Principles of Thermodynamics

5 credits

Syllabus, Bachelor's level, 1KB009

A revised version of the syllabus is available.
Code
1KB009
Education cycle
First cycle
Main field(s) of study and in-depth level
Chemistry G1F, Technology G1F
Grading system
Fail (U), Pass (3), Pass with credit (4), Pass with distinction (5)
Finalised by
The Faculty Board of Science and Technology, 17 April 2015
Responsible department
Department of Chemistry - Ångström

Entry requirements

Chemical Principles I/Basic Chemistry, 10 credits, or The Basic Principles of Chemistry, 15 credits, as well as 15 credits in mathematics.

Learning outcomes

On completion of the course, the student should be able to

  • discuss the consequences of the main laws of thermodynamic as well as the connection between intermolecular interactions and changes of state
  • calculate the change in thermodynamic quantities for different cases of changes of state both within a phase and during phase transitions
  • carry out thermodynamic calculations on different types of mixtures as well as reaction and phase equilibria, and interpret the results
  • use simpler arguments about how statistical considerations at the molecular level are connected with thermodynamic properties for a macroscopic system
  • document laboratory work in laboratory notebooks , plan and carry out laboratory work in a correct way and present the results in a report
  • give examples how the course content has importance for people and the environment

Content

The laws of thermodynamics; enthalpy, entropy, internal energy, free energy, chemical potential, phase equilibria; mixtures, solutions, colligative properties and chemical reaction equilibria, Boltzmann's distribution. Laboratory methodology.

Instruction

Lectures, problem-solving sessions, laboratory practicals and project/assignment.

Assessment

Written examinations are organised at the end of the course and correspond to 3 cr. Laboratory sessions and projects/assignments correspond 2 to cr. Pass grade in all course components must be passed in order to receive a pass grade for the course. The final grade corresponds to a weighted sum of the results of the written examination and the laboratory sessions.

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