Introduction to modern thermodynamics

著者

    • Kondepudi, D. K. (Dilip K.)

書誌事項

Introduction to modern thermodynamics

Dilip Kondepudi

John Wiley & Sons, c2008

  • : hardcover
  • : pbk.

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and indexes

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

: hardcover ISBN 9780470015988

内容説明

This is the first modern approach to thermodynamics written specifically for a first undergraduate course. It covers the fundamental formalism with some attention given to its history; describes basic applications of the formalism and continues with a number of additional applications that instructors can use according to their particular degree program - these chapters cover thermal radiation, biological systems, nano systems, classical stability theory, and principles of statistical thermodynamics. A wide range of examples appear throughout the book from biological, engineering and atmospheric systems. Each chapter contains a bibliography and numerous examples and exercises. An accompanying web site will provide students with information and links to data sources and other thermodynamics-related sites, and instructors will be able to download complete solutions to exercises.

目次

Preface. PART I THE FORMALISM OF MODERN THERMODYNAMICS. 1 BASIC CONCEPTS AND THE LAWS OF GASES. Introduction. 1.1 Thermodynamic Systems. 1.2 Equilibrium and Nonequilibrium Systems. 1.3 Biological and Other Open Systems. 1.4 Temperature, Heat and Quantitative Laws of Gases. 1.5 States of Matter and the van der Waals Equation. 1.6 An Introduction to Kinetic Theory of Gases. Appendix 1.1 Partial Derivatives. Appendix 1.2 Elementary Concepts in Probability Theory. Appendix 1.3 Mathematica Code. References. Examples. Exercises. 2 THE FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS. The Idea of Energy Conservation amidst New Discoveries. 2.1 The Nature of Heat. 2.2 The First Law of Thermodynamics: The Conservation of Energy. 2.3 Elementary Applications of the First Law. 2.4 Thermochemistry: Conservation of Energy in Chemical Reactions. 2.5 Extent of Reaction: A State Variable for Chemical Systems. 2.6 Conservation of Energy in Nuclear Reactions and Some General Remarks. 2.7 Energy Flows and Organized States. Appendix 2.1 Mathematica Codes. References. Examples. Exercises. 3 THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS AND THE ARROW OF TIME. 3.1 The Birth of the Second Law. 3.2 The Absolute Scale of Temperature. 3.3 The Second Law and the Concept of Entropy. 3.4 Entropy, Reversible and Irreversible Processes. 3.5 Examples of Entropy Changes due to Irreversible Processes. 3.6 Entropy Changes Associated with Phase Transformations. 3.7 Entropy of an Ideal Gas. 3.8 Remarks about the Second Law and Irreversible Processes. Appendix 3.1 The Hurricane as a Heat Engine. Appendix 3.2 Entropy Production in Continuous Systems. References. Examples. Exercises. 4 ENTROPY IN THE REALM OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS. 4.1 Chemical Potential and Affi nity: The Thermodynamic Force for Chemical Reactions. 4.2 General Properties of Affinity. 4.3 Entropy Production Due to Diffusion. 4.4 General Properties of Entropy. Appendix 4.1 Thermodynamics Description of Diffusion. References. Examples. Exercises. 5 EXTREMUM PRINCIPLES AND GENERAL THERMODYNAMIC RELATIONS. Extremum Principles in Nature. 5.1 Extremum Principles Associated with the Second Law. 5.2 General Thermodynamic Relations. 5.3 Gibbs Energy of Formation and Chemical Potential. 5.4 Maxwell Relations. 5.5 Extensivity with Respect to N and Partial Molar Quantities. 5.6 Surface Tension. References. Examples. Exercises. PART II APPLICATIONS: EQUILIBRIUM AND NONEQUILIBRIUM SYSTEMS. 6 BASIC THERMODYNAMICS OF GASES, LIQUIDS AND SOLIDS. Introduction. 6.1 Thermodynamics of Ideal Gases. 6.2 Thermodynamics of Real Gases. 6.3 Thermodynamics Quantities for Pure Liquids and Solids. Appendix 6.1 Equations of State. Reference Examples. Exercises. 7 THERMODYNAMICS OF PHASE CHANGE. Introduction. 7.1 Phase Equilibrium and Phase Diagrams. 7.2 The Gibbs Phase Rule and Duhem's Theorem. 7.3 Binary and Ternary Systems. 7.4 Maxwell's Construction and the Lever Rule. 7.5 Phase Transitions. References. Examples. Exercises. 8 THERMODYNAMICS OF SOLUTIONS. 8.1 Ideal and Nonideal Solutions. 8.2 Colligative Properties. 8.3 Solubility Equilibrium. 8.4 Thermodynamic Mixing and Excess Functions. 8.5 Azeotropy. References. Examples. Exercises. 9 THERMODYNAMICS OF CHEMICAL TRANSFORMATIONS. 9.1 Transformations of Matter. 9.2 Chemical Reaction Rates. 9.3 Chemical Equilibrium and the Law of Mass Action. 9.4 The Principle of Detailed Balance. 9.5 Entropy Production due to Chemical Reactions. 9.6 Elementary Theory of Chemical Reaction Rates. 9.7 Coupled Reactions and Flow Reactors. Appendix 9.1 Mathematica Codes. References. Examples. Exercises. 10 FIELDS AND INTERNAL DEGREES OF FREEDOM. The Many Faces of Chemical Potential. 10.1 Chemical Potential in a Field. 10.2 Membranes and Electrochemical Cells. 10.3 Isothermal Diffusion. Reference. Examples. Exercises. 11 INTRODUCTION TO NONEQUILIBRIUM SYSTEMS. Introduction. 11.1 Local Equilibrium. 11.2 Local Entropy Production, Thermodynamic Forces and Flows. 11.3 Linear Phenomenological Laws and Onsager Reciprocal Relations. 11.4 Symmetry-Breaking Transitions and Dissipative Structures. 11.5 Chemical Oscillations. Appendix 11.1 Mathematica Codes. References. Further Reading. Exercises. PART III ADDITIONAL TOPICS. 12 THERMODYNAMICS OF RADIATION. Introduction. 12.1 Energy Density and Intensity of Thermal Radiation. 12.2 The Equation of State. 12.3 Entropy and Adiabatic Processes. 12.4 Wien's Theorem. 12.5 Chemical Potential of Thermal Radiation. 12.6 Matter-Antimatter in Equilibrium with Thermal Radiation: The State of Zero Chemical Potential. References. Examples. Exercises. 13 BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS. 13.1 The Nonequilibrium Nature of Life. 13.2 Gibbs Energy Change in Chemical Transformations. 13.3 Gibbs Energy Flow in Biological Systems. 13.4 Biochemical Kinetics. References. Further Reading. Examples. Exercises. 14 THERMODYNAMICS OF SMALL SYSTEMS. Introduction. 14.1 Chemical Potential of Small Systems. 14.2 Size-Dependent Properties. 14.3 Nucleation. 14.4 Fluctuations and Stability. References. Examples. Exercises. 15 CLASSICAL STABILITY THEORY. 15.1 Stability of Equilibrium States. 15.2 Thermal Stability. 15.3 Mechanical Stability. 15.4 Stability with Respect to Fluctuations in N. References. Exercises. 16 CRITICAL PHENOMENA AND CONFIGURATIONAL HEAT CAPACITY. Introduction. 16.1 Stability and Critical Phenomena. 16.2 Stability and Critical Phenomena in Binary Solutions. 16.3 Configurational Heat Capacity. Further Reading. Exercises. 17 ELEMENTS OF STATISTICAL THERMODYNAMICS. Introduction. 17.1 Fundamentals and Overview. 17.2 Partition Function Factorization. 17.3 The Boltzmann Probability Distribution and Average Values. 17.4 Microstates, Entropy and the Canonical Ensemble. 17.5 Canonical Partition Function and Thermodynamic Quantities. 17.6 Calculating Partition Functions. 17.7 Equilibrium Constants. Appendix 17.1 Approximations and Integrals. Reference. Examples. Exercises. LIST OF VARIABLES. STANDARD THERMODYNAMIC PROPERTIES. PHYSICAL CONSTANTS AND DATA. NAME INDEX. SUBJECT INDEX.
巻冊次

