[Physics] Theoretical Calculation of Specific Heat of a Gas

kinetic-theoryphysical-chemistrythermodynamics

I've read that the theoretical specific heat of a monatomic gas (like dissociated hydrogen or oxygen) is $20.8\, \mathrm{\dfrac{J}{mol\cdot K}}$ at constant pressure and $12.5\, \mathrm{\dfrac{J}{mol\cdot K}}$ at constant volume.

  1. Is there a way to calculate theoretical values for the specific heats of polyatomic gases?
  2. Is there a way to calculate the temperature dependence of specific
    heats for monatomic species?

I don't know much about quantum mechanics, but maybe this is one of the "tricks" you can use it for? The specific heats of everything else I've seen (experimental data) depends on temperature, so I assume monatomic gases are the same. I think the theoretical values I have are for $298\,\textrm{K}$, $1$ atm.

I'm working on some code that simulates the elementary reactions going on in the combustion of several fuels and in order to accurately calculate the Gibbs free energy change to determine whether or not each reaction will occur, I need specific heats that are as accurate as possible, especially in the 2000-4000K range. It's hard to find experimental data for less common species like OH, HO2, etc.

Best Answer

Leaving this here for now... Will update with more information and references later.

Einstein and Debye showed that specific heat is a function of temperature, but is asymptotic at high* temperatures. Here is a simple explanation why:

Heat, with regard to everyday applications, is simply a measure of the motion of atoms and molecules. Let's start with gases. Classical theory tells us there are three types of motion for an atom: translational, rotational, and vibrational. Here's where quantum theory comes in. Quantum Mechanics tells us that there is a "temperature" threshold where each of these types of motion can begin to occur. We know from thermodynamics that there is a distribution of temperatures with regard to the atoms in a gas, so some atoms may have breached this temperature threshold and are in motion in more ways than others--let's call this having more degrees of freedom. This is where the temperature depends comes in. At low temperatures, there is a significant variance in degrees of freedom between atoms, and atoms continuously climb and fall below these thresholds. However, at high temperatures, most atoms have attained enough energy to gain all possible degrees of freedom. Therefore, there is little temperature dependence at high temperature for gases. In solids and liquids, magnetism must be considered, so they can exhibit different behavior at high temperatures.

The above discussion completely ignores pressure and volume, which are far more likely to have an impact on your calculations than temperature. Classical theory says polyatomic gases should have a constant specific heat at high temperatures, but I doubt it is that simple. I will do some reading on these issues and get back to you.

*Varies depending on the compound. Most gases have stable specific heats around room temperature, but behavior can vary wildly. See Einstein Temperature or Debye Temperature, specifically for Diamond.