Conjugate variables (thermodynamics)
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In thermodynamics, the internal energy of a system is expressed in terms of pairs of conjugate variables such as pressure/volume or temperature/entropy. In fact all thermodynamic potentials are expressed in terms of conjugate pairs.
For a mechanical system, a small increment of energy is the product of a force times a small displacement. A very similar situation exists in thermodynamics. An increment in the energy of a thermodynamic system can be expressed as the sum of the products of certain generalized "forces" which, when imbalanced cause certain generalized "displacements", and the product of the two is the energy transferred as a result. These forces and their associated displacements are called conjugate variables. The thermodynamic force is always an intensive variable and the displacement is always an extensive variable, yielding an extensive energy transfer.
For example, for a system with two types of particle, a small change in the internal energy is given by:
- [\mathrmU\le T\mathrmS - P\mathrmV + \mu_1\mathrmN_1 + \mu_2\mathrmN_2\,],
The most commonly considered conjugate thermodynamic variables are (with corresponding SI units):
- :or, more generally,
- Thermal parameters:
- * Temperature: T (K)
- * Entropy: S (J K-1)
- Material parameters:
- * chemical potential: μ (J)
- * particle number: N (particles or mole)
- [\mathrmU=T\mathrmS - P\mathrmV + \sum_i \mu_i \mathrmN_i\,],
The pressure/volume and stress/strain pair
As an example, consider the PV conjugate pair. The pressure acts as a generalized force - pressure differences force a change in volume, and their product is the energy lost by the system due to mechanical work. Pressure is the driving force, volume is the associated displacement, and the two form a pair of conjugate variables.
The above holds true only for non-viscous fluids. In the case of viscous fluids, plastic and elastic solids, the pressure force is generalized to the stress tensor, and changes in volume are generalized to the volume multiplied by the strain tensor
- [\delta w = -V\sum_\sigma_d\varepsilon_]
- [\delta w = -V\sigma_d\varepsilon_]
- [\delta w = -V\,(-P\delta_)\,d\varepsilon_=PVd\varepsilon_]
The temperature/entropy pair
In a similar way, temperature differences drive changes in entropy, and their product is the energy transferred by heating.
The chemical potential/particle number pair
The chemical potential is like a force which pushes an increase in particle number. In cases where there are a mixture of chemicals and phases, this is a useful concept. For example if a container holds water and water vapor, there will be a chemical potential (which is negative) for the liquid pushing water molecules into the vapor (evaporation) and a chemical potential for the vapor, pushing vapor molecules into the liquid (condensation). Only when these "forces" equilibrate is equilibrium obtained.
References
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