In case you're only interested in water, ice, and steam, there are Excel plugins that let you get thermochemical data by calling functions inside Excel. Robert Alberty's Mathematica package for biochemical thermodynamics has a lot of built in thermochemical data for common biochemical compounds - relative to a biochemical standard state of constant pH. See an answer I gave to an old question for an example of how to use it. Their database is referenced back to the chemical literature. The CHNOSz package in R has thermochemical data for a variety of species, mostly inorganic. However, more easily parsed, smaller datasets are available in a couple of other locations. NIST is the best place to turn for lots of data.
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