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Title: Chapter 4: Matter and Heat Part 2


1
Chapter 4 Matter and Heat Part 2
  • Alyssa Jean-Mary

2
The Kinetic Theory of Matter
  • The kinetic theory of matter involves a simple
    model that accounts for many physical and
    chemical properties of matter.
  • This model says that all matter is composed of
    tiny particles.
  • For a gas, these particles are referred to as
    molecules, which are substances that consist of
    two or more atoms.
  • For liquids and solids, the particles can be one
    of three types molecules, atoms, or ions.

3
The Kinetic Theory of Gases
  • The sizes, speeds, and shapes of the molecules of
    many kinds of matter are known today
  • For example, a molecule of Nitrogen, which is the
    chief constituent of air, is about 1.8 x 10-10m
    across. It has a mass of about 4.7 x 10-26kg. At
    0C, its average speed is about 500m/s, which is
    about the speed of a rifle bullet. Every second a
    molecule of Nitrogen collides with more than a
    billion other molecules. Most of the other
    constituents of air have a similar size and speed
    to that of Nitrogen. For every cubic centimeter
    of air, there are 2.7 x 1019 other molecules
    present. To get an idea of how many molecules
    this is if all of the molecules that are present
    in a cubic centimeter of air were divided equally
    amount 6.3 billion people, each person would have
    over 4 billion molecules of air.

4
The Three Basic Assumptions of the Kinetic Theory
of Gases
  • There are three basic assumptions that apply to
    the Kinetic Theory of gases
  • 1. Gas molecules are small compared to the
    average distance between them.
  • 2. Gas molecules collide with each other without
    losing kinetic energy.
  • 3. Gas molecules exert almost no force on one
    another, except when they collide with each
    other.
  • These assumptions have been verified by
    experimentation
  • These assumptions show us that a gas is mainly
    empty space in which isolated particles are all
    moving around in different directions. Therefore,
    we can compare a gas to a swarm of angry bees
    that is in a closed room. Each molecule collides
    with other molecules about billions of times a
    second. Theses collisions change the speed and
    direction of the molecule, but when they arent
    colliding, they are unaffected by their
    neighbors. There is no order to the motion of
    these objects. They have no uniform speed or
    direction. All that can be said about the
    molecules is that they have an average speed and
    that, at any given instant, there are as many
    molecules moving in one direction as there are
    molecules moving in the opposite direction.
  • If a molecule comes to a rest momentarily, it
    will not stay that way long i.e. another
    molecule will soon collide with it to send it
    back into motion.
  • Also, if a molecule reaches a speed than the
    average speed of the molecules, it will not stay
    that way long either i.e. other collisions will
    slow its speed.

5
Properties of Gases from the Kinetic Theory of
Gases
  • Gases can expand and even leak through a small
    opening because of their rapid movement and the
    fact that they dont have a strong attraction for
    each other
  • Gases can be easily compressed because on
    average, there molecules are far apart from each
    other
  • One gas will mix with another gas because, since
    the molecules are far apart from each other,
    there is plenty of space in between them for
    other molecules
  • The mass of a certain volume of a gas is much
    less than the mass of the same volume of a liquid
    or a solid because a gas is mainly empty space

6
The Origin of Boyles Law
  • A gas exerts a pressure on the walls of its
    container because the billions and billions
    molecules of the gas consistently hit the
    container. When we measure these billions and
    billions of tiny, separate hits of the molecules,
    what we see is that a continuous force is
    affecting the walls of the container.
  • The Kinetic Theory of Gases accounts for Boyles
    Law, which states that p1V1 p2V2 when the gas
    is at constant temperature
  • Think of the molecules of a gas in a cylinder as
    some moving vertically (i.e. in between the
    piston and the bottom of the cylinder) and as
    some moving horizontally (i.e. in between the
    walls of the cylinder) the molecules are moving
    equally in either direction. Now, if the piston
    is raised, which doubles the volume of the gas,
    the molecules that are moving vertically are
    going to have to travel further, which means that
    they will not hit the piston or the bottom of the
    container as much as they used to they will
    actually hit the container half as much. The
    molecules moving horizontally will also have to
    change their bombardment of the walls of the
    container because now they have more of the walls
    to interact with. Since these molecules will need
    to hit an area that is twice as big as before,
    the number of hits on the walls of the container
    will decrease just as those for the molecules
    with vertical motion did. This shows that the
    pressure in all parts of the cylinder (vertical
    and horizontal) is cut in half when the volume is
    doubled, which is what Boyles Law predicts. This
    can be expanded to a real gas that has molecules
    that are moving in random motion.

