The Specific Heat of Graphite from 13° to 300°K

Abstract
The specific heat of high‐purity Acheson graphite prepared by the National Carbon Company has been measured from 13° to 300°K. In the region 13° to 54°K the Cp data follows a T2 dependence quite accurately in agreement with previous experimental work and recent theoretical investigations of specific heat in strongly anisotropic solids. On the basis of some recent studies for other highly anisotropic solids, it is suggested that the specific heat of graphite will eventually follow a T3 dependence at still lower temperatures. The derived thermodynamic functions, entropy, enthalpy, and free energy, have been determined by graphical integration and tabulated at integral values of temperature up to 300°K. The entropy of graphite at 298.16°K is 1.372±0.005 cal/g‐atom deg, of which 0.004 is extrapolated from 13° to 0°K assuming the third law and the T2 dependence.

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