Prologue
1: THE ZEROTH LAW: the concept of temperature
2: THE FIRST LAW: the conservation of energy
3: THE SECOND LAW: the increase in entropy
4: FREE ENERGY: the availability of work
5: THE THIRD LAW: the unattainability of zero
Conclusion
Peter Atkins is the author of about 70 books, including the
world-renowned and widely used Physical Chemistry, now in its 10th
edition. He won the Grady-Stack award for science journalism in
2016. After graduating from the University of Leicester and a
post-doctoral year in the University of California, Los Angeles, he
returned to Oxford in 1965 as Fellow of Lincoln College and
University Lecturer (later Professor) in physical chemistry. He
retired in
2007, but continues to write and lecture worldwide.
His engaging account...the lucid figures offer readers a firm understanding of energy and entropy. Science Concise, well-written, engaging and carefully structured... an enjoyable and informative read. Chemistry World Peter Atkins's account of the core concepts of thermodynamics is beautifully crafted. Simon Mitton, THES A brief and invigoratingly limpid guide to the laws of thermodynamics. Saturday Guardian Atkins's systematic foundations should go a long way towards easing confusion about the subject...an engaging book, just the right length (and depth) for an absorbing, informative read. Mark Haw, Nature [Atkins'] ultra-compact guide to thermodynamics [is] a wonderful book that I wish I had read at university. New Scientist
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