What are Thermodynamic Coordinates and Why are Heat and Work Not Included?

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Thermodynamic coordinates are specific variables, such as temperature, volume, and pressure, that define the state of a system. Unlike heat and work, which are energy transfers, thermodynamic coordinates are properties that can be expressed as functions of state. For example, the temperature of a gas can be described using just volume and pressure. Heat and work are not included as thermodynamic coordinates because they do not represent energy stored within the system but rather energy in transit. Understanding these distinctions is crucial for analyzing thermodynamic processes effectively.
renhoran
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i don't really understand which quantities are thermodinamic coordinates and which are not. and what makes work and heat are not thermodinamic coordinates but temperature, volume, etc are thermodinamic coordinates?
 
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What do you mean by "thermodynamic coordinates"? If you mean those P-V, T-S, P-H diagrams and such then work and heat are as a result of the changes in pressure, temperature, enthalpy and so on.

So it makes more sense to plot state changes rather than the work done in the process.
 
Take the simple example of a sample of gas with a fixed number of molecules. It need not be ideal. Its temperature, T, can be expressed as a function of just two variables, volume, V, and pressure, p. We can, it turns out, express all gas properties as functions of just two variables (such as p and V or p and T). These properties include refractive index, viscosity, internal energy, entropy, enthalpy, the Helmholtz function, the Gibbs function. We call these properties 'functions of state'. The state is determined by the values of just two variables.

Heat and work are not functions of state. They are not properties of the gas. They both represent energy in transit to or from the system, not energy residing in the system.
 
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