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Heat capacity or thermal capacity is a physical property of , defined as the amount of to be supplied to an object to produce a unit change in its . The SI unit of heat capacity is per (J/K). It quantifies the ability of a material or system to store thermal energy.

Heat capacity is an extensive property. The corresponding intensive property is the specific heat capacity, found by dividing the heat capacity of an object by its mass. Dividing the heat capacity by the amount of substance in moles yields its molar heat capacity. The volumetric heat capacity measures the heat capacity per . In and civil engineering, the heat capacity of a building is often referred to as its .


Definition

Basic definition
The heat capacity of an object, denoted by C, is the limit C = \lim_{\Delta T\to 0}\frac{\Delta Q}{\Delta T}, where \Delta Q is the amount of heat that must be added to the object (of mass M) in order to raise its temperature by \Delta T.

The value of this parameter usually varies considerably depending on the starting temperature T of the object and the pressure p applied to it. In particular, it typically varies dramatically with such as melting or vaporization (see enthalpy of fusion and enthalpy of vaporization). Therefore, it should be considered a function C(p,T) of those two variables.


Variation with temperature
variation can be ignored in contexts when working with objects in narrow ranges of temperature and pressure. For example, the heat capacity of a block of weighing one pound is about 204 J/K when measured from a starting temperature T = 25 °C and P = 1 atm of pressure. That approximate value is adequate for temperatures between 15 °C and 35 °C, and surrounding pressures from 0 to 10 atmospheres, because the exact value varies very little in those ranges. One can trust that the same heat input of 204 J will raise the temperature of the block from 15 °C to 16 °C, or from 34 °C to 35 °C, with negligible error.


Heat capacities of a homogeneous system undergoing different thermodynamic processes

At constant pressure, δQ = dU + pdV (
)
At constant pressure, heat supplied to the system contributes to both the work done and the change in , according to the first law of thermodynamics. The heat capacity is called C_p and defined as:

C_p = \left.\frac{\delta Q}{dT}\right|_{p = \text{const}}

From the first law of thermodynamics follows \delta Q = dU + p\,dV and the inner energy as a function of p and T is:

\delta Q = \left(\frac{\partial U}{\partial T}\right)_p dT + \left(\frac{\partial U}{\partial p}\right)_T dp + p\left

For constant pressure (dp = 0) the equation simplifies to:

= \left(\frac{\partial U}{\partial T}\right)_p + p\left(\frac{\partial V}{\partial T}\right)_p = \left(\frac{\partial H}{\partial T}\right)_p

where the final equality follows from the appropriate Maxwell relations, and is commonly used as the definition of the isobaric heat capacity.


At constant volume, dV = 0, δQ = dU (isochoric process)
A system undergoing a process at constant volume implies that no expansion work is done, so the heat supplied contributes only to the change in internal energy. The heat capacity obtained this way is denoted C_V. The value of C_V is always less than the value of C_p. (C_V < C_p.)

Expressing the inner energy as a function of the variables T and V gives:

\delta Q = \left(\frac{\partial U}{\partial T}\right)_V dT + \left(\frac{\partial U}{\partial V}\right)_T dV + pdV

For a constant volume (dV = 0) the heat capacity reads:

C_V = \left.\frac{\delta Q}{dT}\right|_{V = \text{const}} = \left(\frac{\partial U}{\partial T}\right)_V

The relation between C_V and C_p is then:

C_p = C_V + \left(\left(\frac{\partial U}{\partial V}\right)_T + p\right)\left(\frac{\partial V}{\partial T}\right)_p


Calculating Cp and CV for an ideal gas
Mayer's relation:

C_p - C_V = nR. C_p/C_V = \gamma,

where:

  • n is the number of moles of the gas,
  • R is the ,
  • \gamma is the heat capacity ratio (which can be calculated by knowing the number of degrees of freedom of the gas molecule).

Using the above two relations, the specific heats can be deduced as follows:

C_V = \frac{nR}{\gamma - 1}, C_p = \gamma \frac{nR}{\gamma - 1}. Following from the equipartition of energy, it is deduced that an ideal gas has the isochoric heat capacity

C_V = n R \frac{N_f}{2} = n R \frac{3 + N_i}{2}

where N_f is the number of degrees of freedom of each individual particle in the gas, and N_i = N_f - 3 is the number of internal degrees of freedom, where the number 3 comes from the three translational degrees of freedom (for a gas in 3D space). This means that a (with zero internal degrees of freedom) will have isochoric heat capacity C_v = \frac{3nR}{2}.


At constant temperature (Isothermal process)
No change in internal energy (as the temperature of the system is constant throughout the process) leads to only work done by the total supplied heat, and thus an amount of heat is required to increase the temperature of the system by a unit temperature, leading to infinite or undefined heat capacity of the system.


At the time of phase change (
)
Heat capacity of a system undergoing phase transition is infinite, because the heat is utilized in changing the state of the material rather than raising the overall temperature.


Heterogeneous objects
The heat capacity may be well-defined even for heterogeneous objects, with separate parts made of different materials; such as an , a with some metal, or a whole building. In many cases, the (isobaric) heat capacity of such objects can be computed by simply adding together the (isobaric) heat capacities of the individual parts.

However, this computation is valid only when all parts of the object are at the same external pressure before and after the measurement. That may not be possible in some cases. For example, when heating an amount of gas in an elastic container, its volume and pressure will both increase, even if the atmospheric pressure outside the container is kept constant. Therefore, the effective heat capacity of the gas, in that situation, will have a value intermediate between its isobaric and isochoric capacities C_p and C_V.

