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Physical Chemistry     38


        of material doubles the mass. The internal energy is another example of an extensive
        property. The value of an intensive property is independent of the amount of material
        present. An example is the temperature or the density of a substance.
           An important classification of thermodynamic properties is whether  they  are  state
        functions or path functions. If the value of a particular property for a system depends
        solely on the state of the system at that time, then such a property is referred to as a state
        function. Examples of state functions are volume, pressure, internal energy and entropy.
        Where a property depends upon the path by which a system in one state is changed into
        another state, then that property is referred to as a path function. Work and heat are both
        examples of path functions.  The  distinction is important because in performing
        calculations upon state functions, no account of how the state of interest was prepared is
        necessary (Fig. 2).


                                       The first law

        The  first law of thermodynamics states that  ‘The  total energy of an isolated
        thermodynamic system is constant’. The law is often referred to as the conservation of
        energy, and implies the popular interpretation of the first law, namely  that  ‘energy
        cannot be created or destroyed’. In other words, energy may be lost from a system in
        only two ways, either as work or as heat. As a result of this, it is possible to describe a
        change in the total internal energy as the sum of energy lost or gained as work and heat,
        since U cannot change in any other way. Thus, for a finite change:
           ∆U=q+w

        where q is the heat supplied to the system, and w is the work done on the system. As with
        ∆U, q and w are positive if energy is gained by the system as heat




















                              Fig. 2. Altitude as a state function. At
                              latitudes and longitudes (X1, Y1) and
                              (X2, Y2) the corresponding altitudes at
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