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Dec 6th, 2005, 04:32 AM
#1
Thread Starter
New Member
Maths help
Hello all.
I would like help with this question if its ok.
Assuming that the free energy of a substance, G, is a function of pressure, p abd temperature, T, i.e G=G(p,T)
(a) write an expression for the total differential change in the free energy, dG.
(b) Comparing the results from above with the equation
dG = V dp - SdT Write down expressions for
(i) (DeltaG/Deltap)T
and
(ii)(deltaG/DeltaT)p
small T and p are meant at X constant
Any help would be appreciated
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Dec 6th, 2005, 02:54 PM
#2
Re: Maths help
Hm, can I recommend that you read "Equilibrium Thermodynamics" by Adkins or "Statistical Physics" by Mandl, like you're supposed to when you get stuck on a problem sheet? Or maybe even the lecture notes.
No offense, but you're really better off reading up on this stuff and making sense of it yourself, or handing in a duff set of answers, getting a bad mark and then getting some help, because it is fairly fundamental thermodynamics and you'll need it later.
You'll thank me.
Last edited by zaza; Dec 6th, 2005 at 02:58 PM.
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Dec 7th, 2005, 09:30 AM
#3
Re: Maths help
 Originally Posted by zaza
Hm, can I recommend that you read "Equilibrium Thermodynamics" by Adkins or "Statistical Physics" by Mandl, like you're supposed to when you get stuck on a problem sheet? Or maybe even the lecture notes.
No offense, but you're really better off reading up on this stuff and making sense of it yourself, or handing in a duff set of answers, getting a bad mark and then getting some help, because it is fairly fundamental thermodynamics and you'll need it later.
You'll thank me.
zaza,
i think it's pure Mathematics (differentiation and integration) which is used extensively in Physics. he is just asking for a differentiation of a function with 2 variables and then comparing it with a given equation to get the equations (or values) for V and S (or -S).
Last edited by Harsh Gupta; Dec 7th, 2005 at 01:55 PM.
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Dec 8th, 2005, 05:36 PM
#4
Re: Maths help
I know what he's after. But honestly, if you skip out on this stuff and don't get your head round it, then there's a lot of thermodynamics that isn't going to make a lot of sense.
The answers to these very questions are in just about every thermo textbook I've read, so fundamental and typical are they. It's worth looking up.
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Dec 9th, 2005, 05:15 PM
#5
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