For complex thermodynamic systems with several interacting parts and , or for measurement conditions that are neither constant pressure nor constant volume, or for situations where the temperature is significantly non-uniform, the simple definitions of heat capacity above are not useful or even meaningful. The heat energy that is supplied may end up as (energy of motion) and (energy stored in force fields), both at macroscopic and atomic scales. Then the change in temperature will depend on the particular path that the system followed through its between the initial and final states. Namely, one must somehow specify how the positions, velocities, pressures, volumes, etc. changed between the initial and final states; and use the general tools of to predict the system's reaction to a small energy input. The "constant volume" and "constant pressure" heating modes are just two among infinitely many paths that a simple homogeneous system can follow.


Measurement
The heat capacity can usually be measured by the method implied by its definition: start with the object at a known uniform temperature, add a known amount of heat energy to it, wait for its temperature to become uniform, and measure the change in its temperature. This method can give moderately accurate values for many solids; however, it cannot provide very precise measurements, especially for gases.


Units

International system (SI)
The SI unit for heat capacity of an object is joule per kelvin (J/K or J⋅K−1). Since an increment of temperature of one is the same as an increment of one kelvin, that is the same unit as J/°C.

The heat capacity of an object is an amount of energy divided by a temperature change, which has the dimension L2⋅M⋅T−2⋅Θ−1. Therefore, the SI unit J/K is equivalent to squared per squared per (kg⋅m2⋅s−2⋅K−1 ).


English (Imperial) engineering units
Professionals in , civil engineering, chemical engineering, and other technical disciplines, especially in the , may use the so-called English Engineering units, that include the pound (lb = 0.45359237 kg) as the unit of mass, the or (K, about 0.55556 K) as the unit of temperature increment, and the British thermal unit (BTU ≈ 1055.06 J),
(2025). 9783642529412, Springer. .
Published under the auspices of the Verein Deutscher Ingenieure (VDI).
(2025). 9781447108054, Springer. .
as the unit of heat. In those contexts, the unit of heat capacity is 1 BTU/°R ≈ 1900 J/K.1 × 1055.06 x ≈ 1899.11 The BTU was in fact defined so that the average heat capacity of one pound of water would be 1 BTU/°F. In this regard, with respect to mass, note conversion of 1 Btu/lb⋅°R ≈ 4,187 J/kg⋅KFrom direct values: 1 × 1055.06 × () x ≈ 4186.82 and the calorie (below).


Calories
In chemistry, heat amounts are often measured in . Confusingly, two units with that name, denoted "cal" or "Cal", have been commonly used to measure amounts of heat:
  • The "small calorie" (or "gram-calorie", "cal") is exactly 4.184 J. It was originally defined so that the heat capacity of 1  of liquid water would be 1 cal/°C.
  • The "grand calorie" (also "kilocalorie", "kilogram-calorie", or "food calorie"; "kcal" or "Cal") is 1000 cal, that is, exactly 4184 J. It was originally defined so that the heat capacity of 1 kg of water would be 1 kcal/°C.
With these units of heat energy, the units of heat capacity are
  • 1 cal/°C = 4.184 J/K ;
  • 1 kcal/°C = 4184 J/K.


Physical basis

Negative heat capacity
Most physical systems exhibit a positive heat capacity; constant-volume and constant-pressure heat capacities, rigorously defined as partial derivatives, are always positive for homogeneous bodies.
(2025). 9780750633727, Elsevier.
However, even though it can seem paradoxical at first, there are some systems for which the heat capacity Q/\Delta T is negative. Examples include a reversibly and nearly adiabatically expanding ideal gas, which cools, \Delta T < 0 , while a small amount of heat Q > 0 is put in, or combusting methane with increasing temperature, \Delta T > 0 , and giving off heat, Q < 0. Others are inhomogeneous systems that do not meet the strict definition of thermodynamic equilibrium. They include gravitating objects such as stars and galaxies, and also some clusters of a few tens of atoms close to a phase transition. A negative heat capacity can result in a negative temperature.


Stars and black holes
According to the , for a self-gravitating body like a star or an interstellar gas cloud, the average potential energy Upot and the average kinetic energy Ukin are locked together in the relation

U_\text{pot} = -2 U_\text{kin}.

The total energy U (= Upot + Ukin) therefore obeys

U = - U_\text{kin}.

If the system loses energy, for example, by radiating energy into space, the average kinetic energy actually increases. If a temperature is defined by the average kinetic energy, then the system therefore can be said to have a negative heat capacity.See e.g., Section 4 and onwards.

A more extreme version of this occurs with . According to black-hole thermodynamics, the more mass and energy a black hole absorbs, the colder it becomes. In contrast, if it is a net emitter of energy, through Hawking radiation, it will become hotter and hotter until it boils away.


Consequences
According to the second law of thermodynamics, when two systems with different temperatures interact via a purely thermal connection, heat will flow from the hotter system to the cooler one (this can also be understood from a statistical point of view). Therefore, if such systems have equal temperatures, they are at thermal equilibrium. However, this equilibrium is stable only if the systems have positive heat capacities. For such systems, when heat flows from a higher-temperature system to a lower-temperature one, the temperature of the first decreases and that of the latter increases, so that both approach equilibrium. In contrast, for systems with negative heat capacities, the temperature of the hotter system will further increase as it loses heat, and that of the colder will further decrease, so that they will move farther from equilibrium. This means that the equilibrium is unstable.

For example, according to theory, the smaller (less massive) a black hole is, the smaller its Schwarzschild radius will be, and therefore the greater the of its will be, as well as its temperature. Thus, the smaller the black hole, the more thermal radiation it will emit and the more quickly it will evaporate by Hawking radiation.


See also
  • (estimation of heat capacities)
  • (enthalpy of fusion)
  • (enthalpy of vaporization)


Further reading

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