: pbk. ISBN 9780470015995

内容説明

Thermodynamics is a core part of most science and engineering degree programs. However, the majority of texts that are currently available to students take a "classical" approach, teaching thermodynamics very much as it was presented in the 19th century. This is done generally for historical rather than pedagogical reasons. "Modern" thermodynamics, in contrast, relates entropy, the central concept of thermodynamics, to irreversible processes. An Introduction to Modern Thermodynamics provides the first modern approach to thermodynamics written specifically for a first undergraduate course. It covers the fundamental formalism with some attention given to its history; describes basic applications of the formalism and continues with a number of additional applications that instructors can use according to their particular degree program - these chapters cover thermal radiation, biological systems, nano systems, classical stability theory, and principles of statistical thermodynamics. A wide range of examples appear throughout the book from biological, engineering and atmospheric systems.

目次

Preface. Part I: The Formalism of Modern Thermodynamics. 1. Basic Concepts and the Laws of Gases. 2. The First Law of Thermodynamics. 3. The Second Law of Thermodynamics and the Arrow of Time. 4. Entropy in the Realm of Chemical Reactions. 5. Extremum Principles and General Thermodynamic Relations. Part II: Applications: Equilibrium and Nonequilibrium Systems. 6. Basic Thermodynamics of Gases, Liquids and Solids. 7. Thermodynamics of Phase Change. 8. Thermodynamics of Solutions. 9. Thermodynamics of Chemical Transformations. 10. Fields and Internal Degrees of Freedom. 11. Introduction to Nonequilibrium Systems. Part III: Additional Topics. 12. Thermodynamics of Radiation. 13. Biological Systems. 14. Thermodynamics of Small Systems. 15. Classical Stability Theory. 16. Critical Phenomena and Configurationally Heat Capacity. 17. Elements of Statistical Thermodynamics. List of Variables. Standard Thermodynamic Properties. Physical Constants and Data. Name Index. Subject Index.

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詳細情報

  • NII書誌ID(NCID)
    BA87227982
  • ISBN
    • 9780470015988
    • 9780470015995
  • LCCN
    2007044834
  • 出版国コード
    uk
  • タイトル言語コード
    eng
  • 本文言語コード
    eng
  • 出版地
    Chichester, England
  • ページ数/冊数
    xiv, 500 p.
  • 大きさ
    25 cm
  • 分類
  • 件名
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