A thermodynamic system can be identified or described in various ways. Most directly, it can be identified by a suitable set of state variables. Less directly, it can be described by a suitable set of quantities that includes state variables and state functions. The primary or original identification of the thermodynamic state of a body of matter is by directly measurable ordinary physical quantities. For some simple purposes, for a given body of given chemical constitution, a sufficient set of such quantities is 'volume and pressure'. Besides the directly measurable ordinary physical variables that originally identify a thermodynamic state of a system, the system is characterized by further quantities called
state functions, which are also called state variables, thermodynamic variables, state quantities, or functions of state. They are uniquely determined by the thermodynamic state as it has been identified by the original state variables. There are many such state functions. Examples are
internal energy,
enthalpy,
Helmholtz free energy,
Gibbs free energy,
thermodynamic temperature, and
entropy. For a given body, of a given chemical constitution, when its thermodynamic state has been fully defined by its pressure and volume, then its temperature is uniquely determined. Thermodynamic temperature is a specifically thermodynamic concept, while the original directly measureable state variables are defined by ordinary physical measurements, without reference to thermodynamic concepts; for this reason, it is helpful to regard thermodynamic temperature as a state function. A passage from a given initial thermodynamic state to a given final thermodynamic state of a thermodynamic system is known as a thermodynamic process; usually this is transfer of matter or energy between system and surroundings. In any thermodynamic process, whatever may be the intermediate conditions during the passage, the total respective change in the value of each thermodynamic state variable depends only on the initial and final states. For an idealized
continuous or quasi-static process, this means that
infinitesimal incremental changes in such variables are
exact differentials. Together, the incremental changes throughout the process, and the initial and final states, fully determine the idealized process. In the most commonly cited simple example, an
ideal gas, the thermodynamic variables would be any three variables out of the following four:
amount of substance,
pressure,
temperature, and
volume. Thus, the thermodynamic state would range over a three-dimensional state space. The remaining variable, as well as other quantities such as the
internal energy and the
entropy, would be expressed as state functions of these three variables. The state functions satisfy certain universal constraints, expressed in the
laws of thermodynamics, and they depend on the peculiarities of the materials that compose the concrete system. Various
thermodynamic diagrams have been developed to model the transitions between thermodynamic states. ==Equilibrium state==