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Magic Square

1) The document introduces thermodynamic identities relating various energies like internal energy (U), enthalpy (H), Helmholtz free energy (A), and Gibbs free energy (G) to natural variables like entropy (S), volume (V), temperature (T), and pressure (P). 2) It presents the "magic square" which shows the relationships between these energies and their natural variables, and how conjugate variables like S & T, P & V are related. 3) Rules are given for determining partial derivative relationships, thermodynamic identities, and Maxwell relations directly from the magic square.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
348 views

Magic Square

1) The document introduces thermodynamic identities relating various energies like internal energy (U), enthalpy (H), Helmholtz free energy (A), and Gibbs free energy (G) to natural variables like entropy (S), volume (V), temperature (T), and pressure (P). 2) It presents the "magic square" which shows the relationships between these energies and their natural variables, and how conjugate variables like S & T, P & V are related. 3) Rules are given for determining partial derivative relationships, thermodynamic identities, and Maxwell relations directly from the magic square.

Uploaded by

quantumtensors
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Energies, Thermodynamic Identities, Maxwell Relations, and the Magic Square

Professor A. J. Mallinckrodt, Physics Department, Cal Poly Pomona, November 2001

Thermodynamic identity for energy dU = TdS PdV( +dN + ...) Additional energies H = U + PV A = U TS G = U + PV TS

Magic Square VAT, UG, SHP (Vat Ugh Ship)


Notice that 1) each side has V A T an energy, 2) each energy is flanked by its two most U G important natural variables, 3) conjugate variables occupy opposite ends of each S H P diagonal, 4) crossed arrows point upward toward V and T and away from S and P.

(Enthalpy) (Helmholtz free energy) (Gibbs free energy)

Additional thermodynamic identities dH = TdS + VdP( +dN +... ) dA = SdT PdV (+dN + . .). dG = SdT + VdP( +dN + . .). Natural variables U S & V (& N & ...) H S & P (& N & ...) A T & V (& N & ...) G T & P (& N & ...) Conjugate variables S & T, P & V, ( & N, ...) Partial derivative relations U U = T, = P, ... S V ,N,... V S, N,... H H = T, = V , ... S P, N,... P S, N,... A A = S , = P , ... T V , N,... V T, N ,... G G = S, = V , ... T P, N,... P T ,N ,... Maxwell relations
(obtained by equating reordered second derivatives of each energy with respect to its natural variables)

Partial derivatives from the Magic Square


Starting at any energy, read toward one of the natural variables Partial of wrt and away from the other at constant and look across for the result and its sign (as indicated by the arrow head) is . For instance:
=+V A T V A T G

U H

G P

(S)

=-S

(P)

1) Partial of H wrt P at constant S is +V 2) Partial of G wrt T at constant P is S

Thermodynamic identities from the Magic Square


Intimately related to the partial derivative relations. For any energy read toward both of its natural variables and across for the conjugate variables and signs. For instance, 1) dH is +V times dP plus +T times dS 2) dG is -S times dT plus +V times dP

Maxwell Relations from the Magic Square


Using only corners, start at any corner and read clockwise or counterclockwise Partial of wrt at constant . Proceed in the same direction to the next corner and then reverse direction to obtain the other side of the equation. Insert a minus sign if the arrows do not point toward or away from both starting points. For example:
V A T

T P = V S S V V T = S P P S S V = P T T P P S = T V V T

Partial of T wrt V at constant S and partial of P wrt S at constant V are opposites. (Since T has an arrowhead and P doesnt.)

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