Title: Thermodynamics. Physical process in the biological membranes.
1Thermodynamics. Physical process in the
biological membranes.
2Heat and Thermodynamics
- First Law of Thermodynamics
- Second Law of Thermodynamics
- Entropy
- Adiabatic Process
- Heat Engine Cycle
- Enthalpy
3First Law of Thermodynamics
- The first law of thermodynamics is the
application of the conservation of energy
principle to heat and thermodynamic processes
4- The first law makes use of the key concepts of
internal energy, heat , and system work. It is
used extensively in the discussion of heat
engines .
5System Work
- When work is done by a thermodynamic system, it
is ususlly a gas that is doing the work. The work
done by a gas at constant pressure is
6For non-constant pressure, the work can be
visualized as the area under the pressure-volume
curve which represents the process taking place.
The more general expression for work done is
- Work done by a system decreases the internal
energyof the system, as indicated in the First
Law of Thermodynamics. System work is a major
focus in the discussion of heat engines.
7Second Law of Thermodynamics
- The second law of thermodynamics is a general
principle which places constraints upon the
direction of heat transfer and the attainable
efficiencies of heat engines . In so doing, it
goes beyond the limitations imposed by the first
law of thermodynamics. It's implications may be
visualized in terms of the waterfall analogy.
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9Second Law Heat Engines
- Second Law of Thermodynamics It is impossible to
extract an amount of heat QH from a hot reservoir
and use it all to do work W . Some amount of heat
QC must be exhausted to a cold reservoir. This
precludes a perfect heat engine . - This is sometimes called the "first form" of the
second law, and is referred to as the
Kelvin-Planck statement of the second law.
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11Second Law Refrigerator
- Second Law of Thermodynamics It is not possible
for heat to flow from a colder body to a warmer
body without any work having been done to
accomplish this flow. Energy will not flow
spontaneously from a low temperature object to a
higher temperature object. This precludes a
perfect refrigerator . The statements about
refrigerators apply to air conditioners and heat
pumps , which embody the same principles.
12Entropy
- Second Law of Thermodynamics In any cyclic
process the entropy will either increase or
remain the same. - Entropy a state variable whose change is
defined for a reversible process at T where Q is
the heat absorbed.
13- Entropya measure of the amount of energy which
is unavailable to do work. - Entropy a measure of the disorder of a system.
Entropy a measure of the multiplicity of a
system.
14- Entropy in Terms of Heat and Temperature
- The macroscopic relationship which was originally
used to define entropy S is - dS Q/T
- This is often a sufficient definition of entropy
if you don't need to know about the microscopic
details.
15- Since entropy gives information about the
evolution of an isolated system with time, it is
said to give us the direction of "time's arrow "
. If snapshots of a system at two different times
shows one state which is more disordered, then it
could be implied that this state came later in
time. For an isolated system, the natural course
of events takes the system to a more disordered
(higher entropy) state.
16- Alternative statements Second Law of
Thermodynamics - Biological systems are highly ordered how does
that square with entropy?
17Adiabatic Process
- An adiabatic process is one in which no heat is
gained or lost by the system. The first law of
thermodynamics with Q0 shows that all the change
in internal energy is in the form of work done.
This puts a constraint on the heat engine process
leading to the adiabatic condition shown below.
This condition can be used to derive the
expression for the work done during an adiabatic
process.
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19- The ratio of the specific heats g CP/CV is a
factor in determining the speed of sound in a gas
and other adiabatic processes as well as this
application to heat engines. This ratio g 1.66
for an ideal monoatomic gas and g 1.4 for air,
which is predominantly a diatomic gas.
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21Heat Transfer
- The transfer of heat is normally from a high
temperature object to a lower temperature object.
Heat transfer changes the internal energy of both
systems involved according to the First Law of
Thermodynamics.
