What is Standard Temperature and Pressure (STP)?

2 Answers
Jan 20, 2016

Some textbooks define it differently than others, but the newest IUPAC standard temperature and pressure are:

T_"STP" = 0^@ "C" = "273.15 K"TSTP=0C=273.15 K
P_"STP" = "1 bar"PSTP=1 bar

Some older (and potentially fairly recent) textbooks might say:

T_"STP" = 0^@ "C" = "273.15 K"TSTP=0C=273.15 K
P_"STP" = "1 atm"PSTP=1 atm

The difference between the two pressures are subtle but significant:

"1 bar" = 1.00000xx10^51 bar=1.00000×105 "Pa"Pa
"1 atm" = 1.01325xx10^51 atm=1.01325×105 "Pa"Pa

This leads to a difference of about "0.3 L"0.3 L for the molar volume (barV = V/n)(¯¯¯V=Vn) of an ideal gas at STP when you calculate it using the Ideal Gas Law: ~"22.7 L"~22.7 L for the former, and ~"22.4 L"~22.4 L for the latter.

Ever had your university lab notebook "torn apart" by a lab TA for "not enough information"? Yeah, it's primarily because science tends to rely on consistency and reproducibility to prove that something is credible.

If someone can't read your lab notebook and then reproduce your lab experiment without your input and correction, you haven't provided enough information to replicate that experiment precisely.

IUPAC has defined such standards so that people have consistent atmospheric conditions to use for comparisons of data from different experimental trials for the same type of experiment. That improves the accuracy to which an experiment can be reproduced.


SIDENOTE: This is not be confused with the temperature and pressure at which DeltaH_f^@, DeltaS^@, and DeltaG^@ are defined, which you should have in your textbook appendix; those are derived and defined (usually) for 25^@ "C", not 0^@ "C".

May 25, 2016

STP is Standard Temperature and Pressure

Explanation:

STP is Standard Temperature and Pressure

Standard Temperature is

0^oC in Celsius or 273K in Kelvin

Standard Pressure is

1 Atmosphere (atm)
760 Torrcellis (torr)
760 Millimeters of Mercury (mmHg)
101.325 KiloPascals (kPa)