We can write first law of thermodynamics in two forms. dU=TdS−pdV and dU=dq+dw It is also true that dw=−pdV therefore TdS=dq for every process irrespective of reversibility. What I am missing here?

dannyboi2006tk

dannyboi2006tk

Answered question

2022-10-05

We can write first law of thermodynamics in two forms.
d U = T d S p d V
and
d U = d q + d w
It is also true that dw=−pdV therefore TdS=dq for every process irrespective of reversibility. What I am missing here?

Answer & Explanation

Demarion Thornton

Demarion Thornton

Beginner2022-10-06Added 11 answers

It is true, for all processes whether reversible or not, that:
d U = T d S P d V = d q + d w
as long as two of the four variables (T,S,V,P) can be defined for the system.
However, it is not true that dq=TdS always; that equality only holds for reversible processes. Likewise, dw=−PdV is only true for reversible processes. If the processes is irreversible, then dq−PdV.
Nevertheless, because of the first law, the sum of dq and dw always equals the change in energy, whether the process is reversible or not:
d U = d q rev + d w rev = d q irrev + d w irrev
which also is equal to TdS−PdV.

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