haber recorrido mucho mundo - перевод на Английский
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haber recorrido mucho mundo - перевод на Английский

APPROACH TO ANALYZING REACTION ENERGIES
Born Haber; Born haber; Born Haber cycle; Born-Haber Cycle; Born-Haber cycle; Born-Haber analysis

haber recorrido mucho mundo      
(v.) = be well-travelled
Ex: And even if you are very well traveled, you will be hard-pushed to think of a place with more interior designers and furniture shops than here.
mundo feliz         
ÁLBUM DE FOBIA
Mundo Feliz
(n.) = brave new world
Ex: The genesis of this brave new world of solid state logic, in which bibliographic data are reduced to phantasmagoria on the faces of cathode-ray tubes (CRT), extends at most only three-quarters of a decade into the dim past.
gr         
  • Marca de un GR en el tronco de un árbol.
SENDEROS DE LARGA DISTANCIA
GR; Sendero de gran recorrido; Senderos de gran recorrido; Grandes recorridos de España; Grandes recorridos de Espana; Gran Recorrido; Senderos de Gran Recorrido
centesimal degree; gr., gram, unit of weight equal to 1/1000 of a kilogram

Определение

gr
gr (pl. "gr" o "grs") Abrev. de "gramo".

Википедия

Born–Haber cycle

The Born–Haber cycle is an approach to analyze reaction energies. It was named after the two German scientists Max Born and Fritz Haber, who developed it in 1919. It was also independently formulated by Kasimir Fajans and published concurrently in the same issue of the same journal. The cycle is concerned with the formation of an ionic compound from the reaction of a metal (often a Group I or Group II element) with a halogen or other non-metallic element such as oxygen.

Born–Haber cycles are used primarily as a means of calculating lattice energy (or more precisely enthalpy), which cannot otherwise be measured directly. The lattice enthalpy is the enthalpy change involved in the formation of an ionic compound from gaseous ions (an exothermic process), or sometimes defined as the energy to break the ionic compound into gaseous ions (an endothermic process). A Born–Haber cycle applies Hess's law to calculate the lattice enthalpy by comparing the standard enthalpy change of formation of the ionic compound (from the elements) to the enthalpy required to make gaseous ions from the elements.

This lattice calculation is complex. To make gaseous ions from elements it is necessary to atomise the elements (turn each into gaseous atoms) and then to ionise the atoms. If the element is normally a molecule then we first have to consider its bond dissociation enthalpy (see also bond energy). The energy required to remove one or more electrons to make a cation is a sum of successive ionization energies; for example, the energy needed to form Mg2+ is the ionization energy required to remove the first electron from Mg, plus the ionization energy required to remove the second electron from Mg+. Electron affinity is defined as the amount of energy released when an electron is added to a neutral atom or molecule in the gaseous state to form a negative ion.

The Born–Haber cycle applies only to fully ionic solids such as certain alkali halides. Most compounds include covalent and ionic contributions to chemical bonding and to the lattice energy, which is represented by an extended Born–Haber thermodynamic cycle. The extended Born–Haber cycle can be used to estimate the polarity and the atomic charges of polar compounds.