Water and copper heat capacity difference due to potential energy?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the differences in heat capacity between copper and water, particularly regarding the role of potential energy in molecular interactions. Water's high specific heat is attributed to its strong hydrogen bonds, which require significant energy to break, thus affecting its temperature increase. In contrast, copper's heat capacity is lower due to its different molecular structure and bonding characteristics. The conversation critiques the explanations found on a referenced page, suggesting they overgeneralize and misapply concepts like potential energy. Overall, the complexities of intermolecular forces and degrees of freedom in different materials are highlighted as key factors in understanding heat capacity differences.
pa5tabear
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I was looking at this page and it explains the heat capacity difference between copper and water in terms of a difference in potential energy change as the molecules are heated.

What does that mean? I know water has polar bonding so is it due to the water molecules having much stronger attractions which must be weakened by the heating?

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/thermo/inteng.html#c4
 
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It's quite obviously wrong, so it doesn't really matter what they mean at that page.

One thing that matters regarding specific heat capacities of copper and water is that one gram of copper has different number of molecules compared to one gram of water.
 
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jartsa said:
It's quite obviously wrong, so it doesn't really matter what they mean at that page.

One thing that matters regarding specific heat capacities of copper and water is that one gram of copper has different number of molecules compared to one gram of water.

I think you may be referring to the Dulong Petit law, which was an early law about the thermal behaviour of crystals.
 
jartsa said:
It's quite obviously wrong, so it doesn't really matter what they mean at that page.

What is wrong in particular?
 
sophiecentaur said:
I think you may be referring to the Dulong Petit law, which was an early law about the thermal behaviour of crystals.



Somehow I just guess that if we want two materials with very different specific heats, then hydrogen and uranium are good choices.

Wikipedia tells us the specific heat of hydrogen gas is 123 times the specific heat of solid uranium.

There's no huge amounts of potential energy in hydrogen gas that could explain the huge specific heat. (that was the wrong explanation at the page)
 
Borek said:
What is wrong in particular?
Wrong type of heat capacity explained with an explanation that is wrong.

Text books explain that the heat capacity per mole is different in different materials, because molecules have different number of degrees of freedom ... or something like that.
 
jartsa said:
There's no huge amounts of potential energy in hydrogen gas that could explain the huge specific heat. (that was the wrong explanation at the page)

IMHO hyperphysics page explanation is perfectly correct, what is incorrect is overgeneralization and trying to apply the same logic to every other case.
 
pa5tabear said:
I was looking at this page and it explains the heat capacity difference between copper and water in terms of a difference in potential energy change as the molecules are heated.

What does that mean? I know water has polar bonding so is it due to the water molecules having much stronger attractions which must be weakened by the heating?

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/thermo/inteng.html#c4

Interesting question, which I interpret simply as; "What does 'potential energy' mean in this context?"

Trying to find the answer myself, I watched a video, where a gentleman presented a graph showing "intermolecular potential energy".

Something similar to this:

400px-Lennard_jones_potential_force.png


Which still left me a bit bewildered, so I googled some more and ran across a paper by some Iranian gentlemen studying something called asphaltene. They had many similar graphs, including this one:

Intermolecular%20separation%20of%20asphaltene.jpg


Which kind of told me why the first graph, from right to left, curves down, and then up.
The x-axis in both graphs represents the distance between the molecules.

But neither graph told me where these forces came from, so I googled some more and ran across a video where a nice young lady described intermolecular forces:
Hydrogen bond
Dipole Dipole
Van Der Waals​
She stated that the Hydrogen bond was the strongest of the three, so I was leaning towards that as an explanation.

But it was just a hunch, so I googled some more and ran across a page, where they kind of imply that water is very weird, and made the following comment:

Water has the highest specific heat of all liquids except ammonia. As water is heated, the increased movement of water causes the hydrogen bonds to bend and break. As the energy absorbed in these processes is not available to increase the kinetic energy of the water, it takes considerable heat to raise water's temperature.

So putting this all together, if you look back at the first graph, I would imagine that you would start out on the far left hand of the graph, where the energy is positive, and as you add heat to the system, the hydrogen bonds breaking consume energy, which pushes you into the negative region.

My final guess is that the broken hydrogen bonds are responsible for the "potential energy" portion of the graph that you originally questioned:

intex.gif


Oh, and another thing, if you look at the molar heat capacities of water vs copper, water has a value only 3 times as high. And metals are all nearly identical!

Please don't take any of this as a true or accurate picture of what is really going on. As my name implies, I know nothing, and I look forward to a clearer explanation. :smile:
 
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