Delta Hf is the enthalpy change when 1 mole of a compound forms from its elements in their standard states at a stated temperature.
Delta Hf (often written as ΔHf or ΔH°f) shows up the first time you meet thermochemistry, then it keeps popping up in exam questions, lab reports, and real process calculations. If you’ve ever stared at a table of numbers and wondered what they mean, this is the piece that makes the table useful.
This article explains what ΔHf measures, what the symbols mean, how signs work, how to use formation enthalpies to get reaction enthalpies, and where students slip up. You’ll also get a practical checklist you can use when you’re solving problems.
What Delta Hf Stands For
ΔH is a change in enthalpy, a heat-like energy term used when pressure is constant. The subscript “f” stands for “formation.” Put together, ΔHf means “enthalpy change of formation.”
In plain terms, it answers one specific question: if you build a compound from its elements, how much heat is released or absorbed?
Standard Formation Enthalpy Vs Formation Enthalpy
You’ll see two common notations:
- ΔHf: formation enthalpy under the stated conditions.
- ΔH°f: standard formation enthalpy, where “standard” means each reactant and product is in its standard state at the chosen standard pressure.
In many courses, “standard” uses 1 bar as the reference pressure, and the standard temperature is often taken as 298.15 K unless a different temperature is stated. The symbol ° tells you you’re using that standard-state reference.
What Counts As “Elements In Their Standard States”
This part matters more than people think. An “element” here means the pure element, not an ion, not a compound, not a mixture. A “standard state” means the stable form of that element at the reference pressure and the stated temperature.
So oxygen’s standard state at 298 K is O2(g), not O(g). Carbon’s standard state is graphite, not diamond. Sulfur’s standard state is the most stable solid form at that temperature. These details decide whether a formation equation is written correctly.
What Is Delta Hf In Chemistry? Meaning And Notation
ΔH°f is defined by a formation reaction that makes exactly 1 mole of the compound from elements in their standard states. That “1 mole” rule is non-negotiable, and it’s why coefficients matter.
A Concrete Formation Reaction
Here’s a clean illustration using liquid water:
- H2(g) + 1/2 O2(g) → H2O(l)
That reaction forms 1 mole of H2O(l) from the elements in their standard states at the stated temperature. The enthalpy change for that reaction is ΔH°f[H2O(l)].
Why The Sign Can Be Negative Or Positive
A negative ΔH°f means heat is released when the compound forms from its elements. A positive value means heat is taken in. Most stable compounds have negative formation enthalpies because forming strong bonds often releases heat, but there are plenty of cases with positive values.
Don’t treat the sign like a “good” or “bad” label. It’s just bookkeeping for heat flow under the stated conditions.
How Delta Hf Connects To Reaction Enthalpy
Formation enthalpies earn their keep when you use them to calculate ΔH° for a reaction you care about. The standard relation is:
ΔH°rxn = ΣνΔH°f(products) − ΣνΔH°f(reactants)
ν is the stoichiometric coefficient. You multiply each compound’s ΔH°f by its coefficient, add up products, add up reactants, then subtract.
Why This Works
Enthalpy is a state function. That means the overall change depends on start and end states, not the path. A formation enthalpy table gives a set of “building-block” paths from elements to compounds. When you add and subtract those paths to match a net reaction, the algebra mirrors the energy changes.
A Quick Sign Check That Saves Marks
After you compute ΔH°rxn, do a gut check. If the reaction makes stronger bonds than it breaks, you’ll often get a negative value. If it breaks lots of strong bonds without forming comparable ones, you’ll often get a positive value. This check won’t replace math, but it catches sign flips.
Units, Reference Conditions, And What Tables Are Telling You
Most tables list ΔH°f in kJ/mol. “Per mole” always refers to one mole of the compound as written, not one mole of elements. If you double the reaction, you double the enthalpy change. That’s why you must match the coefficients used in your reaction enthalpy calculation.
Tables also specify physical state: (s), (l), (g), or (aq). That little tag can change the value by tens of kJ/mol. Water as a gas and water as a liquid do not share the same ΔH°f.
Also check the temperature. Many classroom problems assume 298 K, yet some data sets list values at other temperatures. When temperature shifts, heat capacities come into play, and you may need extra steps.
Where Standard-State Definitions Come From
If you want the formal wording behind standard-state terms, the IUPAC Gold Book entry for standard state is a clean reference that matches what most chemistry courses use.
