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Ch1. Statistical Basis of Thermodynamics

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Title: Ch1. Statistical Basis of Thermodynamics


1
Ch1. Statistical Basis of Thermodynamics
  • 1.1 The macroscopic state and the microscopic
    state
  • Macrostate a macrostate of a physical system is
    specified by macroscopic variables (N,V,E).
  • Microstate a microstate of a system is specified
    by the positions, velocities, and internal
    coordinates of all the molecules in the system.
  • For a quantum system, Y(r1,r2,.,rN), specifies a
    microstate.

2
Microstate Number W(N,V,E)
  • For a given macrostate (N,V,E), there are a large
    number of possible microstates that can make the
    values of macroscopic variables. The actual
    number of all possible miscrostate is a function
    of macrostate variables.
  • Consider a system of N identical particles
    confined to a space of volume V. N1023. In
    thermodynamic limit N?, V?, but nN/V finite.
  • Macrostate variables (N, V, E)
  • Volume V
  • Total energy

3
Macrostate variables
4
Physical siginificance of W(N,V,E)
  • For a given macrostate (N,V,E) of a physical
    system, the absolute value of entropy is given by

Where k1.38x10-23 J/K Boltzman constant
  • Consider two system A1 and A2 being separately in
    equilibrium.
  • When allow two systems exchanging heat by thermal
    contact, the whole system has E(0)E1E2const.
    macrostate (N,V, E(0))

5
Problem 1.2
  • Assume that the entropy S and the statistical
    number W of a physical system are related through
    an arbitrary function Sf(W). Show that the
    additive characters of S and the multiplicative
    character of W necessarily required that the
    function f(W) to be the form of

f(W) k ln(W)
  • Solution Consider two spatially separated
    systems A and B

6
1.3 Future contact between statistics and
thermodynamics
  • Consider energy change between two sub-systems A1
    and A2, both systems can change their volumes
    while keeping the total volume the constant.

Energy change Volume variable No mass change
E(0) E1E2const
V(0) V1V2const
N(0) N1N2const
7
1.3 Future contact between statistics and
thermodynamics cont.
  • Initial states

System A1 (N1,V1, E1), S1(N1,V1,E1)k
lnW1(N1,V1,E1) System A2 (N2,V2, E2),
S2(N2,V2,E2)k lnW2(N1,V1,E1)
  • Thermal contact process

E(0) E1E2const, E1, E2 changeable
V(0) V1V2const, V1, V2 changeable
N(0) N1N2const, N1, N2 changeable
W(0) (N1,V1,E1 N2,V2,E2) W1(N1,V1,E1)W2(N2,V2,E
2)
8
1.3 Future contact between statistics and
thermodynamics cont.
  • Thermal equilibrium state (N1,V1,E1)

9
Summary-how to derive thermodynamics from a
statistical beginning?
  • 1) Start from the macrostate (N,V,E) of the given
    system
  • 2) Determine the number of all possible
    microstate accessible to the system, W(N,V,E).
  • 3) Calculate the entropy of the system in that
    macrostate

4) Determine systems parameters, T,P, m
5) Determine the other parameters in
thermodynamics
Helmhohz free energy A E-T S Gibbs free energy
G A PV mN Enthalpy H E PV
10
Determine heat capacity
  • 6) Determine heat capacity Cv and Cp

11
1.4 Classical ideal gas
  • Model
  • N particles of nonatomic molecules
  • Free, nonrelativistic particles
  • Confined in a cubic box of side L (VL3)
  • Wavefunction and energy of each particle

12
1.4 Classical ideal gas-cont.
  • Hamiltonian of each particle
  • Separation of variables
  • Boundary conditions Y(x) vanishes on the
    boundary,

13
1.4 Classical ideal gas-cont.
  • Boundary conditions Y(x) vanishes on the
    boundary

14
Microstate of one particle
  • Boundary conditions Y(x) vanishes on the
    boundary

One microstate is a combination of (nx,ny,,nz)
15
The number of microstate of one particle W(1,e,V)
  • The number of distinct microstates for a particle
    with energy e is the number of independent
    solutions of (nx,ny,nz), satisfying
  • The number W(1,e,V) is the volume in the shell of
    a 3 sphere. The volume of in (nx,ny,nz) space id
    1.

16
Microstates of N particles
  • The total energy is
  • One microstate with a given energy E is a
    solution of (n1,n2,n3N) of

3N-dimension sphere with radius sqrt(E)
17
The number of microstate of N particles W(N,E,V)
  • The volume of 3N-sphere with radius Rsqrt(E)

(Appendix C)
  • The number W(N,E,V) is the volume in the shell of
    a 3N-sphere.

18
Entropy and thermodynamic properties of an ideal
gas
  • Determine temperature
  • Determine specific heat

19
State equation of an ideal gas
  • Determine pressure
  • Specific heat ratio

20
1.5 The entropy of mixing ideal gases
  • Consider the mixing of two ideal gases 1 and 2,
    which are initially at the same temperature T.
    The temperature of the mixing would keep as the
    same.

mixing
N1,V,T N2,V,T
N2,V2,T
N1,V1,T
  • Before mixing
  • After mixing

21
P1-11
Four moles of nitrogen and one mole of oxygen at
P1 atm and T300K are mixed together to form air
at the same pressure and temperature. Calculate
the entropy of the mixing per mole of the air
formed.
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