Entropy 170828073801
Entropy 170828073801
Entropy 170828073801
ON
ENTROPY
CONTENTS
• INTRODUCTION
• VARIOUS TYPE OF DISORDER
• EXAMPLES OF DISORDER
• DEFINITION AND EXPRESSION OF ENTROPY
• IMPORTANCE OF ENTROPY IN
GEOCHEMICAL
THERMODYNAMICS
• APPLICATION OF ENTROPY
• CONCUSION
• REFERENCE
INTRODUCTION
What is entropy?
The word entropy is sometimes confused with energy.
Although they are related quantities, they are distinct.
or energy measures the capability of an object or system
to do work.
on the other hand, is a measure of the "disorder" of a
system. What "disorder refers to is really the number of
different microscopic states a system can be in, given that
the system has a particular fixed composition, volume,
energy, pressure, and temperature. By "microscopic
states", we mean the exact states of all the molecules
making up the system.
Entropy = (Boltzmann's constant k) x logarithm of number of
possible states
= k log(N).
Entropy - thermodynamic property-- a
quantitative measure of disorder
Entropy traces out its origin –molecular
movement interpretation-Rudolf Clausias in
1850
The concept of entropy -thermodynamic
laws(i.e. the 2nd law of thermodynamics)
It can be visualised due to the process of
expansion, heating, mixing and reaction.
Entropy is associated with heat and
temperature.
Various types of
disorder
Entropy-reflects the degree of disorderness.
Diorderness can be pointed out in three different
types. They are:
Positional disorder
whether the atoms are free to move or not
Vibrational disorder(thermal disorder)
whether the atoms vibrate about an
average position
Configurational disorder
this refers to the distribution of different atoms
or sites in lattice.
EXAMPLES OF DISORDER
This is one
example of
entropy
Box 1-less
entropy
Box 2-more
entropy
Box-1
Box-2
Definition and expression of
entropy
Entropy may be defined as the property of a system
which measure the degree of disorder or randomness
in the system
It is a Greek word which means
transformation
It is denoted by the symbol ‘S’
Clausius was convinced of the significance of the
ratio of heat delivered and the temperature at which
it is
delivered,
Entropy is the sum total of entropy due to
positional disorder, vibrational disorder and
configurational disorder. i.e randomness due
to change of state
S=sp+st+sc
When a system is undergoing change then the
entropy change is equal to the heat absorbed by the
system divided by the temperature at which change
taken place.
ΔS = S2 –S1
= ∫ dq / T T ΔS = dq or TdS = dq
this is the II law expression.
By integration,
1 ∫2dS = 1∫2 Cp dT /T
S2 – S1 = Δ Cp ln (T2 / T )