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- From: bathurst@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (Bruce Bathurst)
- Subject: Re: Thermodynamics
- Message-ID: <1993Jan23.022026.7611@Princeton.EDU>
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- Organization: Princeton University
- References: <1993Jan21.231729.19481@vela.acs.oakland.edu>
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- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 02:20:26 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
- The difficulty with this simple request is that classical
- thermodynamics is just a couple of abstract theorems until it is
- reified with applications. Hence every book on classical
- thermodynamics has applications to some special discipline or other,
- from biology to mechanical engineering.
-
- The problem with Denbigh is that it's not an introduction. Its
- discussion of fundamentals probably is the clearest anywhere, but it
- requires a certain "sophistication" (which I can't define). [Check
- the discussion of which quantities are measurable--this is found no
- where else.]
-
- There is a book I can recommend: De Heer, J., 1986. Phenomenological
- Thermodynamics with Applications to Chemistry. Englewood Cliffs, NJ:
- Prentice-Hall. I'm not really sure it's an introduction either, but
- the presentation is very nice, and covers both the American and
- European schools of chemical thermodynamics.
-
- Others I can recommend are by Everett, by McGlashan, and two older
- books, one by Eherenfest and one by Macdougall. Lewis and Randall
- defined the American school. (A review at the time deprecated their
- concept of chemical activity (relative escaping tendency) and claimed
- it would never survive to the 2d edition.) Zemansky's Heat and
- Thermodynamics is the most popular American introduction for physics
- students; but I'm not keen on texts, myself. Of these books,
- Zemansky, Everett, and possibly McGlashan are introductions.
-
- Bruce (Gypsy Scholar)
-
-
- --
- Department of Geological and Geophysical Sciences
- Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544
- bathurst@phoenix.princeton.edu bathurst@pucc.bitnet !princeton!phoenix!bathurst
-