7
Molecular Motion and Temperature
  • A fourth assumption is added to the Kinetic
    Theory of gases
  • 4. The absolute temperature of a gas is
    proportional to the average kinetic energy of the
    molecules of the gas
  • This assumption was added to account for the
    behavior of a gas with a change in temperature
  • Since this shows that temperature is related to
    the energy of the molecules, it also is related
    to the speed of the molecules. Thus, if the
    pressure inside a container increases, the
    temperature inside that container also increases.
    This is because when the pressure increases, the
    molecules must be hitting the walls of the
    container with more force, which means that they
    are moving faster.
  • Earlier, we saw that if the temperature of a gas
    is at 0K (or -273C), the pressure of the gas is
    at zero. For this to occur, the bombardment of
    the molecules must stop completely. So, at 0K
    (i.e. absolute zero), the molecules of a gas
    would lose all of their kinetic energy. (This is
    a simplified idea since in reality, even at 0K,
    there will be a small amount of KE that will
    never be able to disappear.) The reason that
    there is no temperature below 0K is that there is
    simply no way to have less than no kinetic
    energy. Thus, if there is constant volume, an
    increase in the pressure of the gas will increase
    the temperature of the gas, and if there is
    constant pressure, an increase in the volume of
    the gas will increase the temperature of the gas.

8
The Origin of Charless Law
  • When a gas is compressed, since the temperature
    of the gas is the measure of the average kinetic
    energy of the molecules of the gas, the
    temperature in the cylinder should rise
  • Put a gas in a cylinder with a piston on top.
    When the piston is moving down, thus increasing
    the pressure inside the cylinder, the molecules
    rebound from the piston with an increase in
    energy, which causes an increase in the
    temperature of the gas. This can be shown when
    using a bicycle tire pump after you have used
    the pump for awhile, you will notice that it gets
    warmer because of the compression of the gas
    inside as the pump is being used. Also, when the
    piston is moving up, which decreases the pressure
    inside the cylinder, the molecules will give up
    some of their kinetic energy to the piston, which
    will cause the temperature of the gas to
    decrease.
  • Thus, as a gas expands, it cools. This can
    explain the formation of clouds from rising moist
    air.
  • As moist air is moving upward, since the
    atmospheric pressure is decreasing, the water
    vapor in the moist air is cooling, until it
    condenses into the water droplets that constitute
    clouds.

9
Liquids and Solids Intermolecular Forces
  • If you compare a gas to a swarm of angry bees,
    then a liquid is bees in their hive, crawling
    constantly over one another.
  • The molecules in a liquid slide past one another
    easily, which is why liquids flow. Liquids flow
    less readily than gases do because of the
    intermolecular attractions that act only over
    short distances.
  • The molecules in a solid are held together with a
    stronger force than those that hold together
    liquids. Actually, this force is so strong that
    the molecules of solids are not free to move
    about. The molecules of solids still move,
    however they vibrate back and forth rapidly
    between the particles that they are in between,
    as if they were on a spring. This spring
    represents the bond that is between two
    molecules. This bond is electrical in nature.
  • The reason why a solid is elastic is because
    after the molecules have been pulled apart or
    pushed together by some force, the molecules
    return to their original positions, with the
    normal amount of space between the molecules
    instead of too much or too less. A force that is
    too great may deform the solid permanently. When
    this occurs, the molecules move to new normal
    positions and find new molecules to bond with. A
    solid can actually break apart if too much force
    is applied.

