Monday, October 4, 2010

What is Thermodynamics?

This is the study of the laws that govern the conversion of energy from one form to another, the direction in which heat will flow, and the availability of energy to do work. It is based on the concept that in an isolated system anywhere in the universe there is a measurable quantity of energy called the internal energy (U) of the system. This is the total kinetic and potential energy of the atoms and molecules of the system of all kinds that can be transferred directly as heat; it therefore excludes chemical and nuclear energy. 





What is Thermodynamic Process?


thermodynamic process may be defined as the energetic evolution of a thermodynamic system proceeding from an initial state to a final state. Paths through the space of thermodynamic variables are often specified by holding certain thermodynamic variables constant.

A thermodynamic process can be visualized by graphically plotting the changes to the system's state variables

In the example, four processes are shown. Each process has a well-defined start and end point in the pressure-volume state space. In this particular example, processes 1 and 3 are isothermal, whereas processes 2 and 4 are isochoric. The PV diagram is a particularly useful visualization of a process, because the area under the curve of a process is the amount ofwork done by the system during that process. Thus work is considered to be a process variable, as its exact value depends on the particular path taken between the start and end points of the process. Similarly, heat may be transferred during a process, and it too is a process variable. In contrast, pressure and volume (as well as numerous other other properties) are considered state variables because their values depend only on the position of the start and end points, not the particular path between them.

7 comments:

  1. kakasilaw po..hhe..readers will be more interested if you'll make the texts match the layout of the post..by the way, thanks for the infos..:)

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  2. It is helpful to everyone especially to students.

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  3. I really learned a lot from this! Thank you for posting! I hope that you can help more students like me to understand better the Thermodynamic Processes :)

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  4. tnx for the comments.we really hope you learned something from our blog :)

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  5. is this for High School Chemistry?
    if it is, then, I think it'll be a lot better if you define the terms and variables (like q(heat), w(work), R(gas constant, also state if it is 8.314 or 0.0821), T, etc.) so it'll be more understandable esp. to the younger readers (like HS students).
    the definition was more like for the advanced chemistry students rather than for the lower years.
    More pictures may also be very helpful. You can put pictures of thermodynamic processes/rxns/ experiments.
    anyway, good and informative.
    Also, better put the source of your info (better be safe from plagiarism. :D ).

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