Portfolios Wiki courses:lecture:eelec
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2020-01-27T00:58:03-08:00Portfolios Wiki
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http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelec3rdthermolaw?rev=1342461145
Lecture: Third Law of Thermodynamics (20 minutes)text/html2016-07-11T11:20:06-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eeleccarnoteff
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eeleccarnoteff?rev=1468261206
Lecture: Carnot Efficiency (30 minutes)
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
A heat engine is a device that accepts energy in the form of heat from something hot, and uses that energy to do work. The Kelvin formulation states that this cannot be all that a heat engine does. In fact, a heat engine will also “waste” energy by heating something cool. Thus the energy you put in from the “hot place” will not all get used to do useful work.text/html2016-07-08T11:41:50-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecdiaidealgas
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecdiaidealgas?rev=1468003310
Lecture on Finding the Internal Energy of a Diatomic Ideal Gas (20 minutes)
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Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
Let's consider a diatomic ideal gas, such as nitrogen. In this case, the energy levels of a single molecule are given by the sum of the translational kinetic energy, rotational kinetic energy and vibrational energy---both kinetic and potential: $$E_{n_xn_yn_zn_vlm}^{(1)} = \frac{\hbar^2 \pi^2 \left(n_x^2 + n_y^2 + n_z^2\right)}{2mL^2} + \frac{\hbar^2 l(l+1)…text/html2016-07-07T14:15:42-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecdulongpetit
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecdulongpetit?rev=1467926142
Lecture: Dulong and Petit Rule (5 minutes)
Ice Calorimetry Lab
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
In 1819, shortly after Dalton had introduced the concept of atomic weight in 1808, Dulong and Petit observed that if they measured the specific heat per unit mass of a variety of solids, and divided by the atomic weights of those solids, the resulting per-atom specific heat was essentially constant. This is the Dulong-Petit law, although we have since given a name to that constant…text/html2016-07-08T15:21:04-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecenergyconstraint
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecenergyconstraint?rev=1468016464
Lecture: Energy Constraints (?? minutes)
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Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
If the energy of a system is actually constrained (as it generally is), then we should be applying a second constraint, besides the one that allows us to normalize our probabilities. $$\mathcal{L} = -k_B\sum_iP_i\ln P_i + \alpha k_B\left(1-\sum_i P_i\right) + \beta k_B \left(U - \sum_i P_i E_i\right)$$ where $\alpha$ and $\beta$ are the two Lagrange multipliers. We want to maximize this, so we …text/html2016-07-11T10:41:15-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecfairent
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecfairent?rev=1468258875
Lecture: Fairness and Entropy (5 minutes)
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
Given two uncorrelated systems, AA and BB, we can show that the fairness of the combined system is equal to the sum of the fairnesses of the two separate systems. This means that FF is extensive. $$\mathcal{F}_A = -k \sum_i P_i \ln P_i$$ $$\mathcal{F}_B = -k \sum_i P_i \ln P_i$$ $$\mathcal{F}_{AB} = -k \sum_{ij} P_{ij} \ln\left( P_{ij} \right)$$ $$= -k \sum_{ij} P_iP_j \ln\left( P_iP_j \right)$$ $$= …text/html2016-07-08T15:17:15-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecfairintenergy
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecfairintenergy?rev=1468016235
Lecture: Relating Internal Energy and Fairness (15 minutes)
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
$\newcommand\myderiv[3]{\left(\frac{\partial #1}{\partial #2}\right)_{#3}}$ Let's talk a bit about fairness. We used the fairness to find the probabilities of being in the various eigenstates, by assuming that the ``fairest'' distribution would prevail. If you bring two separate systems together and allow them to equilibrate, then you would expect that the net fairness would either …text/html2016-07-08T13:45:28-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecfairnessfunc
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecfairnessfunc?rev=1468010728
Lecture: Fairness (10 minutes)
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
The primary quantity in statistical mechanics is the probability $P_i$ of finding the system in eigenstate ii. Once we know the probability of each eigenstate for any given state, we will be able to compute every thermodynamic property of the system.text/html2016-07-08T15:50:12-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecfirstlaw
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecfirstlaw?rev=1468018212
Lecture: First Law of Thermodynamics (10 minutes)
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
The first law of thermodynamics simply states that energy is conserved. But it is useful to look at those two non-state variables work and heat. Both are changes in energy of a system, so we can write the first law as $$\Delta U=Q+W$$ where $U$ is the internal energy of the system, $Q$ is the energy added to the system by heating, and $W$ is the work done by the system (or the energy removed …text/html2016-07-07T14:17:18-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecheatcapacity
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecheatcapacity?rev=1467926238
Lecture: Heat Capacity (10 minutes)
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
As we learned last week, heat capacity is amount of energy required to raise the temperature of an object by a small amount. $$C \sim \frac{đ Q}{\partial T}$$ $$đ Q = C dT \text{ At constant what?}$$ If we hold the volume constant, then we can see from the first law that $$dU = đQ - pdV$$ since $dV=0$ for a constant-volume process, $\newcommand\myderiv[3]{\left(\frac{\partial #1}{\partial #2}\right)_{…text/html2016-07-08T12:26:33-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eeleclagrangemultip
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eeleclagrangemultip?rev=1468005993
Lecture: Lagrange Multipliers (?? minutes)
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Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