22Heat Conduction
- Conduction is heat transfer by means of molecular
agitation within a material without any motion of
the material as a whole. If one end of a metal
rod is at a higher temperature, then energy will
be transferred down the rod toward the colder end
because the higher speed particles will collide
with the slower ones with a net transfer of
energy to the slower ones. For heat transfer
between two plane surfaces, such as heat loss
through the wall of a house, the rate of
conduction heat transfer is
23- Q heat transferred in time t
- T thermal conductivity of the barrier
- A area
- d thickness of barrier
24Heat Convection
- Convection is heat transfer by mass motion of a
fluid such as air or water when the heated fluid
is caused to move away from the source of heat,
carrying energy with it. Convection above a hot
surface occurs because hot air expands, becomes
less dense, and rises (see Ideal Gas Law).
25- Hot water is likewise less dense than cold water
and rises, causing convection currents which
transport energy. Convection is thought to play a
major role in transporting energy from the center
of the Sun to the surface, and in movements of
the hot magma beneath the surface of the earth
26- It is difficult to quantify the effects of
convection since it inherently depends upon small
nonuniformities in an otherwise fairly
homogeneous medium. In modeling things like the
cooling of the human body, we usually just lump
it in with conductio
27Heat Engines
- A heat engine typically uses energy provided in
the form of heat to do work and then exhausts the
heat which cannot be used to do work.
Thermodynamics is the study of the relationships
between heat and work. The first law and second
law of thermodynamics constrain the operation of
a heat engine.
28- The first law is the application of conservation
of energy to the system, and the second sets
limits on the possible efficiency of the machine
and determines the direction of energy flow.
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30Enthalpy
- Four quantities called "thermodynamic
potentials" are useful in the chemical
thermodynamics of reactions and non-cyclic
processes. They are internal energy, the
enthalpy, the Helmholtz free energy and the Gibbs
free energy. Enthalpy is defined by
H U PV
31- where P and V are the pressure and volume, and U
is internal energy. Enthalpy is then a precisely
measurable state variable, since it is defined in
terms of three other precisely definable state
variables. It is somewhat parallel to the first
law of thermodynamics fora constant pressure
system - Q DU PDV
- since in this case QDH
32- It is a useful quantity for tracking chemical
reactions. If as a result of an exothermic
reaction some energy is released to a system, it
has to show up in some measurable form in terms
of the state variables. An increase in the
enthalpy H U PV might be associated with an
increase in internal energy which could be
measured by calorimetry, or with work done by the
system, or a combination of the two.
33- The internal energy U might be thought of as the
energy required to create a system in the absence
of changes in temperature or volume. But if the
process changes the volume, as in a chemical
reaction which produces a gaseous product, then
work must be done to produce the change in
volume. For a constant pressure process the work
you must do to produce a volume change DV is PDV.
Then the term PV can be interpreted as the work
you must do to "create room" for the system if
you presume it started at zero volume.
34Membrane. Mechanism of transport charge and non
charge partial throw membrane structure of cell.
35Transfer of water soluble molecules across cell
membranes by transport proteins
36Two classes of membran proteins
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38Comparison of passive and active transport
39Examples of sbubstances transported across
cell membranes by carrier proteins
40Bacteriorhodopsin A carrier protein
41Conformational change in protein to
passively carry glucose
42Two components of an electrochemical gradient
43Three ways of driving active transport
44Three types of transport by carrier proteins
45Two types of glucose carriers for transfer of
glucose across the gut lining
46The Na-K pump
47The Na-K pump cycle
48Osmosis
49Avoiding osmotic swelling
50Carrier mediated solute transport in animal and
plant cells
51The structure of an ion channel
52Patch-clamp recording
53Current through a single ion channel
54Gated ion channels
55Stress activated ion channels allow us to hear
56Distribution of ions gives rise to
membrane potential
57K is responsible for generating a membrane
potential
Nernst equation V 62log10(Co/Ci)
58Neurons
59Action Potenetial
60Three conformations of the voltage gated Na
channel
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61Ion Flows and the Action Potential
62The propogation of an action potential along an
axon
63The Action Potential
64Synapses
65Synapses
66Synapses
67Excitatory vs. Inhibitory Synapse
68Synapses
69Ion Channels