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$\Delta U = Q + W$, where the signs have been assumed to be positive (work is done on the system and heat is absorbed). But, also, $Q$ can be written as $Q=\Delta U + W$, since $W=P \Delta V$.

So is $Q=\Delta H$?

This somehow doesn't feel right. So, I want to know, if I am wrong (I believe so) where I have gone wrong?

Gilgamesh
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Ram Bharadwaj
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  • We use MathJax here to render formulae. 2. Always explain your notation! What is $H$? How does $\Delta W = P\Delta V$ show that $\Delta Q = \Delta U+\Delta W$, and what has this to do with $\Delta H$?
  • – ACuriousMind Jan 24 '16 at 15:33
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    Short answer: that's only if $P$ is constant. That's why you use $H$ with constant pressure, it's not useful elsewhere. Otherwise $\Delta H=\Delta P V + P \Delta V \neq W$ – FGSUZ Aug 25 '18 at 00:11