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Thermal Energy

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Title: Thermal Energy


1
Thermal Energy
  • Internal energy energy of the moving particles
    that compose matter

2
Starter 3 Thermal Energy Transfer
  • Read Ch. 22.1-22.3
  • Fold a piece of notebook paper to form three
    columns
  • Head each column with one of the three ways that
    thermal energy can be transferred
  • Define each
  • List three main points from the reading for each
    thermal energy transfer process
  • On the back of the paper, prepare an example
    illustrating how each transfers heat

3
Todays Key Terms and Ideas
  • Thermal Energy
  • Kinetic Theory
  • Heat
  • Thermal Equilibrium and heat transfer
  • Kinetic Theory as it relates to expansion and
    contraction
  • Hot vs. cold

4
Physics and Particles
  • Particle is a general term used to describe
    molecules, atoms and sub-atomic particles

5
21.1 Temperature
  • The higher the temperature of a substance, the
    faster the motion of its molecules.
  • This is also referred to as the Kinetic Theory
  • all matter is made of atoms and molecules that
    are moving.
  • The higher the temperature, the faster the
    particles move.
  • Given the same temperature, heavier particles
    move slower than lighter particles.

6
Matter is changing state
solid
Increasing Avg. KE Increasing Temp.
Particle speed is increasing
melting
freezing
liquid
evaporation
condensation
gas
7
21.1 Temperature
  • Temperature and Kinetic Energy

Temperature is related to the average kinetic
energy of the atoms and molecules in a
substance. The faster the molecules move, the
______________ the temperature and the
_____________ the average kinetic energy and the
__________ the particle speed.
greater
greater
greater
8
21.2 Heat
  1. Heat is the quantity of thermal energy
    transferred
  2. Heat always flows from a substance with a higher
    temperature to a substance with a lower
    temperature.
  3. Heat flows only when there is a difference in
    temperature.
  4. Heat units are calories or joules.

9
hotter
21.2 Heat
Entropy! Flow from higher to lower energy state.
Just as water will not flow uphill by itself,
regardless of the relative amounts of water in
the reservoirs, heat will not flow from a cooler
substance into a hotter substance by itself.
colder
10
21.2 Heat
What causes heat to flow?
A difference in temperature between objects in
thermal contact.
11
21.4 Internal Energy
  • When a substance takes in or gives off heat, its
    internal energy changes.

12
21.3 Thermal Equilibrium
What happens when a warmer substance comes in
contact with a cooler substance?
  • Heat flows between two objects of different
    temperature until they have the same temperature.
  • The loss of thermal energy from the warmer object
    equals the gain of thermal energy for the cooler
    object

13
21.8 Thermal Expansion
  • Most forms of mattersolids, liquids, and
    gasesexpand when they are heated and contract
    when they are cooled.

14
21.8 Thermal Expansion
  • When the temperature of a substance is increased,
    its molecules jiggle faster and normally tend to
    move farther apart.
  • This results in an expansion of the substance.
  • Gases generally expand or contract much more than
    liquids.
  • Liquids generally expand or contract more than
    solids.

15
Starter Question 2How does a thermometer work?
  • The kinetic theory be used to explain expansion
    and contraction of materials when the temperature
    of the material changes.
  • As the temperature rises, heat is transferred
    from the surroundings to the liquid inside the
    thermometer and the molecules that compose the
    liquid vibrate faster. This causes the liquid to
    expand and rise.
  • As the temperature falls, heat is transferred
    away from the liquid inside to the surroundings
    and the molecules that compose this liquid slow
    down. This causes the liquid to contract.

16
  • The liquid in the thermometer stops rising or
    falling when thermal equilibrium is reached (no
    more heat flow!)

Air temperature Liquid temperature
17
21.6 Specific Heat Capacity
  • Do copper, clay and water have the same chemical
    composition?
  • No. Copper is composed of Cu atoms and water is
    composed of H2O molecules. Clay is a complex
    silicate.
  • The difference in chemical composition influences
    how copper, clay and water respond when heat is
    transferred.

