Chemistry 1302A/B Lecture 5: Chem 1302B Lecture 5 (Section 2.1/ 2.2)

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Intensive property: a physical property that does not depend on the amount of material in the system. ( density, temperature) Extensive property: a physical property who"s value is proportional to the size of the system. (volume, energy, entropy) State functions depend only on the present state of the system; it doesn"t matter how it got there. Examples include: pressure, temperature, internal energy, enthalpy. Eg: the money in your wallet, (100$) that is the state of your nances. The total energy of a system and its surroundings is conserved. Energy can be converted from one form to another but it cannot be created or destroyed. Work w" is de ned as the product of force acting on an object and the distance d" it moves in response to the force. Chemists are interested in pressure-volume (pv) work, the work involved in the expansion or compression of gas. If system does work on the surroundings, w" is negative (-)

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