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Thermodynamics—An Exposition

The American Mathematical Monthly, 1933
(1933). Thermodynamics—An Exposition. The American Mathematical Monthly: Vol. 40, No. 10P1, pp. 580-592.
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Thermodynamics on the Nanoscale

The Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2005
Classical thermodynamics is applied to the melting of nanometer-sized Sn particles with radii in the range 5-50 nm. Such particles display a depression of both the melting point and the latent heat of fusion depending on the particle size. The size dependence can be explained with the formation of a structurally perturbed layer at the particle surface.
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Nixon And Thermodynamics

Hospital Practice, 1988
Abstract Richard Milhous Nixon is not my favorite U.S. President, nor is he my least favorite. He did play a major role in determining my career, however, and I think that the time has come to acknowledge his contribution. I was about to say, “to give the devil his due,” but that would be a more judgmental statement than I wish to make ...
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From irreversible thermodynamics to network thermodynamics

The Journal of Membrane Biology, 1972
Whenever the subject of the thermodynamics of irreversible processes TIP is brought up among biologists, there seems to be a very polarized reaction: some have found it a useful tool, others reject it utterly, and for some reason which I do not understand, even fervently.
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Thermodynamics. II. The extended thermodynamic system

Journal of Mathematical Physics, 1981
The algebraic theory of thermodynamics developed in a previous paper is extended to include the algebraic structure that arises from the introduction of a physical body into the theory. The extension is based on very general definitions of both the thermodynamic states of a body and subsystems of that body. The algebraic analysis, which includes bodies
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Thermodynamics of Bioreactions

Annual Review of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, 2016
Thermodynamic principles have been applied to enzyme-catalyzed reactions since the beginning of the 1930s in an attempt to understand metabolic pathways. Currently, thermodynamics is also applied to the design and analysis of biotechnological processes.
Christoph, Held, Gabriele, Sadowski
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Biochemical thermodynamics

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Protein Structure and Molecular Enzymology, 1994
Biochemists need two types of reaction equations, chemical equations in terms of species and biochemical equations in terms of reactants at specified pH and concentrations of free metal ions that are bound by reactant species. Both types of reaction equations have corresponding equilibrium constants, K for chemical reactions and K' for biochemical ...
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