Chestermiller said:
This is a very restricted version of the first law, based on the following two assumptions:
- The process is reversible
- The system is an ideal gas
We know that the equation is assuming that the process is reversible because it is written in terms of differentials and, more significantly, the differential work dW is expressed as pdv, where, presumably, p is the thermodynamic pressure of the system. For an irreversible process, the internal energy can be established confidently only in the initial and final equilibrium states of the system, which is described by ΔU and not dU.
The system is assumed to be an ideal gas because, for an ideal gas, the internal energy U is a function only of temperature. For real gases (i.e., at pressures beyond the ideal gas limit), liquids, and solids, the internal energy is a function also of volume (or pressure).
For more discussion of these points, please see my Physics Forums Insights article at:
https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/understanding-entropy-2nd-law-thermodynamics/. This article includes a discussion of the first and second laws.
Chet
Thanks Chet, that makes sense about the restricted first law and reversible processes.
I will post my understanding, please let me know of any flaws:
For a reversible process, we can use two variables to define the state of the system (choosing temperature T and specific volume v in this case), then the specific energy:
du = (\frac{\partial u}{\partial T})_v dT + (\frac{\partial u}{\partial v})_T dv
The restricted first law is (pressure is constant throughout the system as the process is reversible):
du = dq - pdv
Setting dv=0 for a constant volume process:
du = dq
Comparing the two equations:
dq = du = (\frac{\partial u}{\partial T})_v dT
Then:
(dq/dT)_v = (du/dT)_v = (\frac{\partial u}{\partial T})_v
Since we know the specific energy depends on temperature alone for a reversible process:
c_v = du/dT = dq/dT
Now, for any reversible process:
du = dq - pdv
Since the specific heat does not depend on volume, we can write for any reversible process:
du = c_v dT - pdv
Recalling dq=du for a constant volume process, but the internal energy depends only on temperature, we can sub du=dq:
dq = c_v dT - pdv
For an ideal gas: Pv=RT (R is the specific gas constant), we have:
dq = c_v dT - \frac{RT}{v} dv
We can divide this by T, so that the entropy is an exact differential for an ideal gas:
(dq/T)_{rev} = \frac{c_v}{T} dT - \frac{R}{v} dv