CLASSICAL THERMODYNAMICS

'Classical thermodynamics' is a branch of physics developed in the nineteenth century, by Sadi Carnot (1824), Emile Clapeyron (1834), Rudolf Clausius (1850), Willard Gibbs (1876), Hermann von Helmholtz (1882), and others that studied heat and work and their relation to the collision and interaction of particles in large, near-equilibrium systems.
The term ''classical thermodynamics'' is used in distinction to statistical thermodynamics, which came to be pioneered from the 1860s onwards. Statistical thermodynamics analyses thermodynamic properties by relating them to molecular-level models of microscopic behaviour in the thermodynamic system. In contrast, classical thermodynamics analyses what can be deduced solely from the macroscopic properties of the system and the laws of thermodynamics, regardless of microscopic interpretation.

Contents
Branches of

Branches of


The following list gives a rough outline as to when the major branches of thermodynamics came into inception:

Thermochemistry - 1780s

Classical thermodynamics - 1824

Phenomenological thermodynamics

Chemical thermodynamics - 1876

Statistical thermodynamics - c. 1880s

Equilibrium thermodynamics

Engineering thermodynamics

Psychodynamics - c. 1920s

Chemical engineering thermodynamics - c. 1940s

Non-equilibrium thermodynamics - 1941

Small systems thermodynamics - 1960s

Biological thermodynamics - 1957

Ecosystem thermodynamics - 1959

Relativistic thermodynamics - 1965

Quantum thermodynamics - 1968

Molecular thermodynamics - 1969

Thermoeconomics - c. 1970s

Black hole thermodynamics - c. 1970s

Geological thermodynamics - c. 1970s

Biological evolution thermodynamics - 1978

Geochemical thermodynamics - c. 1980s

Atmospheric thermodynamics - c. 1980s

Natural systems thermodynamics - 1990s

Supramolecular thermodynamics - 1990s

Earthquake thermodynamics - 2000

Drug-receptor thermodynamics - 2001

Pharmaceutical systems thermodynamics – 2002

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