Using the Standard State Temperature

The Standard State Temperature is the temperature at which the standard state of a substance is defined. The commonest choice is 298.15 K (25.00 C).

Standard State Temperature is used to calculate enthalpy. The enthalpy value varies with Standard State Temperature, but in direct proportion, so differences in enthalpy remain the same for different values of Standard State.

Among other circumstances, the Standard State Temperature node appears when the chosen method for specific heat is either Gas Kinetics or Polynomial in T. The supplied quantity is always a constant value. Be sure to supply thermodynamic data for different phases or species in a consistent manner.

This property is not required when Specific Heat is set to a constant value. Using a constant specific heat setting gives the same enthalpy as using a constant polynomial for specific heat (with the same value) and setting the Standard State Temperature to zero.