Table 1: Common Delta Hf Patterns You Should Recognize
The numbers below are not a substitute for your course table. They’re pattern cues that help you read any ΔH°f list with less guesswork.
| Situation | Typical ΔH°f Sign | What Usually Drives It |
|---|---|---|
| Pure element in its standard state | 0 by definition | Reference point for the scale |
| Stable ionic solids (many salts) | Negative | Large lattice energy from ion attraction |
| Simple covalent molecules (CO2, H2O) | Negative | Strong bond formation beats bond breaking |
| Less stable oxides or unusual stoichiometries | Can be positive | Formation stores energy relative to elements |
| Aqueous ions listed as “formed” species | Varies | Hydration and reference conventions |
| Same formula, different phase (l vs g) | Often different | Intermolecular forces add or remove enthalpy |
| Allotropes (graphite vs diamond) | 0 only for the stable form | Metastable forms have nonzero values |
| Hydrocarbons compared by chain length | More negative as bonds increase | More C–H and C–C bonds formed |
How To Use Delta Hf In Problem Solving
Most textbook and exam problems follow the same rhythm. If you learn that rhythm, you spend less time second-guessing and more time scoring points.
Step-By-Step Method
- Write the balanced reaction. Include states if they are given or implied.
- Mark each species you’ll pull from a table. You need ΔH°f for every compound on both sides.
- Set ΔH°f for standard-state elements to zero. Leave them in the sum with a zero if it helps you stay organized.
- Multiply each ΔH°f by its coefficient. Don’t skip fractional coefficients; keep them as fractions until the end if you like.
- Add products, add reactants, subtract. Products minus reactants.
- Check units and sign. Report kJ per “reaction as written.”
One Common Trap: Confusing Formation With Combustion
Combustion enthalpy is about burning something in O2. Formation enthalpy is about building from elements. A combustion equation can create more than one mole of products and can include compounds that are not elements. So combustion values do not replace ΔH°f values unless the problem sets it up with Hess’s law.
Another Trap: Using The Wrong Element Form
If you write nitrogen as N(g) instead of N2(g), your “formation” equation is no longer a formation equation. Same with Cl(g) instead of Cl2(g). When in doubt, check the most stable form at the stated temperature and the reference pressure.
When Delta Hf Equals Zero And When It Doesn’t
Students memorize “elements are zero,” then get tripped by edge cases. Here’s the clean rule:
- ΔH°f = 0 for an element in its standard state at the reference pressure and stated temperature.
- ΔH°f ≠ 0 for the same element in a different form, phase, or allotrope.
So O2(g) has ΔH°f = 0 at 298 K, yet O3(g) does not. Graphite has 0, diamond does not. Liquid bromine has 0 at 298 K because it’s bromine’s standard state at that temperature, while Br2(g) does not.
Table 2: Fast Checklist For Delta Hf Work
| Check | What To Do | What It Prevents |
|---|---|---|
| Compound amount | Confirm your formation reaction makes 1 mole of product | Wrong scaling of ΔH°f |
| Element forms | Use the stable elemental form (O2, N2, graphite) | Non-formation equations |
| States | Match (s)/(l)/(g)/(aq) to the table entry | Phase-mismatch errors |
| Coefficients | Multiply each ΔH°f by ν before summing | Half-credit arithmetic slips |
| Sign logic | Products sum minus reactants sum | Sign flips |
| Units | Report kJ per reaction as written | Confusing kJ/mol with total kJ |
Where To Find Reliable Delta Hf Data
For homework, your textbook or course data sheet is often the correct source because values can differ by reference state and rounding. For lab work, you’ll want curated data with clear citations and conditions.
A widely used public database for thermochemical values is the NIST Chemistry WebBook, which provides referenced data and conditions for many species.
Practical Notes For Exams And Labs
Write states early. If you wait until the end, you’ll copy the wrong table entry at least once.
Keep a neat sum line. A single line that shows “products: …” and “reactants: …” makes it easy to spot a missing term.
Don’t round too soon. Keep one extra digit in intermediate sums, then round at the end to match the data’s precision.
Label your answer. Write ΔH°rxn = … kJ (reaction as written). That phrase stops confusion about scaling.
A Mini Worked Example Without A Wall Of Math
Say you want ΔH° for the formation of CO2(g) from CO(g) and O2(g):
- CO(g) + 1/2 O2(g) → CO2(g)
You’d pull ΔH°f for CO2(g) and CO(g) from your table. O2(g) is zero. Multiply by coefficients (both 1 here, plus a 1/2 for oxygen’s zero), then subtract reactants from products. The result is negative, matching the idea that converting CO to CO2 releases heat.
What To Remember After You Close The Tab
ΔH°f is a reference-based number tied to a specific “build it from elements” reaction that makes 1 mole of product. Once you treat it as a building block, reaction enthalpy problems become a tidy accounting exercise.
References & Sources
- IUPAC.“Standard State.”Defines standard-state terms used with standard formation enthalpy.
- National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).“NIST Chemistry WebBook.”Public thermochemical data source with referenced conditions for many species.