point according to context By convention the pressure is assumed to be 1 atm 101 325 kPa unless otherwise specified Contents 1 Overview 2 Examples 3 Solubility prediction 3 1 Proof 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesOverview editThe enthalpy of fusion is a latent heat because while melting the heat energy needed to change the substance from solid to liquid at atmospheric pressure is latent heat of fusion as the temperature remains constant during the process The latent heat of fusion is the enthalpy change of any amount of substance when it melts When the heat of fusion is referenced to a unit of mass it is usually called the specific heat of fusion while the molar heat of fusion refers to the enthalpy change per amount of substance in moles The liquid phase has a higher internal energy than the solid phase This means energy must be supplied to a solid in order to melt it and energy is released from a liquid when it freezes because the molecules in the liquid experience weaker intermolecular forces and so have a higher potential energy a kind of bond dissociation energy for intermolecular forces When liquid water is cooled its temperature falls steadily until it drops just below the line of freezing point at 0 C The temperature then remains constant at the freezing point while the water crystallizes Once the water is completely frozen its temperature continues to fall The enthalpy of fusion is almost always a positive quantity helium is the only known exception 1 Helium 3 has a negative enthalpy of fusion at temperatures below 0 3 K Helium 4 also has a very slightly negative enthalpy of fusion below 0 77 K 272 380 C This means that at appropriate constant pressures these substances freeze with the addition of heat 2 In the case of 4He this pressure range is between 24 992 and 25 00 atm 2 533 kPa 3 nbsp Standard enthalpy change of fusion of period three nbsp Standard enthalpy change of fusion of period two of the periodic table of elementsSubstance Heat of fusion cal g J g water 79 72 333 55methane 13 96 58 99propane 19 11 79 96glycerol 47 95 200 62formic acid 66 05 276 35acetic acid 45 90 192 09acetone 23 42 97 99benzene 30 45 127 40myristic acid 47 49 198 70palmitic acid 39 18 163 93sodium acetate 63 69 264 289 4 stearic acid 47 54 198 91gallium 19 2 80 4paraffin wax C25H52 47 8 52 6 200 220These values are mostly from the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics 62nd edition The conversion between cal g and J g in the above table uses the thermochemical calorie calth 4 184 joules rather than the International Steam Table calorie calINT 4 1868 joules Examples editTo heat 1 kg of liquid water from 0 C to 20 C requires 83 6 kJ see below However heating 0 C ice to 20 C requires additional energy to melt the ice We can treat these two processes independently and using the specific heat capacity of water to be 4 18 J g K thus to heat 1 kg of ice from 273 15 K to water at 293 15 K 0 C to 20 C requires 1 333 55 J g heat of fusion of ice 333 55 kJ kg 333 55 kJ for 1 kg of ice to melt plus 2 4 18 J g K 20 K 4 18 kJ kg K 20 K 83 6 kJ for 1 kg of water to increase in temperature by 20 K 1 2 333 55 kJ 83 6 kJ 417 15 kJ for 1 kg of ice to increase in temperature by 20 K From these figures it can be seen that one part ice at 0 C will cool almost exactly 4 parts water from 20 C to 0 C Silicon has a heat of fusion of 50 21 kJ mol 50 kW of power can supply the energy required to melt about 100 kg of silicon in one hour 50 kW 50kJ s 180000 kJ h 180000 kJ h 1 mol Si 50 21kJ 28g Si mol Si 1kg Si 1000 g Si 100 4kg hSolubility prediction editThe heat of fusion can also be used to predict solubility for solids in liquids Provided an ideal solution is obtained the mole fraction x 2 displaystyle x 2 nbsp of solute at saturation is a function of the heat of fusion the melting point of the solid T fus displaystyle T text fus nbsp and the temperature T displaystyle T nbsp of the solution ln x 2 D H fus R 1 T 1 T fus displaystyle ln x 2 frac Delta H text fus circ R left frac 1 T frac 1 T text fus right nbsp Here R displaystyle R nbsp is the