Kopp's law can refer to either of two relationships discovered by the German chemist Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp (1817âÂÂ1892).
The KoppâÂÂNeumann law, named for Kopp and Franz Ernst Neumann, is a common approach for determining the specific heat C (in J÷kg<sup>âÂÂ1</sup>÷K<sup>âÂÂ1</sup>) of compounds using the following equation:
where N is the total number of compound constituents, and C<sub>i</sub> and f<sub>i</sub> denote the specific heat and mass fraction of the i-th constituent. This law works surprisingly well at room-temperature conditions, but poorly at elevated temperatures.