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Chapter 20 Second Law of Thermodynamics

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Title: Chapter 20 Second Law of Thermodynamics


1
Physics is fun!
2
Chapter 20Second Law of Thermodynamics
3
Introduction
  • Second law of thermodynamics
  • Entropy (S)
  • Heat engines

4
20-1 The Second Law of Thermodynamics --
Introduction
  • The first law of thermodynamics states that
    energy is conserved.
  • Scientists in the 19th century noticed that many
    processes that did not violate the law of
    conservation of energy, never-the-less did not
    occur naturally.
  • They formulated the second law of thermodynamics.
  • Statement of the second law of thermodynamics by
    R.J.E. Clausius (1822 1888)
  • Heat flows naturally from a hot object to a cold
    object heat will not flow spontaneously from a
    cold object to a hot object.

5
20-2 Heat Engines
  • Circa 1700, the steam engine, the first practical
    device to get work from thermal energy was
    developed.
  • The basic idea behind any engine is that
    mechanical energy can be obtained from thermal
    energy only when heat is allowed to flow from a
    high temperature to a low temperature.
  • In that process, heat can be transformed to
    mechanical work.

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Heat Engines
  • By conservation of energy
  • QH W QL.
  • The high and low temperatures TH and TL are
    called the operating temperatures of the engine.
  • We will considering only engines that run in a
    repeating cycle, that is, the system returns
    repeatedly to its starting point, and thus can
    run continuously.
  • Absolute value signs are used because we are
    worried only about the magnitudes.

8
Steam Engine
9
Internal Combustion Engine
  • The material that is heated and cooled, steam in
    the case of a steam engine, is called the working
    substance.
  • In the steam engine, the high temperature is
    obtained by burning one of the four fuels
    mentioned.
  • In an internal combustion engine, the high
    temperature is achieved by burning the
    gasoline-air mixture in the cylinder itself
    (ignited by the spark plug).

10
Efficiency
  • The efficiency of any heat engine, e, can be
    defined as the ratio of the work it does, W, to
    the heat input at the high temperature, QH
  • e
  • Using conservation of energy this works out to
  • e 1 -

W QH
QL QH
11
Example 20-1
  • Car efficiency.
  • An automobile engine has an efficiency of 20
    percent and produces an average of 23,000 J of
    mechanical work per second during operation. How
    much heat is discharged from this engine per
    second?

12
Efficiency
  • The lower we can make QL the more efficient the
    engine will be.
  • If QL could be reduced to zero we would have a
    100 percent efficient engine.
  • Experience has shown however, that it impossible
    to reduce QL to zero.
  • That such a perfect engine, running continuously
    in a cycle (a perpetual motion machine) is not
    possible is another way of expressing the second
    law of thermodynamics.
  • No device is possible whose sole effect is to
    transform a given amount of heat completely into
    work.
  • This is the Kelvin-Planck statement of the second
    law of thermodynamics

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20-3 Reversible and Irreversible Process the
Carnot Engine
  • In the early nineteenth century, the French
    scientist N.L. Sadi Carnot (1796 1832) studied
    in detail the process of transforming heat into
    mechanical energy.
  • Goal to increase inefficiency.
  • In 1824 Carnot invented, on paper, the Carnot
    engine. This is the ideal engine.

16
Reversible and Irreversible Processes
  • The Carnot engine involves reversible processes.
  • A reversible process is one carried out
    infinitely slowly, so that the process can be
    considered as a series of equilibrium states, and
    the whole process could be done in reverse with
    no change in magnitude of the work done or heat
    exchanged.
  • Of course this cannot be done since it would take
    an infinite time.
  • All real processes are irreversible they cannot
    be done infinitely slowly, there can be
    turbulence in the gas, friction will be present,
    and so on.

17
Carnot's Engine
  • The Carnot engine makes use of a reversible
    cycle.
  • This cycle is called the Carnot cycle and the
    working substance is an ideal gas.

18
Carnot Cycle
19
Carnot Efficiency and the Second Law of
Thermodynamics
  • eideal 1 -
    1 -
  • Carnots Theorem
  • All reversible engines operating between the
    same two constant temperatures TH and TL have the
    same efficiency. Any irreversible engine
    operating between the same two temperatures will
    have an efficiency less than this.

