Chemical Engineering - Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics - Discussion
Discussion Forum : Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics - Section 1 (Q.No. 16)
16.
Which of the following is not an intensive property ?
Discussion:
11 comments Page 1 of 2.
Trisha Dutta said:
5 years ago
Heat capacity is the amount of heat supplied to a given mass to produce a unit change in temperature, so it is extensive. While specific heat capacity is the heat supplied to a unit mass of material to produce a unit change in temperature, so it is an intensive property.
(2)
Rocky said:
7 years ago
Chemical potential is not an intensive property.
(1)
Ravi said:
1 decade ago
Specific heat capacity is a intensive property because it is specific heat per unit mass.
But heat capacity is not intensive but extensive.
But heat capacity is not intensive but extensive.
Raj musale said:
1 decade ago
Heat capacity is ratio of amount of heat added to an object to the temperature change. It is an extensive property.
Rem said:
1 decade ago
Heat capacity is the amount of heat added per unit mass to change it's temperature by one degree.
Shubham said:
1 decade ago
It is specific property and all specific properties are intensive.
Vijay Parmar said:
9 years ago
Extensive properties, such as mass and volume, "depend on the amount of matter being measured".
Intensive properties, such as density and color, "do not depend on the amount of the substance present".
Intensive properties, such as density and color, "do not depend on the amount of the substance present".
Adarsh sinha said:
6 years ago
I think heat capacity is an intensive property and specific heat capacity should be extensive property as it depends upon mass.
Divyanshu said:
6 years ago
Intensive Properties are Independent of the amount of substance and depend only on the material. Properties like temperature, refractive index, chemical potential, density, etc. Are some of the intensive properties. On the other hand properties like volume, Enthalpy, entropy, etc.
Samad Afghan said:
4 years ago
Chemical potential (an intensive property) of a substance is a force that drives the chemical system to equilibrium and is equal to its partial molar properties.
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