Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of constants, conversions, and prefixes
- Part I Setting the scene
- Part II Small systems
- Part III Energy and the first law
- Part IV States and the second law
- Part V Constraints
- 9 Natural constraints
- 10 Models
- 11 Choice of variables
- 12 Special processes
- 13 Engines
- 14 Diffusive interactions
- Part VI Classical statistics
- Part VII Quantum statistics
- Appendices
- Further reading
- Problem solutions
- Index
9 - Natural constraints
from Part V - Constraints
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of constants, conversions, and prefixes
- Part I Setting the scene
- Part II Small systems
- Part III Energy and the first law
- Part IV States and the second law
- Part V Constraints
- 9 Natural constraints
- 10 Models
- 11 Choice of variables
- 12 Special processes
- 13 Engines
- 14 Diffusive interactions
- Part VI Classical statistics
- Part VII Quantum statistics
- Appendices
- Further reading
- Problem solutions
- Index
Summary
Overview
The preceding chapters introduced the fundamental ideas that connect the microscopic and macroscopic behavior of systems. They also gave an overview of the three types of interactions between systems and how the second law controls them. These concepts form the statistical basis of thermodynamics, and the tools are so general that they can be applied to almost any system imaginable. This is the single most impressive feature of the subject. Unfortunately, it is also the single most confusing feature of the subject. There are so many different kinds of systems and such a variety of parameters – internal energy, temperature, pressure, entropy, volume, chemical potential, number of particles, and many more. Furthermore, the interdependence among these parameters varies from one system to the next and in ways that are usually not specified. Consequently, we often deal with general and abstract expressions, each involving many parameters whose interrelationships are either vague or unknown.
But the large number of parameters can be turned to our advantage. We don't need them all, so we can choose to use whichever we wish and ignore the rest. Furthermore, their behaviors and interrelationships are heavily constrained. In this and the following chapters we learn how to make order out of chaos through a judicious choice of parameters and the application of constraints.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- An Introduction to Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics , pp. 155 - 185Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007