Thermodynamic equilibrium
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermodynamic_equilibriumExos de thermo CPGE - Hubert de Haan
http://hdehaan.free.fr/page_base_thermodynamique.htmEntropie et phénomènes irréversibles
http://res-nlp.univ-lemans.fr/NLP_C_M10_G02/co/module_NLP_C_M10_G02_1.htmlFire From Moonlight (Optics & Thermodynamics)
https://what-if.xkcd.com/145/2 versions de la 2nd loi
Transformation polytropique
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transformation_polytropiqueRésumé CPGE : Bilan des grandeurs thermodyn. extensives
Entropy Confusion - Sixty Symbols
Vapor-liquid equilibrium (VLE)
http://www.et.byu.edu/~rowley/VLEfinal/VLE_home.htmEutectique
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/EutectiqueRelation de Mayer
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relation_de_MayerRelations de Maxwell
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relations_de_MaxwellThe Physics And Mathematics Of The Second Law Of Thermodynamics - Lieb & Yngvason, 100p
https://arxiv.org/pdf/cond-mat/9708200.pdfExamination of the foundations of thermodynamics - Caratheodory, 1907
http://neo-classical-physics.info/uploads/3/0/6/5/3065888/caratheodory_-_thermodynamics.pdfConstantin Carathéodory and the axiomatic thermodynamics - Pogliani & Berberan-Santos, 2000
http://web.ist.utl.pt/berberan/data/68.pdfThere are various conditions which might apply while a gas expands : 1. adiabatic (isentropic) expansion. Gas does work on its surroundings (pushing on the boundary as the boundary moves) so loses energy. No heat comes in. So internal energy goes down. Temperature goes down. 2. isothermal. Obviously the temperature does not change. This is because heat flows in while the gas does work in expanding. 3. constant enthalpy (Joule-Kelvin process, also known as throttling). The temperature may go up or down, depending on the initial conditions. 4. free expansion (expansion into vacuum). This is a process at constant internal energy. Temperature of an ideal gas stays constant, temperature of a real gas falls a little. This is because the molecules attract one another so as they move apart they gain potential energy. But no energy has come in so they must lose kinetic energy. The kinetic energy is directly related to the temperature.