Discovery of Isobar

  The discovery of isobars was a surprise for many scientists. Generally, more or less it was assumed that due to Coulombs interaction the term of isobaric in the nuclei was a meaningless concept. This is the reason that the discovery of isobars was delayed. Originally isobars were called as the isobares and later this … Read more

shells and subshells in chemistry

Concept of shells and subshells Shells An electronic shell or a principal energy level is an orbit followed by electrons around an atom’s nucleus. The closest shell to the nucleus is called the K shell (also called 1 shell), followed by L shell , M shell, and so on farther and farther from the nucleus. … Read more

Charles’s Law

Have you smelled freshly-baked bread? Well, most of the people who have who had an aroma of this baking, loved it, and people also enjoy its taste. It’s fluffy because of the yeast on sugar, and also it’s light. The yeast has the ability to convert sugar into carbon dioxide, which causes the dough to … Read more

Gay-Lussac’s Law

  Propane tanks are extensively used with grills of barbecue. But you’ll not love that in the middle of your grilling, you run out of gas. You can purchase the gauge which measures the pressure in the tank to notice how much is left. The gauge measures the pressure and will record a high pressure … Read more

Intermolecular Interactions

Intermolecular forces prevail along intermolecular interactions being forces of repulsion or attraction among neighboring particles that may be ions, molecules or atoms. These forces are comparatively weaker than the covalent and iconic bonds that are formed among atoms in a molecule. For instance, the covalent bonds that may prevail within Hydrogen Chloride (HCl) are supposed … Read more

Extensive properties of thermodynamics

Chemical Thermodynamics: Extensive properties A property of the system is any characteristic specific to it. Physical properties are often referred to as observables. They are not modal properties. Properties can either be basic or derived. Basic property is directly measured while derive property is indirectly calculated from the basic ones. Properties can also be explained … Read more

Energy in thermodynamics

Chemical Thermodynamics: Energy Every system or sample of matter has energy stored in it. In a chemical reaction, the new bonds formed never have the same amount of potential energy as the bonds that were broken. Therefore, all chemical reactions involve a change in energy. Energy is either given off or taken on by the … Read more

Heat in thermodynamics

Chemical Thermodynamics: Heat Heat and the thermodynamics form the basics which helped process designers and engineers to optimize their processes and harness the energy associated with chemical reactions economically. When researchers especially researched on thermodynamics, they were only researching heat and thermal energy. Heat is able to do anything: I can flow from one area … Read more

Work done in thermodynamics

Chemical Thermodynamics: Work Energy $(\Delta U)$ can cross the boundary of a system in two forms -> Work (W) and Heat (q). Both work and heat refer to processes by which energy is transferred to or from a substance. $\Delta U=W+q$ Work done by a system is defined as the quantity of energy exchanged between … Read more

Surroundings in thermodynamics

Chemical Thermodynamics: Surroundings A system is a part of the universe in which we make observations while all the remaining part of the universe is called surrounding. We can consider the ‘Surrounding’ as the immediate neighborhood of the system (the part of the universe at large, with which the system ‘effectively’ interacts). In this process … Read more