- Principle of maximum work
In the
history of science , the principle of maximum work was a postulate concerning the relationship betweenchemical reaction s,heat evolution, and the potential work produced there from. The principle was developed in approximate form in 1875 by French chemistMarcellin Berthelot , in the field ofthermochemistry , and then later in 1876 by American mathematical physicistWillard Gibbs , in the field ofthermodynamics , in a more accurate form. Berthelot's version was essentially: "every pure chemical reaction is accompanied by evolution of heat." (and that this yields the maximum amount of work). The effects ofirreversibility , however, showed this version to be incorrect. This was rectified, in thermodynamics, by incorporating the concept ofentropy .Overview
Berthelot independently enunciated a generalization (commonly known as Berthelot's Third Principle, or Principle of Maximum Work), which may be stated in brief as follows: - Every pure chemical reaction is accompanied by evolution of heat. Whilst this principle is undoubtedly applicable to the great majority of chemical actions under ordinary conditions, it is subject to numerous exceptions, and cannot therefore be taken (as its authors originally intended) as a secure basis for theoretical reasoning on the connexion between thermal effect and chemical affinity. The existence of reactions which are reversible on slight alteration of conditions at once invalidates the principle, for if the action proceeding in one direction evolves heat, it must absorb heat when proceeding in the reverse direction. As the principle was abandoned even by its authors, it is now only of historical importance, although for many years it exerted considerable influence on thermochemical research. [
Encyclopedia Britannica 1911]Thus, to summarize, in 1875 by the French chemist
Marcellin Berthelot which stated thatchemical reaction s will tend to yield the maximum amount of chemical energy in the form of work as the reaction progresses.In 1876, however, through the works of
Willard Gibbs and others to follow, the work principle was found to be a particular case of a more general statement:The principle of maximum work was a precursor to the development of the thermodynamic concept of free energy.
Thermochemistry
In
thermodynamics , theGibbs free energy orHelmholtz free energy is essentially the energy of a chemical reaction "free" or available to do external work. Historically, the "free energy" is a more advanced and accurate replacement for thethermochemistry term “affinity ” used by chemists of olden days to describe the “force” that causedchemical reaction s. The term dates back to at least the time ofAlbertus Magnus in 1250.According to Nobelist and chemical engineering professor
Ilya Prigogine : “as motion was explained by the Newtonian concept of force, chemists wanted a similar concept of ‘driving force’ for chemical change? Why do chemical reactions occur, and why do they stop at certain points? Chemists called the ‘force’ that caused chemical reactions affinity, but it lacked a clear definition. [Source: Ilya Prigogine's 1998 textbook "Modern Thermodynamics"]During the entire 18th century, the dominant view in regard to heat and light was that put forward by
Isaac Newton , called the “Newtonian hypothesis”, which stated that light and heat are forms of matter attracted or repelled by other forms of matter, with forces analogous to gravitation or to chemical affinity.In the 19th century, the French chemist
Marcellin Berthelot and the Danish chemistJulius Thomsen had attempted to quantifychemical affinity using heats of reaction. In 1875, after quantifying the heats of reaction for a large number of compounds, Berthelot proposed the “principle of maximum work” in which all chemical changes occurring without intervention of outside energy tend toward the production of bodies or of a system of bodies which liberateheat .Thermodynamics
With the development of the first two
laws of thermodynamics in the 1850s and 60s, heats of reaction and the work associated with these processes were given a more accurate mathematical basis. In 1876,Willard Gibbs unified all of this in his 300-page "On the Equilibrium of Heterogeneous Substances". Suppose , for example, we have a general thermodynamic system, called the "primary" system and that we mechanically connect it to a "reversible work source". A reversible work source is a system which, when it does work, or has work done to it, does not change its entropy. It is therefore not aheat engine and does not suffer dissipation due to friction or heat exchanges. A simple example would be a frictionless spring, or a weight on a pully in a gravitational field. Suppose further, that we thermally connect the primary system to a third system, a "reversible heat source". A reversible heat source may be thought of as a heat source in which all transformations are reversible. For such a source, the heat energy δQ added will be equal to the temperature of the source (T) times the increase in its entropy. (If it were an irreversible heat source, the entropy increase would be larger than δQ/T)Define:
:
We may now make the following statements
:
Eliminating , , and gives the following equation:
:
When the primary system is reversible, the equality will hold and the amount of work delivered will be a maximum. Note that this will hold for "any" reversible system which has the same values of "dU" and "dS" .
ee also
*
Chemical thermodynamics
*Thomsen-Berthelot principle
*Thermochemistry References
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