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Thermodynamics

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Title: Thermodynamics


1
Thermodynamics Chapter 12
2
Temperature and Heat
  • The temperature of a hot cup of coffee left
    sitting on the table will fall until it reaches
    thermal equilibrium with the air temperature in
    the room.
  • When a soda can is taken out of the refrigerator
    and left on the kitchen table, its temperature
    will rise rapidly at first but then more slowly
    until the temperature of the soda equals that
    of the air in the room. At this point, the soda
    and the air temperature in the room are in
    thermal equilibrium.
  • The change in temperature is due to the transfer
    of energy between the object and the environment.

3
Temperature and Heat
  • Thermal energy the total potential and kinetic
    energy associated with the random motion and
    arrangement of the particles of a material.
  • Heat, Q, is thermal energy that is absorbed,
    given up, or transferred from one body to
    another.
  • Heat is thermal energy in motion.
  • Heat is used when the transfer of thermal energy
    from one body to another body at a different
    temperature is involved.

4
Temperature
  • Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic
    energy of all the particles within an object.
  • The temperature of a substance will increase if
    the average kinetic energy of its particles is
    increased.
  • If the average kinetic energy of particles
    decreases, so does the temperature of the
    substance.

5
Temperature
  • Central concept of thermodynamics is temperature.
  • Our temperature sense is often unreliable.
  • On a cold winter day, an iron railing seems much
    colder to the touch than a wooden fence post,
    even though both are at the same temperature.
  • This error in perception results because the iron
    removes energy from our fingers more quickly than
    the wood does.

6
  • Specific heat Every substance gains or loses
    heat based on its identity. This physical
    property of the substance is called the specific
    heat capacity of the object.
  • The specific heat capacity, C, of a solid or
    liquid is defined as the heat required to raise a
    unit mass of the substance by one degree of
    temperature.

7
Define Specific Heat
  • Amount of energy required to raise the
    temperature of 1kg by 1oC

Heat Energy (mass)x specific x change
heat in temp OR Q m c DT
8
Heat Change
  • To determine the amount of thermal energy gained
    or lost by a mass
  • Heat energy is gained if Q is positive.
  • Heat energy is lost if Q is negative.

9
  • Ex. A 4.0 kg sample of glass heated from 1o C to
    41o C, and was found to have absorbed 32 J of
    energy. What is the specific heat of the glass?
  • Q C x m x ?T
  • ?T 41oC 1oC 40oC
  • 32 J C (4.0 kg)(40oC)
  • 32 J C (160 kg oC)
  • C 0.2 J/kgoC

10
Law of Heat Exchange
  • For a closed system in which heat energy cannot
    enter or leave, the heat lost by objects at a
    higher temperature is equal to the heat gained by
    objects at lower temperature until thermal
    equilibrium is reached (at which point the final
    temperature of both objects is the same).
  • The final temperature will be somewhere between
    the initial low temperature and the initial high
    temperature.

11
Law of Heat Exchange
  • Conservation of Energy
  • Q lost Q gained
  • To avoid problems with signs, for
  • Q lost Q gained problems,
  • it is best to make ?T Thi Tlo

12
Heats of Transformation
  • When energy is absorbed as heat by a solid or
    liquid, the temperature of the object does not
    necessarily rise.
  • The thermal energy may cause the mass to change
    from one phase, or state, to another.
  • The amount of energy per unit mass that must be
    transferred as heat when a mass undergoes a phase
    change is called the heat of transformation, L.

13
Phase Changes
14
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15
Thermal Expansion of Solids
  • Solids expand when heated and contract when
    cooled (with a few exceptions).
  • Heated solids increase or decrease in all
    dimensions (length, width, and thickness).
  • When a solid is heated, the increase in thermal
    energy increases the average distance between the
    atoms and molecules of the solid and it expands.

16
Thermal Expansion of Solids
  • Thermal expansion can be explained on a molecular
    basis.
  • Picture the interatomic forces in a solid as
    springs, as shown in the picture on the right.
  • Each atom vibrates about its equilibrium
    position. When the temperature increases, the
    amplitude and associated energy of the vibration
    also increase.

