Table of Contents

Thermodynamic Analogies

Prerequisites

Student should be able to:

  • Read basic graphs to determine the values of different variables.
  • Recall fundamental thermodynamic variables like pressure, volume, and temperature.

In-class Content

Lecture: PDM Dictionary (25 minutes)

Consider a canonical thermodynamic system that consists of a gas in a cylinder with a moveable piston. Help me draw a picture on the board.

SWBQ: On your small whiteboard, tell me a quantity you can measure for this system.

Students should generate the following. For each, follow up with: How would you measure _ for this system? Then label them the picture, along with a way to measure that quantity:

Follow-up: How would you hold each of these variables constant?

There is an analogy between the gas in a piston and the PDM. With your group, discuss what is analogous between the two systems.

Good questions for helping students:
  • How do you change quantities in the gas?
  • How do you change quantities in the PDM?
  • How do you hold quantities constant?
  • Are there similarities in the dimensions of quantities between the two systems?

Final dictionary:

We are probably going to need a fourth variable here. It turns out this fourth variable is Entropy ($S$), which you will learn about more during the rest of the course. This is a good place to note that holding entropy constant is equivalent to insulating the system and remarking on how this is different from holding temperature constant.