An appreciation of thermodynamics is required to become a chemical and biomolecular engineer. Thermodynamics can assess the viability of a process and is one of the curriculum's most essential topics. The principles are utilized in following engineering courses (kinetics, mass transfer, design, materials) and are applicable to numerous engineering disciplines. The increased emphasis on energy usage and transformation as a result of rising demand, diminishing supply, and global warming necessitates that the engineers who will tackle these issues have a firm grasp of thermodynamics.
The first and second laws will be studied in this course. Non-ideal features of single-component and multicomponent systems will be emphasized. A substantial portion of the course is devoted to solution thermodynamics, which is crucial for separations (e.g., distillation, extraction, membranes), and chemical equilibrium, which is crucial for reaction engineering.
"A theory is more striking when its premises are simpler, when it relates more diverse types of things, and when its scope of applicability is broader. Consequently, the profound impact that classical thermodynamics had on me. It is the only physical theory with universal content that I am confident, within the range of its applicability, will never be overthrown."
— Albert Einstein
What's included
3 videos1 reading1 assignment
Show info about module content
3 videos•Total 53 minutes
1-1 The Nature of Thermodynamics•23 minutes
1-2 The Internal Energy•13 minutes
1-3 The Basic Problem of Thermodynamics•18 minutes
1 reading•Total 10 minutes
Quiz 1. Problem & Solution•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 60 minutes
Quiz 1.•60 minutes
Week 2
Module 2•3 hours to complete
Module details
What's included
7 videos1 reading1 assignment
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 99 minutes
2-1 Basic Concepts•27 minutes
2-2 Work & Heat (1)•16 minutes
2-3 Work & Heat (2)•11 minutes
2-4 The First Law•14 minutes
2-5 Internal Energy•8 minutes
2-6 Internal Energy & Constant Volume Process•13 minutes
The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) was established in 1971 by the Korean government as the nation’s first research-intensive graduate school for science, engineering and technology. It has now grown into one of the world’s best universities, delivering top notch education and research programs for undergraduate and graduate students. KAIST encourages interdisciplinary and convergent research across a wide spectrum of disciplines, as well as strong collaborations with industry and global institutions.
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Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology(KAIST)
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