Definition and Concept
Thermodynamic Potential
Internal energy (U): total energy contained within a thermodynamic system. Includes kinetic and potential energies of particles. Central thermodynamic potential in closed systems.
Macroscopic Description
Represents energy stored due to molecular motion, chemical bonds, atomic interactions. Excludes kinetic energy of bulk motion and potential energy from external fields.
System Boundary
Defined relative to system boundary: isolated, closed, or open. Internal energy changes depend on energy exchange across boundary.
Units and Dimensions
SI unit: joule (J). Dimensions: mass·length²/time². Extensive property: scales with system size.
First Law of Thermodynamics
Energy Conservation
Statement: energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transformed. Internal energy changes reflect net heat and work exchange.
Mathematical Expression
ΔU = Q - W, where Q = heat added, W = work done by system. Sign conventions critical.
Closed System Focus
Applicable mainly to closed systems with fixed mass. Open systems require additional terms.
Implications
Provides framework for analyzing engine cycles, refrigeration, chemical reactions.
Microscopic Origin
Kinetic Energy of Particles
Translational, rotational, vibrational motion of molecules contribute to internal energy.
Potential Energy of Interactions
Intermolecular forces, chemical bonds, electronic configurations contribute to potential energy component.
Quantum Mechanical Effects
Energy quantization affects internal energy levels, especially in gases and solids at low temperatures.
Statistical Interpretation
Internal energy averaged over ensemble of microstates weighted by probability distribution (Boltzmann distribution).
Internal Energy as a State Function
Dependence on State Variables
U depends only on system state variables: temperature, pressure, volume, composition.
Path Independence
Change in U between two states independent of process path. Enables use in cyclic processes analysis.
Contrast with Heat and Work
Heat (Q) and work (W) are path functions; only internal energy is a true state function.
Thermodynamic Surfaces
Internal energy surfaces define equilibrium properties and enable calculation of other potentials.
Changes in Internal Energy
Heating and Cooling
Energy increase from heat absorption; decrease from heat loss. Related to specific heat capacity.
Work Effects
Energy change due to expansion/compression work, electrical work, surface work.
Chemical Reactions
Bond formation/breaking alters internal energy. Reaction enthalpies linked to ΔU.
Phase Transitions
Latent heat changes internal energy at constant temperature and pressure.
Heat and Work Contributions
Heat (Q)
Energy transfer due to temperature difference. Increases or decreases internal energy depending on direction.
Work (W)
Energy transfer by force acting through displacement. Includes boundary work, shaft work, electrical work.
Sign Conventions
Positive Q: heat added to system; positive W: work done by system on surroundings.
Combined Effects
Net internal energy change integrates heat and work contributions.
Relation to Other Thermodynamic Potentials
Enthalpy (H)
H = U + PV. Useful for processes at constant pressure.
Helmholtz Free Energy (A)
A = U - TS. Governs spontaneous processes at constant volume and temperature.
Gibbs Free Energy (G)
G = U + PV - TS = H - TS. Determines equilibrium at constant pressure and temperature.
Legendre Transformations
Internal energy is base potential; others derived by transforming natural variables.
| Potential | Definition | Natural Variables |
|---|---|---|
| Internal Energy (U) | U(S,V,N) | Entropy (S), Volume (V), Particle Number (N) |
| Enthalpy (H) | H = U + PV | Entropy (S), Pressure (P), Particle Number (N) |
| Helmholtz Free Energy (A) | A = U - TS | Temperature (T), Volume (V), Particle Number (N) |
| Gibbs Free Energy (G) | G = U + PV - TS | Temperature (T), Pressure (P), Particle Number (N) |
Measurement and Calorimetry
Calorimetric Techniques
Direct measurement of heat transfer to infer ΔU. Types: bomb calorimeter, differential scanning calorimetry.
Work Measurement
Mechanical, electrical work measured to complete energy balance.
Experimental Challenges
Isolating system, accounting for all energy flows, precise temperature control crucial.
Data Interpretation
Use of heat capacities, enthalpy changes to calculate internal energy changes indirectly.
Mathematical Formulation
Fundamental Thermodynamic Relation
dU = TdS - PdV + μdN, where T=temperature, S=entropy, P=pressure, V=volume, μ=chemical potential, N=particle number.
Partial Derivatives
T = (∂U/∂S)_V,N ; P = -(∂U/∂V)_S,N ; μ = (∂U/∂N)_S,V
Integration for Finite Changes
ΔU found by integrating differential form along reversible path.
Ideal Gas Example
For ideal gas, U depends only on temperature: U = (f/2) nRT, where f = degrees of freedom.
dU = TdS - PdV + μdNT = (∂U/∂S)_V,NP = -(∂U/∂V)_S,Nμ = (∂U/∂N)_S,VFor ideal gas:U = (f/2) nRTwhere f = degrees of freedom, n = moles, R = gas constant, T = temperatureApplications in Science and Engineering
Thermodynamic Cycle Analysis
Internal energy changes used to evaluate efficiency, work output in engines, turbines, compressors.
Chemical Thermodynamics
Reaction energetics, phase equilibria, and stability analyzed using internal energy data.
Material Science
Heat treatments, phase transformations monitored via internal energy changes.
Biological Systems
Metabolic energy balances, enzyme energetics related to internal energy changes.
Limitations and Extensions
Non-Equilibrium Systems
Internal energy defined strictly for equilibrium states; extension to non-equilibrium requires generalized potentials.
Open Systems
Mass transfer complicates internal energy accounting; use enthalpy and chemical potentials.
Relativistic and Quantum Effects
At extreme conditions, classical internal energy concept modified by relativistic or quantum field theories.
Approximation in Complex Systems
In heterogeneous or multi-phase systems, internal energy partitioning challenging; requires modeling.
Summary
Core Concept
Internal energy: fundamental thermodynamic potential representing microscopic energy content.
Key Properties
State function, extensive, linked to heat and work by first law of thermodynamics.
Mathematical and Practical Importance
Foundation for defining other potentials, analyzing processes, measuring energy changes experimentally.
Continued Relevance
Essential for thermodynamics, physical chemistry, engineering, materials science, biology.
References
- Callen, H.B., Thermodynamics and an Introduction to Thermostatistics, 2nd ed., Wiley, 1985, pp. 1-540.
- Atkins, P., de Paula, J., Physical Chemistry, 10th ed., Oxford University Press, 2014, pp. 25-80.
- Smith, J.M., Van Ness, H.C., Abbott, M.M., Introduction to Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics, 7th ed., McGraw-Hill, 2005, pp. 100-250.
- Zemansky, M.W., Dittman, R.H., Heat and Thermodynamics, 7th ed., McGraw-Hill, 1997, pp. 50-160.
- Reif, F., Fundamentals of Statistical and Thermal Physics, Waveland Press, 2009, pp. 200-340.