TL TH
QL QH
20
Example 20-2
  • Steam engine efficiency.
  • A steam engine operates between 500oC and 270oC.
    What is the maximum possible efficiency of this
    engine?

21
Example 20-3
  • A phony claim?
  • An engine manufacturer makes the following
    claims The heat input per second of the engine
    is 9.0 kJ at 475 K. The heat output per second
    is 4.0 kJ at 325 K. Do you believe these claims?

22
20-4 Refrigerators, Air Conditioners, and Heat
Pumps
  • The operating principle of refrigerators, air
    conditioners, and heat pumps is just the reverse
    of the heat engine.
  • By doing work W, heat is taken from a
    low-temperature region, TL (inside the
    refrigerator), and a greater amount of heat is
    exhausted at a high temperature, TH (into the
    room).
  • The work is usually done by a compressor motor
    that compresses a fluid.
  • A perfect refrigeratorone where no work is
    required to take heat from the low-temperature
    region to the high-temperature regionis not
    possible.

23
Clausius
  • Restatement of Clausius statement of the second
    law of thermodynamics
  • No device is possible whose sole effect is to
    transfer heat from one system at one temperature
    into a second system at a higher temperature.

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Coefficient of Performance (CP)
  • The coefficient of performance for a
    refrigerator is defined as the heat QL removed
    from the low-temperature area (inside a
    refrigerator) divided by the work W done to
    remove the heat.
  • CP

QL W
Refrigerator and air conditioner
27
CP Ideal
  • Energy is conserved, so we can write
  • QH QL W
  • Therefore W QH - QL
  • and CP
  • so CPideal

QL
QL W
QH - QL
TL
TH - TL
28
Coefficient of Performance (CP)
  • The coefficient of performance for a heat pump
    acting as a heater can heat a house in the winter
    by taking heat QL from the outside at low
    temperature and delivering heat QH to the
    warmer inside of the house, by doing work W.
    Thus for a heat pump
  • CP heat pump
  • Most heat pumps can run in reverse and perform as
    an air conditioner.

QH W
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Example 20-5
  • Heat pump.
  • A heat pump has a coefficient of performance of
    3.0 and is rated to do work at 1500 W. (a) How
    much heat can it ass to a room per second? (b)
    If the heat pump were turned around to act as an
    air conditioner in the summer, what would you
    expect its coefficient of performance to be
    assuming all else stays the same?

31
20-5 Entropy
  • When you open a bottle of perfume you can smell
    the aroma as the molecules leave the bottle and
    reach your nose.
  • Why dont they spontaneously go back into the
    bottle?
  • It would not violate the first law of
    thermodynamics.
  • There answer it they can do just that, but they
    most probably will not.
  • The explanation is entropy.

32
Definitions
  • Entropy is
  • a measure of the disorder of a system.
  • a measure of the energy in a system or process
    that is unavailable to do work. In a reversible
    thermodynamic process, entropy is expressed as
    the heat absorbed or emitted divided by the
    absolute temperature.
  • dS dQ/T

33
Entropy
  • The general statement of the quantity, S, entropy
    was introduced by Clausius in the 1860s.
  • DS Sb Sa dS
  • DS is independent of the path between the two
    points a and b. This tells us that the
    difference in entropy between two equilibrium
    systems does not depend on how you get from one
    state tot the other. Thus, entropy is a state
    variable.

b
b
dQ T
reversible processes
a
a
34
20-6 Entropy and the Second Law of Thermodynamics
  • Entropy, S, can be used to define the state of a
    system, along with P, T, V, U, and n.
  • We can calculate entropy only for reversible
    processes.
  • To calculate entropy for an irreversible process
    find a reversible process that takes the system
    between the same two states and calculate the
    entropy.
  • It will be the same as for the irreversible
    process because it depends only on the two states.

35
Example 20-6
  • Entropy change in melting.
  • A 1.00-kg piece of ice melts very slowly to
    water at 0oC. Assume the ice is in contact with
    a heat reservoir whose temperature is only
    infinitesimally greater than 0oC. Determine the
    entropy change of (a) the ice cube, (b) the heat
    reservoir.

