3.00 Thermodynamics of Materials

As taught in: Fall 2002

Level:

Undergraduate

Instructors:

Prof. W. Craig Carter

Photo showing gas bubbles form and collapse when a liquid is energized by ultrasound.
Photo showing gas bubbles form and collapse when a liquid is energized by ultrasound. (Courtesy of K.S. Suslick and K. J. Kolbeck, University of Illinois; National Science Foundation.)

Course Features

Course Highlights

This course includes a wealth of materials: full sets of lecture notes, recitation notes and assignments.

Course Description

Treatment of the laws of thermodynamics and their applications to equilibrium and the properties of materials. Provides a foundation to treat general phenomena in materials science and engineering, including chemical reactions, magnetism, polarizability, and elasticity. Develops relations pertaining to multiphase equilibria as determined by a treatment of solution thermodynamics. Develops graphical constructions that are essential for the interpretation of phase diagrams. Treatment includes electrochemical equilibria and surface thermodynamics. Introduces aspects of statistical thermodynamics as they relate to macroscopic equilibrium phenomena.

*Some translations represent previous versions of courses.

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