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Lecture 1m - Introduction To Thermodynamics
Lecture 1m - Introduction To Thermodynamics
Course Topics
Basic concepts
First law
Enthalpy, heat capacity, enthalpy changes
Second law, entropy, and entropy changes
Free energy and free energy changes
Stability diagrams and stability boundaries
Thermodynamics of mixing
Solution thermodynamics
Phase equilibrium
Reaction equilibrium
I did my Thermo course(s) already.
Why do I need take Thermodynamics of Materials?
In this course we will study the application of the
thermodynamic concepts to the analysis of phase equilibria,
phase transformations, and phase diagrams starting from
one-component until
multicomponent systems.
open ↔ matter
heat closed ↔ heat isolated
Boundaries of The
System
The boundaries or walls of the system are classified as
follows:
• Adiabatic : No thermal energy can pass through.
• Diathermal : Thermal energy can pass through.
• Permeable : Matter can pass through.
• Impermeable : Matter cannot pass through.
• Semipermeable : Some components are able to pass
through, while others are not.
Picking a system
• The investigator picks the system
• It can be as large or as small as you want
it to be, proper definition of the system is
important to address the reactions you
want to
• Leaving out gases or sediments or melts
or other can make a problem
simpler/tractable or more inaccurate…
Defining a system
• A system at equilibrium has measurable
properties
• If the system changes from one equilibrium
‘state’ to another → these changes depend
of the properties changed and not on the
path (or exact process) the change went
along
In thermodynamics,
these 2 reactions
Energy
dw
Energy change with volume and
heat
• Taking dU = dq – PdV from state 1 to state 2:
2 2 2
dU = dq − P dV
1 1 1
"In many of these cases, we must be careful to pay attention to all the order and
disorder that is present in the problem. Thus the process of tidying the office
requires physical effort on someone's part. This causes ordered biochemical
energy stored in starches and sugars to be degraded into heat. If one counts this
into the entropy budget, then the decrease in entropy or disorder associated with
the tidied desk is more than compensated for by the other increases."
Barrow (1990)
• Combining the 1st and 2nd Laws of
Thermodynamics:
dU = dqrev + dw = TdS – PdV
• In thermodynamics,
temperature is always
represented in Kelvins
• K = ºC + 273.15
The Fundamental Equation
• Combining the first and second laws
yields:
• dU = TdS – PdV