Classical thermodynamics

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Classical thermodynamics is a branch of physics developed in the nineteenth century, by those as Sadi Carnot (1824), Emile Clapeyron (1834), Rudolf Clausius (1850), and others that studies heat and work and their relation to the collision and interaction of particles in large, near-equilibrium systems.

The term classical thermodynamics is used in distinction to statistical thermodynamics, which came to be pioneered from the 1860s onwards. Statistical thermodynamics analyses thermodynamic properties by relating them to molecular-level models of microscopic behaviour in the thermodynamic system. In contrast, classical thermodynamics analyses what can be deduced solely from the macroscopic properties of the system and the laws of thermodynamics, regardless of microscopic interpretation.

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