10
Evaporation Changing a Liquid into a Gas
  • A liquid is placed in an open container. The
    molecules of the liquid are moving in all
    directions in the dish, some moving faster than
    others. Some of the molecules are moving fast
    enough upward to escape into the air. They escape
    into the air even though they have an attraction
    to their neighbor molecules because the
    attraction is not enough to stop them from
    escaping. This loss of molecules to the air is
    referred to as evaporation. Since it is the
    faster molecules, and thus, the warmer molecules
    that escape into the air, the slower molecules
    are left behind in the liquid, which makes the
    liquid cool.
  • If you compare the evaporation of water to
    alcohol, you see that alcohol evaporates more
    quickly than water, and thus, cools more quickly
    than water. This is because the attraction liquid
    alcohol molecules have for one another is less
    than the attraction liquid water molecules have
    for one another, and thus a greater number of
    alcohol molecules can escape.

11
Boiling Changing a Liquid into a Gas
  • When a liquid is heated, at a certain
    temperature, even molecules that are traveling at
    average speed (i.e. not only the molecules that
    are traveling at high speeds) can overcome the
    attraction between their neighbor molecules and
    escape into the air. At this temperature, there
    are bubbles of gas throughout the liquid, and
    thus, the liquid is boiling. Therefore, this
    temperature is referred to the boiling point of
    the liquid.
  • The boiling point of water is 100C, which is
    higher than the boiling point of alcohol, which
    is 78C. This reinforces the idea that alcohol
    evaporates more quickly than water.
  • Evaporation and boiling differ in the following
    two ways
  • 1. Evaporation occurs only at the surface of the
    liquid, whereas boiling occurs throughout the
    entire liquid.
  • 2. Evaporation occurs at all temperatures,
    whereas boiling only occurs at the boiling point
    or temperatures above the boiling point.

12
Heat of Vaporization
  • To change a liquid to a gas, whether by
    evaporation or boiling, energy is needed
  • For evaporation, the energy is supplied from the
    heat content of the liquid itself, which is why
    the liquid that is left behind is cooler
  • For boiling, the energy is supplied from heat
    from an outside source
  • The heat of vaporization of a substance is the
    amount of energy that is needed to change each
    kilogram of liquid into gas at its boiling point
  • For water at its boiling point, 100C, the heat
    of vaporization is 2260kJ
  • The temperature of a liquid and its gas are not
    different. Because of this, the kinetic energy
    that the liquid has is the same amount of kinetic
    energy that its gas has. Thus, the extra energy
    that is supplied to the liquid to turn it into a
    gas does not go into the kinetic energy of the
    gas. Because the molecules in a liquid are closer
    together, the intermolecular forces in a liquid
    are stronger than those in a gas. In order to
    change a liquid into a gas, the molecules of the
    liquid have to be broken apart and moved so that
    they are in positions that are far apart from
    each other, and thus have smaller attractions for
    each other. This requires that the strong forces
    between molecules in a liquid need to be
    overcome. The molecules of the liquid that are
    moving apart to become gas molecules are gaining
    potential energy, just like a stone that is
    thrown upward against the earths gravity gains
    potential energy, except this is potential energy
    with respect to intermolecular forces. Thus, the
    extra energy that is supplied to the liquid to
    turn it into a gas becomes potential energy of
    the gas.
  • When the reverse occurs, i.e. when a gas becomes
    a liquid, instead of the liquid molecules
    escaping from the liquid into the air, the gas
    molecules are falling toward one another because
    of their attraction to one another. When this
    occurs, the potential energy that the gas
    molecules are losing is taken up as heat by the
    surroundings.

