different between enthalpy vs exoenthalpic
enthalpy
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ??????? (enthálp?, “to warm in”). Coined by Dutch physicist Heike Kamerlingh Onnes, but first used in print by J. P. Dalton in 1909 in a paper titled "Researches on the Joule-Kelvin-effect, especially at low temperatures".
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??n.??l.pi?/
Noun
enthalpy (countable and uncountable, plural enthalpies)
- (physics, chemistry) In thermodynamics, a measure of the heat content of a chemical or physical system.
- , where H is enthalpy, U is internal energy, p is pressure, and V is volume.
Derived terms
Translations
See also
- Gibbs free energy
enthalpy From the web:
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exoenthalpic
English
Etymology
exo- +? enthalpic
Adjective
exoenthalpic (comparative more exoenthalpic, superlative most exoenthalpic)
- (physics) In which enthalpy increases; exothermic.
Antonyms
- endoenthalpic
Translations
exoenthalpic From the web:
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