Given below are observations on molar specific heats at room temperature of some common gases
Gas | Molar specific heat (Cv)(calmol−1K−1)
|
Hydrogen | 4.87 |
Nitrogen | 4.97 |
Oxygen | 5.02 |
Nitric oxide | 4.99 |
Carbon monoxide | 5.01 |
Chlorine | 6.17 |
The measured molar specific heats of these gases are markedly different from those for monatomic gases. Typically molar specific heat of a monatomic gas is 2.92 cal/mol K. Explain this difference. What can you infer from the somewhat larger (than the rest ) value for chlorine ?