Mayer's relationIn the 19th century, German chemist and physicist Julius von Mayer derived a relation between the molar heat capacity at constant pressure and the molar heat capacity at constant volume for an ideal gas. Mayer's relation states that where CP,m is the molar heat at constant pressure, CV,m is the molar heat at constant volume and R is the gas constant. For more general homogeneous substances, not just ideal gases, the difference takes the form, (see relations between heat capacities), where is the molar volume, is the temperature, is the thermal expansion coefficient and is the isothermal compressibility. From this latter relation, several inferences can be made:[1]
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