36
Example 20-7
  • Entropy change when mixing water.
  • A sample of 50.0 kg of water at 20oC is mixed
    with 50.0 kg of water at 24oC. Estimate the
    change in entropy without using calculus.

37
Example 20-8
  • Entropy changes in a free expansion.
  • Consider the adiabatic free expansion of n moles
    of an ideal gas from volume V1 to volume V2,
    where V2 gt V1, as was discussed in Section 19-7,
    Fig. 19-13. Calculate the change in entropy (a)
    of the gas (b) of the surrounding environment.
    (c) Evaluate DS for 1.00 mole, with V2 V1.

38
Example 20-9
  • Heat conduction.
  • A red-hot 2.0-kg piece of iron at temperature T1
    880 K is thrown into a huge lake whose
    temperature T2 280 K. Assume the lake is so
    large that its temperature rise is insignificant.
    Determine the change in entropy (a) of the iron,
    (b) of the surrounding environment (the lake).

39
Total Entropy
  • For any reversible process
  • DS DSsyst DSenv 0
  • For irreversible processes
  • DS DSsyst DSenv gt 0
  • The second law the entropy of an isolated
    system never decreases. It either stays constant
    (reversible process) or increases (irreversible
    process).
  • Although the entropy in one part of the universe
    may decrease in any process, the entropy of some
    other part of the universe always increases by a
    greater amount, so the total entropy always
    increases.

40
20-7 Order to Disorder
  • The entropy of a system can be considered a
    measure of the disorder of the system.
  • Then the second law of thermodynamics can be
    stated as
  • Natural processes tend to move toward a state of
    greater disorder.

41
The Second Law
  • The second law of thermodynamics can be stated
    in several equivalent ways
  • Heat flows spontaneously from a hot object to a
    cold one, but not the reverse.
  • There cannot be a 100 percent efficient heat
    enginethat is, one that can change a given
    amount of heat completely into work.
  • Natural processes tend to move toward a state of
    greater disorder or greater entropy.

42
20-8 Energy Availability Heat Death
  • In any natural process, some energy becomes
    unavailable to do useful work.
  • As time goes on, energy is degraded, in a sense
    it goes from more orderly forms (such as
    mechanical) eventually to the least orderly form,
    internal or thermal energy.
  • The amount of energy that becomes unavailable to
    do work is proportional to the change in entropy
    during any process.
  • A natural consequence of this is that over time,
    the universe will approach a state of maximum
    disorder.
  • Heat Death!

43
20-9 Statistical Interpretation of Entropy and
the Second Law
  • By Ludwig Boltzmann (1844 1906)
  • The microstate of a system would be specified
    when the position and velocity of every particle
    (or molecule) is the system is specified.
  • The macrostate of a system is specified by giving
    the macrostate properties of the system by using
    state variables, P, T, S, etc.
  • A great many microstates can correspond to the
    same macrostate.

44
Macrostates and Microstates
  • Take four coins and toss them, calling the
    number of heads and tales that show on each toss.

Macrostates Possible
Microstates Number of Microstates 4 heads
HHHH
1 3 heads,
1 tale HHHT, HHTH, HTHH, THHH
4 2 heads, 2 tales HHTT,
HTHT, THHT, HTTH, THTH, TTHH 6 1 head, 3
tales TTTH, TTHT, THTT, HTTT
4 4 tales
TTTT
1
16 possible microstates
5 possible macrostates
45
Macrostates and Microstates
  • Each microstate is equally probable.
  • Thus, the number of microstates that give the
    same macrostate corresponds to the relative
    probability of that state occurring.
  • The macrostate of two heads and two tales is the
    most problem one in this example.
  • Out of a total of 16 possible microstates, six
    correspond to tossing two heads and two tales, so
    the probably of throwing two heads and two tales
    is 6 out of 16, or 38.

