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Which substances have AH = 0 kJ/mol

Which substances have AH = 0 kJ/mol-example-1
User Deadtime
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Answer:

Oxygen, bromine, iron, helium

Step-by-step explanation:


\Delta H^o_f is defined as the standard enthalpy of formation. By definition, the standard enthalpy of formation is equal to 0 kJ/mol for the substances in their standard states, that is, at room temperature and 1 atm pressure.

Simply speaking, looking at the substances given, we need to understand whether their states agree with what we expect to see at standard conditions (e. g., sodium is a metal, fluorine is a gas, bromine is a liquid at standard conditions). Those are substances consisting of just one type of atoms.

  • Firstly, oxygen is a gas at standard conditions and it is diatomic, so its
    \Delta H^o_f=0 kJ/mol.
  • Although nitrogen is a gas at standard conditions, it is diatomic, so
    \Delta H^o_f\\eq 0 kJ/mol.
  • Water is a liquid at standard conditions, however, it consists of two types of atoms, hydrogen and oxygen, so
    \Delta H^o_f \\eq 0 kJ/mol.
  • Bromine is a liquid at standard conditions, so
    \Delta H^o_f=0 kJ/mol.
  • Iron is a solid at standard conditions, it's a metal, so
    \Delta H^o_f=0 kJ/mol.
  • Helium is a gas at standard conditions, it belongs to noble gases, so
    \Delta H^o_f=0 kJ/mol.
  • Sulfur is a solid at room conditions, however, the conformation it has is
    S_8 and not
    S_6, so
    \Delta H^o_f\\eq 0 kJ/mol.
User Blacklight Shining
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