13
Melting Changing a Solid into a Liquid
  • Heat is needed to change a solid into a liquid at
    its melting point, just like heat is needed to
    change a liquid to a gas at its boiling point
  • The heat of fusion of a substance is the amount
    of heat that is needed to change each kilogram of
    solid into liquid at its melting point
  • For water at its melting point, the heat of
    fusion is 335kJ/kg
  • Most other substances have a lower heat of fusion
    than water
  • The same amount of heat that is needed to change
    one kilogram of a solid to a liquid has to be
    released in order to change one kilogram of a
    liquid into a solid
  • The heat of fusion of a substance is always much
    smaller than the heat of vaporization of the
    substance
  • The molecules of a solid are arranged in such a
    way that they have the maximum amount of force
    between themselves and their neighbors. To become
    a liquid, the molecules of a solid have to become
    more random, to be able to move about more. To do
    this, energy needs to be added so that the forces
    between the molecules of a solid are overcome.
    But, the amount of energy that is needed to do
    this is not as much as for a liquid to become a
    gas since a liquid still has a definite volume,
    even if it doesnt have a definite shape, unlike
    a gas, which has no definite shape or volume.
    Since the molecules of a gas are so far apart,
    they move more freely and thus, can expand. In a
    vacuum, the molecules of a gas could expand
    indefinitely.

14
Water
  • If we start with 1kg of ice at -50C, and we add
    heat, the ice will increase in temperature until
    0C (i.e. the melting point of water), which is
    when it will start to melt. The temperature will
    remain at 0C until all of the ice has melting.
    After all of the ice has melted, and thus, has
    become water, the temperature of the water will
    increase until 100C (i.e. the boiling point of
    water) is reached, which is when it will start
    boiling. The amount of energy that is required at
    this point (i.e. to turn the water into steam) is
    a lot more than the amount of energy that was
    required to melt the ice. The temperature will
    remain at 100C until all the water has become
    steam, and then, the temperature of the steam
    will rise since more heat is still being added.

15
Sublimation
  • Sublimation occurs when a solid turns directly
    into a gas, without first turning into a liquid.
  • Most substances will sublime as long as the right
    conditions of temperature and pressure are
    present.
  • Usually pressures well under atmospheric pressure
    are needed in order for sublimation to occur.
  • One example of an exception is solid carbon
    dioxide, which is also referred to as dry ice.
    Solid carbon dioxide sublimes (i.e. turns into a
    gas) at temperatures above -79C, even if it is
    at atmospheric pressure
  • Instant coffee can be made using sublimation.
    Coffee is first brewed, and then it is frozen.
    Following that, it is put into a vacuum chamber.
    The ice that is in the frozen coffee sublimes to
    water vapor, which is pumped away. Freeze drying
    coffee like this doesnt affect the flavor of the
    coffee as much as when you dry it by heating. The
    process of freeze drying is also used to preserve
    many other materials, including blood plasma.

16
Changes of State
17
Energy Transformations
  • Remember that any form of energy can be converted
    into another form of energy. This applies to
    heat, since it is a form of energy. The
    conversion of heat to another form of energy does
    not occur efficiently.
  • For example, mechanical energy is obtained by
    heat that is given off from burning coal and oil
    in various types of engines. A large amount of
    the heat that is given off does not get changed
    into mechanical energy it is wasted. In an
    electric power station, about two-thirds of the
    heat is wasted. This is a serious situation since
    these loses occur on the raw energy that is
    available to us.
  • This inefficient conversion of heat in engines
    was discovered in the nineteenth century, at the
    start of the Industrial Revolution. The loss of
    heat is not due to poor design or construction of
    the engines it is just because heat cant be
    converted to another form of energy without these
    losses. The reasons for this inefficient
    conversion was studied by engineers to get as
    much mechanical energy as they could out of a
    given amount of fuel and by scientists to study
    the properties of heat. What was learned was for
    the idea that heat is actually the kinetic energy
    of random molecular motion.

