The thermodynamic laws provide us with our most powerful and general scientific principles for predicting the direction of spontaneous change in physical, chemical, and biological systems. This course develops the concepts of energy, entropy, free energy, temperature (and absolute zero), heat, work, and chemical potential within the framework of classical and statistical thermodynamics. The principles developed are applied to a variety of problems: chemical reactions, phase changes, energy technology, industrial processes, and environmental science. Laboratory experiments provide quantitative and practical demonstrations of the theory of real and ideal systems studied in class.
Class Format: lecture, three hours per week; laboratory, four hours per week
Requirements/Evaluation: evaluation will be based on problem sets, laboratory work, exams, and an independent project
Additional Info:
Prerequisites: Chemistry 155 or 256, a basic knowledge of applied integral and differential calculus such as provided by Mathematics 104, 105, and some basic mechanics such as provided by Physics 131 or 141
Enrollment Preference:
Department Notes:
Material and Lab Fees:
Distribution Notes:
Divisional Attributes: Division III
Other Attributes: BIMO Interdepartmental Electives, MTSC Related Courses
Enrollment Limit: none
Expected Enrollment: 16
| CLASSES | ATTR | INSTRUCTORS | TIMES |
|---|---|---|---|
| CHEM366-01(S) LEC Physical Chem:Thermodynamics | ![]() |
John W. Thoman |
MWF 09:00 AM-09:50 AM |