gas constant For example the solubility of paracetamol in water at 298 K is predicted to be x 2 exp 28100 J mol 1 8 314 J K 1 mol 1 1 298 K 1 442 K 0 0248 displaystyle x 2 exp left frac 28100 text J mol 1 8 314 text J K 1 text mol 1 left frac 1 298 text K frac 1 442 text K right right 0 0248 nbsp Since the molar mass of water and paracetamol are 18 0153g mol 1 and 151 17g mol 1 and the density of the solution is 1000g L 1 an estimate of the solubility in grams per liter is 0 0248 1000 g L 1 18 0153 g mol 1 1 0 0248 151 17 g mol 1 213 4 g L 1 displaystyle frac 0 0248 times frac 1000 text g L 1 18 0153 text g mol 1 1 0 0248 times 151 17 text g mol 1 213 4 text g L 1 nbsp 1000 g L mol 18 0153g is an estimate of the number of moles of molecules in 1L solution using water density as a reference 0 0248 1000 g L mol 18 0153g is the molar fraction of substance in saturated solution with a unit of mol L 0 0248 1000 g L mol 18 0153g 151 17g mol is the solute s molar fraction equivalent mass conversion 1 0 0248 will be the fraction of the solution that is solvent which is a deviation from the real solubility 240 g L of 11 This error can be reduced when an additional heat capacity parameter is taken into account 5 Proof edit At equilibrium the chemical potentials for the solute in the solution and pure solid are identical m solid m solute displaystyle mu text solid circ mu text solute circ nbsp or m solid m liquid R T ln X 2 displaystyle mu text solid circ mu text liquid circ RT ln X 2 nbsp with R displaystyle R nbsp the gas constant and T displaystyle T nbsp the temperature Rearranging gives R T ln X 2 m liquid m solid displaystyle RT ln X 2 left mu text liquid circ mu text solid circ right nbsp and since D G fus m liquid m solid displaystyle Delta G text fus circ mu text liquid circ mu text solid circ nbsp the heat of fusion being the difference in chemical potential between the pure liquid and the pure solid it follows that R T ln X 2 D G fus displaystyle RT ln X 2 left Delta G text fus circ right nbsp Application of the Gibbs Helmholtz equation D G fus T T p D H fus T 2 displaystyle left frac partial left frac Delta G text fus circ T right partial T right p frac Delta H text fus circ T 2 nbsp ultimately gives ln X 2 T D H fus R T 2 displaystyle left frac partial left ln X 2 right partial T right frac Delta H text fus circ RT 2 nbsp or ln X 2 D H fus R T 2 d T displaystyle partial ln X 2 frac Delta H text fus circ RT 2 times delta T nbsp and with integration X 2 1 X 2 x 2 d ln X 2 ln x 2 T fus T D H fus R T 2 D T displaystyle int X 2 1 X 2 x 2 delta ln X 2 ln x 2 int T text fus T frac Delta H text fus circ RT 2 times Delta T nbsp the end result is obtained ln x 2 D H fus R 1 T 1 T fus displaystyle ln x 2 frac Delta H text fus circ R left frac 1 T frac 1 T text fus right nbsp See also editEnthalpy of vaporization Heat capacity Thermodynamic databases for pure substances Joback method Estimation of the heat of fusion from molecular structure Latent heat Lattice energy Heat of dilutionNotes edit Atkins amp Jones 2008 p 236 Ott amp Boerio Goates 2000 pp 92 93 Hoffer J K Gardner W R Waterfield C G Phillips N E April 1976 Thermodynamic properties of 4He II The bcc phase and the P T and VT phase diagrams below 2 K Journal of Low Temperature Physics 23 1 63 102 Bibcode 1976JLTP 23 63H doi 10 1007 BF00117245 S2CID 120473493 Ibrahim Dincer and Marc A Rosen Thermal Energy Storage Systems and Applications page 155 Measurement and Prediction of Solubility of Paracetamol in Water Isopropanol Solution Part 2 Prediction H Hojjati and S Rohani Org Process Res Dev 2006 10 6 pp 1110 1118 Article doi 10 1021 op060074gReferences editAtkins Peter Jones Loretta 2008 Chemical Principles The Quest for Insight 4th ed W H Freeman and Company p 236 ISBN 978 0 7167 7355 9 Ott BJ Bevan Boerio Goates Juliana 2000 Chemical Thermodynamics Advanced Applications Academic Press ISBN 0 12 530985 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Enthalpy of fusion amp oldid 1197269113, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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