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Macrostates and Microstates
  • There are a total of 1030 microstates and 100
    macrostates possible. For 99 heads and 1 tale
    there are 100 microstates possible since each
    coin could come up tales once. But any
    macrostate of 99 heads and 1 tale is equivalent.
  • The probability of all heads is 1 in 1030. NOT a
    good bet!
  • The probability of 50 heads and 50 tales is 1.0 x
    1029/ 1030 0.10 or 10.
  • Therefore as the number of coins increases we see
    the probability or obtaining an orderly
    arrangement of say, 100 heads becomes extremely
    unlikely.

48
Macrostates and Microstates
  • That was for 100 coins. Can you imagine the
    numbers when you have 1030 air molecules in a
    room.
  • The most probable arrangement is the air
    molecules is to take up the whole space and move
    randomly. This is described by the Maxwellian
    distribution.
  • On the other hand a very orderly arrangement of
    all the air molecules concentrated in one corner
    of the room and all moving with the same velocity
    is extremely unlikely.
  • This is why perfume molecules to not go back into
    the bottle. They are allowed to by the first law
    of thermodynamics, but the second law tells us
    that the probability that they will do so is
    essentially zero.

49
Entropy
macroscopic
microscopic
  • S k ln W

W is the number of microstates corresponding to
the macrostate whose entropy is S. That is, it
is proportional to the probably of occurrence of
that state. W is called the thermodynamic
probability.
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Problem Solving Thermodynamics
  • Define the system you are dealing with be
    careful to distinguish the system under study
    from its surroundings.
  • Be careful of the signs associated with work and
    heat. In the first law
  • work, done by the system is positive work done
    on the system is negative.
  • Heat added to the system is positive heat
    removed from the system is negative.
  • With heat engines, we usually consider heat and
    work as positive and write the conservation
    equations with and signs taking into account
    directions.

52
Problem Solving Thermodynamics
  • Watch the units for work and heat work is most
    often expressed in joules, and heat in calories
    or kilocalories. Be consistent choose only one
    unit for use throughout a given problem.
  • Temperatures must generally be expressed in
    kelvins temperature differences may be expressed
    in Co or K.
  • Efficiency (or coefficient of performance) is a
    ratio of two energy transfers useful output
    divided by required input. Efficiency (but not
    coefficient of performance) is always less than 1
    in value and hence is stated as a percentage.

53
Problem Solving Thermodynamics
  • The entropy of a system increases when heat is
    added to the system, and decreases when heat is
    removed. Because entropy is a state variable,
    the range of change in entropy DS for an
    irreversible process can be determined by
    calculating DS for a reversible process between
    the same two states.

54
Homework Problem 4
  • A four-cylinder gasoline engine has an
    efficiency of 0.25 and delivers 180 J of work per
    cycle per cylinder. The engine fires at 25
    cycles per second. (a) Determine the work done
    per second. (b) What is the total heat input per
    second from the gasoline? (c) If the energy
    content of the gasoline is 130 MJ per gallon, how
    long does one gallon last?

55
Homework Problem 13
  • A nuclear power plant operates at 75 percent of
    its maximum theoretical (Carnot) efficiency
    between temperatures of 660oC and 360oC. If the
    plant produces electric energy at the rate of 1.1
    GW, how much exhaust heat is discharged per hour?

56
Homework Problem 27
  • An ideal engine has an efficiency of 35 percent.
    If it were run backward as a heat pump, what
    would be its coefficient of performance?

57
Homework Problem 36
  • If 1.00 kg of water at 100oC is changed by a
    reversible process to steam at 100oC, determine
    the change in entropy of (a) the water, (b) the
    surroundings, and (c) the universe as a whole.
    (d) How would your answers differ if the process
    were irreversible?

58
Richard P. Feynman(1918-1988)Richard Chace
Tolman Professor of Theoretical
PhysicsCalifornia Institute of Technology
Finally may I add that the main purpose of
my teaching has not been to prepare you for some
examination. I wanted most to give you some
appreciation of the wonderful world and the
physicists way of looking at it, which, I
believe, is a major part of the true culture of
modern times. (There are probably professors of
other subjects who would object, but I believe
that they are completely wrong.) Perhaps you
will not only have some appreciation of this
culture it is even possible that you may want to
join in the greatest adventure that the human
mind has ever begun.
From The Feynman Lectures in Physics, 1963
59
Physics is fun!
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