Copyright Information: Robert A. Alberty, Carl W. Garland, Irwin Oppenheim, John S. Waugh, Moungi Bawendi, John M. Deutch, Robert W. Field, Robert G. Griffin, Keith A. Nelson, Robert J. Silbey, Jeffrey I. Steinfeld, Bruce Tidor, James L. Kinsey, Philip W. Phillips; 5.60 Thermodynamics & Kinetics, Spring 2008. (MIT OpenCourseWare: Massachusetts Institute of Technology), http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Chemistry/5-60Spring-2008/CourseHo... (Accessed December 12, 2009). License: Creative commons BY-NC-SA
Lecture Description
This video lecture, part of the series Thermodynamics and Kinetics by Prof. Moungi G. Bawendi, does not currently have a detailed description and video lecture title. If you have watched this lecture and know what it is about, particularly what Chemistry topics are discussed, please help us by commenting on this video with your suggested description and title. Many thanks from,
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Course Index
- State of a System, 0th Law, Equation of State
- Work, Heat, First Law
- Internal Energy, Expansion Work
- Enthalpy
- Adiabatic Changes
- Thermochemistry
- Calorimetry
- Second Law
- Entropy and the Clausius Inequality
- Entropy and Irreversibility
- Fundamental Equation, Absolute S, Third Law
- Criteria for Spontaneous Change
- Gibbs Free Energy
- Multicomponent Systems, Chemical Potential
- Chemical Equilibrium
- Temperature, Pressure and Kp
- Equilibrium: Application to Drug Design
- Phase Equilibria - One Component
- Clausius-Clapeyron Equation
- Phase Equilibria - Two Components
- Ideal Solutions
- Non-Ideal Solutions
- Colligative Properties
- Introduction to Statistical Mechanics
- Partition Function (q) - Large N Limit
- Partition Function (Q) - Many Particles
- Statistical Mechanics and Discrete Energy Levels
- Model Systems
- Applications: Chemical and Phase Equilibria
- Introduction to Reaction Kinetics
- Complex Reactions and Mechanisms
- Steady-State and Equilibrium Approximations
- Chain Reactions
- Temperature Dependence, Ea, Catalysis
- Enzyme Catalysis
- Autocatalysis and Oscillators
Course Description
This course deals primarily with equilibrium properties of macroscopic systems, basic thermodynamics, chemical equilibrium of reactions in gas and solution phase, and rates of chemical reactions.
The original name of this MIT course is 5.60 Thermodynamics & Kinetics.
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