Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface to the First Edition
- Preface to the Fourth Edition
- Contents
- List of Symbols
- Values of Physical Constants
- PART I THE PRINCIPLES OF THERMODYNAMICS
- PART II REACTION AND PHASE EQUILIBRIA
- PART III THERMODYNAMICS IN RELATION TO THE EXISTENCE OF MOLECULES
- Appendix: Answers to Problems and Comments
- Index
Preface to the First Edition
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Preface to the First Edition
- Preface to the Fourth Edition
- Contents
- List of Symbols
- Values of Physical Constants
- PART I THE PRINCIPLES OF THERMODYNAMICS
- PART II REACTION AND PHASE EQUILIBRIA
- PART III THERMODYNAMICS IN RELATION TO THE EXISTENCE OF MOLECULES
- Appendix: Answers to Problems and Comments
- Index
Summary
My aim has been to write a book on the general theory of chemical equilibrium, including its statistical development, and displaying its numerous practical applications, in the laboratory and industry, by means of problems. It is hoped that the book may be equally useful to students in their final years of either a chemistry or a chemical engineering degree.
Thermodynamics is a subject which needs to be studied not once but several times over at advancing levels. In the first round, usually taken in the first or second year of the degree, a good deal of attention is given to calorimetry, before going forward to the second law. In the second or third rounds—such as I am concerned with in this book—it is assumed that the student is already very familiar with the concepts of temperature and heat, but it is useful once again to go over the basis of the first and second laws, this time in a more logical sequence.
The student's confidence, and his ability to apply thermodynamics in novel situations, can be greatly developed if he works a considerable number of problems which are both theoretical and numerical in character. Thermodynamics is a quantitative subject and it can be mastered, not by the memorizing of proofs, but only by detailed and quantitative application to specific problems. The student is therefore advised not to aim at committing anything to memory.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Principles of Chemical EquilibriumWith Applications in Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, pp. iii - ivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1981