Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Hess's Law
Hess's Law states that energy cannot be created or destroyed; it can only be changed from one form to another. Hess's Law is used to predict the enthalpy change for a reaction ΔHr in enthalpy changes.
The enthalpy change for a chemical reaction leading from reactants to products is the same no matter which route is chosen for the reaction. This is called a state function. That is, the enthalpy change going from reactants to intermediates 1 then to products is the same as for going from reactants to intermediates 2 then to products.
Addition of chemical equations can lead to a net equation. If energy is included for each equation and added, the result will be the energy for the net equation.
Hess's Law says that enthalpy changes are additive. ΔHnet = ΣΔHr. Two rules:
- If the chemical equation is reversed, the sign of ΔH changes.
- If coefficients are multiplied, multiply ΔH by the same amount.
see also Chemistry
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