Usually, (analytically) we maximize functions by setting their derivatives equal to zero. So we could maximize the fairness by $$\frac{\partial\mathcal{F}}{\partial P_i} = 0$$ $$= -k_B (\ln P_i + 1)$$ Using the formula for the fairness function, what can this tell us about $P_i$? It doesn't make much sense at all... it means $P_i = e^{-1}$.$\ddot\frown$ There is a problem with this, which is…text/html2016-07-08T15:40:56-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecmaxwelllegendre
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecmaxwelllegendre?rev=1468017656
Lecture: Legendre Transformations (5 minutes)
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
On your devices, measure the following two derivatives and describe how they are related: [SWBQ] $\newcommand\myderiv[3]{\left(\frac{\partial #1}{\partial #2}\right)_{#3}}$ $$\myderiv{F_1}{x_2}{x_1} \qquad\qquad \myderiv{F_2}{x_1}{x_2}$$ Hiding one string and fixing one weighttext/html2016-07-07T14:36:09-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecmaxwellrel
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecmaxwellrel?rev=1467927369
Lecture: Maxwell Relations (?? minutes)
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Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
In the Interlude, we learned that mixed partial derivatives are the same, regardless of the order in which we take the derivative, so $$\left(\frac{\partial \left(\frac{\partial f}{\partial x}\right)_y}{\partial y}\right)_x=\left(\frac{\partial \left(\frac{\partial f}{\partial y}\right)_x}{\partial x}\right)_y$$ $$\frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x \partial y}=\frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial y \partial…text/html2016-07-08T15:20:27-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecpartitionfunc
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecpartitionfunc?rev=1468016427
Lecture: Partition Function (?? minutes)
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Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
The partition function is a particularly useful quantity. Physically, it is nothing more than the normalization factor needed in order to compute probabilities, but in practice, finding that normalization is typically the hardest part of a calculation---once you have found all the energy eigenvalues, that is.text/html2016-07-11T11:23:00-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecrevieweneigenv
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecrevieweneigenv?rev=1468261380
Lecture: Reviewing Several Energy Eigenvalues (10 minutes)
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
I'm going to quickly review and introduce the energy eigenvalues for some simple quantum mechanical problems. For each of the following, I will sketch out the potential, then sketch the wavefunctions and the spacing of the energy levels.text/html2012-08-27T11:23:01-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecrubberbandstretch
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecrubberbandstretch?rev=1346091781
Lecture: Snapping a Rubber Band (15 minutes)text/html2016-07-08T14:50:02-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecsecondlaw
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecsecondlaw?rev=1468014602
Lecture: The Second Law of Thermodynamics (5 minutes)
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
Second Law and Entropy
If you drop a hot chunk of metal into a cup of water, which way will energy be transferred by heating? What is the rule that governs this?text/html2016-07-08T14:25:24-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecstatthermocompare
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecstatthermocompare?rev=1468013124
Lecture: Introduction to the Statistical Approach (?? minutes)
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Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
A statistical approach
So far in this class, you have learned classical thermodynamics. Starting next week, we will be studying statistical mechanics. Thermodynamics may look ``theoretical'' because it involves a lot of math, but ultimately it is an experimental science. Thermodynamics puts severe (and interesting) constraints on equations of state, but can never tell us …text/html2016-07-07T14:34:55-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecthermoidentity
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecthermoidentity?rev=1467927295
Lecture: The Thermodynamic Identity (?? minutes)
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Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
The internal energy is clearly a state function, and thus its differential must be an exact differential. $$dU = \text{ ?}$$ $$= đQ - đW$$ $$ = đQ - pdV \text{ only when change is quasistatic}$$text/html2016-07-11T11:45:08-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecthermoterms
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecthermoterms?rev=1468262708
Lecture: Thermodynamic Terms (7 minutes)
Naming Thermodynamic Variables
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
We begin with the now-familiar thermodynamic identity $$dU=TdS-pdV$$ Remember in the Interlude I talked about what if one of the weights were hidden in the black box, so you could not change it, or measure its position? Now we get to see why.text/html2016-07-08T14:40:17-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecthermowork
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecthermowork?rev=1468014017
Lecture: Work in Thermodynamics (5 minutes)
Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
We can find the change in potential energy of our system by measuring the work done by our weights as they move up and down. If we consider that $x_1$ and $x_2$ increase as the weights move down, the work done by the $x_1$ weight is given by: $$W_1 = \int F_1 dx_1$$ Similarly, the work done by the $x_2$ weight is given by: $$W_2 = \int F_2 dx_2$$ Taken together, we can see that the change in the …text/html2016-07-18T10:17:15-08:00courses:lecture:eelec:eelecweightedavg
http://sites.science.oregonstate.edu/portfolioswiki/courses:lecture:eelec:eelecweightedavg?rev=1468862235
Lecture: Weighted Averages (?? minutes)
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Lecture notes from Dr. Roundy's 2014 course website:
Most thermodynamic quantities can be expressed as weighted averages over all possible eigenstates (or microstates). For instance, the internal energy is given by: by: $$U = \sum_i P_i E_i$$ Note that this will probably not be an eigenvalue of the energy, but that's okay. The energy eigenvalues are so close for the total energy of a macroscopic object that we couldn't distinguish them anyhow. Any…