Everything about Standard Enthalpy Change Of Combustion totally explained
The
standard enthalpy of combustion is the
enthalpy change when one mole of a substance completely reacts with oxygen under
standard thermodynamic conditions (although experimental values are usually obtained under different conditions and subsequently adjusted). By definition, combustion reactions are generally strongly
exothermic and so enthalpies of combustion are generally strongly negative.
It is commonly denoted as
Enthalpies of combustion are typically measured using
bomb calorimetry, and have units of energy (typically kJ); strictly speaking, the enthalpy change per mole of substance combusted is the standard
molar enthalpy of combustion (which typically would have units of kJ mol
−1).
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