18
Heat Engines
  • Since all that is needed to obtain heat is to
    burn a fuel, heat is an easy and a cheap form of
    energy to obtain
  • A heat engine is a device that turns heat into
    mechanical energy
  • Some examples of heat engines are the gasoline
    and diesel engines of cars, the jet engines of
    aircraft, and the steam turbines of ships and
    power stations.
  • All engines operate in the same basic way a gas
    is heated and then it expands against a piston or
    the blades of a turbine
  • When a gas in a cylinder on top of which is a
    piston is heated, since the temperature of the
    gas is increasing, the pressure of the gas is
    increasing, which makes the piston move upward.
    This upward movement is what is used to make use
    of an engine. When the piston reaches the top of
    the cylinder, the conversion of heat into
    mechanical energy stops since the piston stops
    moving. If we want to continue to make use of an
    engine, we need to push the piston back down
    again. Then, we can start another cycle to expand
    the gas.
  • If the piston is pushed back down to continue the
    cycle when the gas is still hot, the amount of
    work that needs to be done is the same as the
    amount of energy that was produced by the
    expansion of the gas. This means that if it is
    pushed back down when the gas is still hot, no
    net work will be done. Thus, for some work to be
    done, the gas first must be cooled so that there
    is less work required for the piston to be pushed
    back down. This is where the heat is lost in an
    engine. Thus, if you want an engine to continue
    to work, there is no way to prevent this heat
    loss. The heat that is lost usually ends up in
    the atmosphere around the engine, in the water of
    a nearby river, or in the ocean.

19
The Complete Cycle of Heat Engines
  • In the compete cycle of an engine, heat flows
    into and out of the engine. During this process,
    some of the heat is converted into mechanical
    energy.
  • In order for an engine to operate, both a hot
    reservoir and a cold reservoir are needed. A gas
    flows naturally from the hot reservoir to the
    cold reservoir.
  • In a gasoline or diesel engine, the hot reservoir
    is the burning gases of the power stroke, and the
    cold reservoir is the atmosphere.
  • Even though a vast amount of heat is contained in
    the molecular motions of the atmosphere, the
    oceans, and the earth itself, it is only rarely
    used because a colder reservoir is needed for the
    heat to flow into.
  • A refrigerator is the reserve of a heat engine.
    It uses mechanical energy to push heat from a
    cold reservoir to a warm reservoir. Energy is
    required for this movement because heat naturally
    flows from a warm reservoir to a cold one. Since
    there is a large amount of energy that is needed
    to drive a refrigerator, it is not a good cold
    reservoir for an engine to use.

20
Thermodynamics
  • Thermodynamics is the study of heat
    transformation
  • There are two fundamental laws of thermodynamics
  • 1. Energy cannot be created or destroyed, but it
    can be converted from one form to another.
  • 2. It is impossible to take heat from a source
    and change all of it to mechanical energy or
    work some heat must be wasted.
  • As you can see, the first law of thermodynamics
    is actually the law of conservation of energy. It
    basically is saying that we cannot obtain
    anything from nothing.
  • The second law of thermodynamics referrers only
    to heat. It says that the conversion of heat into
    another form of energy is inefficient.
  • Thermodynamics specifies the maximum efficiency
    of a heat engine only by ignoring the losses to
    friction and some other practical difficulties.
    The maximum efficiency depends only on the
    absolute temperatures of the hot reservoir and
    the cold reservoir by which the engine operates
  • Maximum efficiency (work output/energy
    input)maximum
  • OR
  • Eff(max) 1 (Tcold/Thot)
  • where Eff(max) is the maximum efficiency, Tcold
    is the temperature of the cold reservoir, and
    Thot is the temperature of the hot reservoir
  • This equation shows that the greater the ratio
    between the two temperatures, the less heat is
    wasted, and therefore, the more efficient the
    engine is.

21
A Steam Turbine
  • A steam turbine is what is used in a power
    station. The steam comes from a boiler that is
    heated by either a coal furnace, a oil furnace, a
    gas furnace, or a nuclear reactor. The turbine
    shaft is connected to an electric generator. In a
    typical power station, the steam enters the
    turbine at about 570C (843K) and exits at about
    95C (368K) into a partial vacuum. The maximum
    efficiency of a turbine like this is equal to 1
    (368K/843K) or 0.56, so the maximum efficiency
    is 56 percent. The actual efficiency is less than
    40 percent due to friction and other sources of
    energy loss.
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