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Buck Thorn
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I was wondering if someone can explain why the answer to the following question is volume instead of the others.

If pressure has no effect on the transition temperature between two crystalline forms of matter the two forms have the same molar (a) volume (b) energy (c) enthalpy (d) entropy (e) heat capacity

If pressure has no effect on the transition temperature between two crystalline forms of matter the two forms have the same molar
(a) volume
(b) energy
(c) enthalpy
(d) entropy
(e) heat capacity

I know the answer is volume but I'm not sure which equation that comes from. I was thinking maybe the law of reduced properties but at this point I'm just guessing based on the answer and I know that that particular equation is for gases. Does anyone know if there's an analog for crystalline forms of matter or if there's a more intuitive explanation? Thanks!

I was wondering if someone can explain why the answer to the following question is volume instead of the others.

If pressure has no effect on the transition temperature between two crystalline forms of matter the two forms have the same molar (a) volume (b) energy (c) enthalpy (d) entropy (e) heat capacity

I know the answer is volume but I'm not sure which equation that comes from. I was thinking maybe the law of reduced properties but at this point I'm just guessing based on the answer and I know that that particular equation is for gases. Does anyone know if there's an analog for crystalline forms of matter or if there's a more intuitive explanation? Thanks!

I was wondering if someone can explain why the answer to the following question is volume instead of the others.

If pressure has no effect on the transition temperature between two crystalline forms of matter the two forms have the same molar
(a) volume
(b) energy
(c) enthalpy
(d) entropy
(e) heat capacity

I know the answer is volume but I'm not sure which equation that comes from. I was thinking maybe the law of reduced properties but at this point I'm just guessing based on the answer and I know that that particular equation is for gases. Does anyone know if there's an analog for crystalline forms of matter or if there's a more intuitive explanation? Thanks!

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Effect of pressure on transition temperature

I was wondering if someone can explain why the answer to the following question is volume instead of the others.

If pressure has no effect on the transition temperature between two crystalline forms of matter the two forms have the same molar (a) volume (b) energy (c) enthalpy (d) entropy (e) heat capacity

I know the answer is volume but I'm not sure which equation that comes from. I was thinking maybe the law of reduced properties but at this point I'm just guessing based on the answer and I know that that particular equation is for gases. Does anyone know if there's an analog for crystalline forms of matter or if there's a more intuitive explanation? Thanks!