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  1. 28 de jul. de 2021 · 1 Three iconic equations in thermodynamics. 2 Thermodynamic (Clausius) definition of entropy. 2.1 State variables: Pressure (P), Energy (E), Volume (V), and Temperature (T): 2.2 Heat, work and the heat engine. 2.3 Why heat and work are not state variables. 3 Carnot's Theorem. 3.1 Why the Carnot engine is reversible.

  2. Statistical Thermodynamics. Statistical thermodynamics provides the link between the microscopic (i.e., molecular) properties of matter and its macroscopic (i.e., bulk) properties. It provides a means of calculating thermodynamic properties from the statistical relationship between temperature and energy.

  3. Thermodynamics — Introduction to Statistical Mechanics. 5. Thermodynamics ¶. Statistical mechanics grew out of an earlier field called thermodynamics, which was concerned with the thermal properties of liquids and gasses. It grew up around it, and then subsumed it.

  4. In physics, statistical mechanics is a mathematical framework that applies statistical methods and probability theory to large assemblies of microscopic entities. Sometimes called statistical physics or statistical thermodynamics, its applications include many problems in the fields of physics, biology, [1] chemistry, neuroscience ...

  5. Statistical thermodynamics is a theory that uses molecular properties to predict the behavior of macroscopic quantities of compounds. While the origins of statistical thermodynamics predate the development of quantum mechanics, the modern development of statistical thermodynamics assumes that the quantized energy levels associated with a ...

  6. The book begins with the essentials of statistical thermodynamics, pauses to recover needed knowledge from quantum mechanics and spectroscopy, and then moves on to applications involving ideal gases, the solid state and radiation.

  7. Download pdf file of lecture notes on statistical thermodynamics, covering macroscopic thermodynamic results, ideal gas and liquid mixtures, energy and entropy changes. These notes are from the MIT course 5.60 on thermodynamics and kinetics.