17
Examples of Uses of Thermal Expansion
  • Dental materials used for fillings must be
    matched in their thermal expansion properties to
    those of tooth enamel, otherwise consuming hot
    drinks or cold ice cream would be painful.
  • In aircraft manufacturing, rivets and other
    fasteners are often cooled using dry ice before
    insertion and then allowed to expand to a tight
    fit.

18
  • You can loosen a tight metal jar lid by holding
    it under a stream of hot water. Both the metal
    of the lid and the glass of the jar expand as the
    hot water adds energy to their atoms. With the
    added energy, the atoms can move a bit farther
    from each other than usual, against the
    interatomic forces that hold every solid
    together. However, because the atoms in the
    metal move farther apart than those in the glass,
    the lid expands more than the jar and is
    loosened.
  • Expansions slots are often placed in bridges to
    accommodate roadway expansion on hot days. This
    prevents buckling of the roadway. Driveways and
    sidewalks have expansion slots for the same
    reason.

19
Methods of Heat Energy Transfer
  • Conduction is the transfer of heat energy by
  • Between particles of objects in direct contact
  • Convection is the transfer of heat energy by
  • the movement of fluids(gas or liquid)
  • convection currents due to hot fluid rising and
    cold fluid sinking
  • Radiation is the transfer of heat energy by
  • electromagnetic waves
  • does not involve the movement of matter

20
A Conduction transfers energy as heat along the
wire and into the hand
B. Embers swirl upward in the convection currents
that are created by the warmed air above the fire
which rises
C. Electromagnetic waves emitted by the hot
campfire transfer energy by radiation
21
Heat Transfer by Conduction
  • Conduction is the transfer of thermal energy
    without any net movement of the material itself.
  • When a metal poker is put in a hot fire, the
    exposed end of the poker soon becomes hot as
    well, even though it is not directly in contact
    with the source of heat. We say that heat has
    been conducted from the hot end to the cold end.

22
Heat conduction in many materials can be
visualized as the result of molecular collisions.
As one end of the object is heated, the
molecules there move faster and faster. As they
collide with their slower-moving neighbors, they
transfer some of their energy to these molecules
whose speeds thus increase. These in turn
transfer some of their energy by collision with
molecules farther along the
  • object. Thus the energy of
  • thermal motion is transferred by
  • molecular collision along the object.
  • Good thermal conductors such as
  • silver, copper, aluminum, and gold
  • are also good electrical conductors.

23
Heat Transfer by Convection
  • Convection is the process of heat transfer
    through the mass motion or flow of some fluid,
    such as air or water.
  • When a pot of water is heated, convection
    currents are set up as the heated water at the
    bottom of the pot rises because of its reduced
    density and is replaced by cooler water from
    above.

24
Heat Transfer by Convection
  • Although liquids and gases are generally not very
    good conductors of heat, they can transfer heat
    quite rapidly by convection. Convection is the
    process whereby heat is transferred by the mass
    movement of molecules from one place to another.
    Whereas conduction involves molecules (and/or
    electrons) moving only over small distances and
    colliding, convection involves the movement of
    molecules over large distances.

25
Perhaps the first thing that most people say is
"heat rises". While not wrong, what you should
say is "hot air rises" or "hot water rises".
Anything fluid - that is gases or liquids - will
tend to change density with changes in
temperature. For example, if heated, air
decreases in density. The surrounding air is
cooler and denser. This makes it heavier, so it
falls beneath the hot air, forcing it upwards.
26
Heat Transfer by Radiation
  • Radiation is a more rapid transfer of
  • thermal energy in the form of electromagnetic
  • radiation accomplished by a process that
  • requires neither contact nor mass flow.
  • A hot object also loses heat energy by
  • radiation. This radiation is similar to light
  • and can pass through empty space. The
  • warmth you fell when you warm yourself by
  • a fire is due to this radiation. If the
  • object is hot enough, some of the radiation
  • is visible and can indeed be seen.

27
What type of heat transfer is shown in the
following pictures?
B.
Radiation
A.
Convection
C.
Conduction
D.
Radiation
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