The specific heat capacity of a substance is the
quantity of heat required to raise 1 g of a
substance by 1 degree Celsius.
18
21.6 Specific Heat Capacity
A substance with a high specific heat capacity
can absorb a large quantity of heat before it
will raise in temperature (water has a high
specific heat). A substance with a low specific
heat requires relatively little heat to raise its
temperature (copper has a low specific heat).
19
21.6 Specific Heat Capacity
highest
lowest
20
21.6 Specific Heat Capacity
  • think!
  • Which has a higher specific heat capacitywater
    or sand? Explain.

21
21.6 Specific Heat Capacity
  • think!
  • Which has a higher specific heat capacitywater
    or sand? Explain.
  • Answer
  • Water has a greater heat capacity than sand.
    Water is much slower to warm in the hot sun and
    slower to cool at night. Sands low heat
    capacity, shown by how quickly it warms in the
    morning and how quickly it cools at night,
    affects local climates.

Good conductors have a low specific heat capacity!
22
21.6 Specific Heat Capacity
A gram of water requires 1 calorie of energy to
raise the temperature 1C. It takes only about
one eighth as much energy to raise the
temperature of a gram of iron by the same amount.
The capacity of a substance to store heat depends
on its chemical composition.
23
21.6 Specific Heat Capacity
24
  • 6. What is the difference between a substance
    with a high specific heat and a low specific heat
    capacity?

25
  • Substances with a low specific heat (e.g.,
    metals) need very little heat to raise
    temperature
  • Good conductors, not good absorbers, do not hold
    onto heat well
  • Substances with a high specific heat need a large
    quantity of heat to raise temperature.
  • Poor conductors, good absorbers, store and hold
    onto heat well

26
  • 7. How does the specific heat of water help to
    moderate climate?

27
  • During the summer, surrounding air is cooled by
    the water and keeps the coast cooler than the
    intercontinental locations.
  • During the winter, the surrounding air is warmed
    by the water and keeps the coast warmer than the
    intercontinental locations.

28
21.7 The High Specific Heat Capacity of Water
  • The property of water to resist changes in
    temperature improves the climate in many places.

29
21.7 The High Specific Heat Capacity of Water
Water has a high specific heat and is
transparent, so it takes more energy to heat up
than land does.
30
21.7 The High Specific Heat Capacity of Water
Waters capacity to store heat affects the global
climate. Water stores and hold heat well because
of its high specific heat.
  • Gulf Stream brings warm water northeast from the
    Caribbean.
  • It holds much of its thermal energy long enough
    to reach the North Atlantic off the coast of
    Europe.
  • As it cools, the energy released is carried by
    the prevailing westerly winds over the European
    continent.

31
The Gulf Stream brings warm winters to Ireland
and the prevailing winds off the Atlantic carry
with them rain. It means grass can grow almost
all year round creating the lush sweeping
pastures of the Emerald Isle. Today they make up
93 percent of all farmland. No other country in
Europe has quite as much grass as Ireland.
32
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35
21.7 The High Specific Heat Capacity of Water
  • Climate of Europe

Look at a world globe and notice the high
latitude of Europe. Both Europe and Canada get
about the same amount of the suns energy per
square kilometer.
36
Marine Climate
Continental Climate
Cork
Edmonton
Same insolation angle, different climate due to
proximity to water and the warming effect from
the Gulf Stream
http//www.sampleireland.com/weather-in-ireland-ye
ar-round.html
37
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38
21.7 The High Specific Heat Capacity of Water
  • Climate of America
  • On the west coast, air moves from the Pacific
    Ocean to the land.
  • In winter, the water warms the air that moves
    over it and warms the western coastal regions of
    North America.
  • In summer, the water cools the air and the
    western coastal regions are cooled.

The central interior of a large continent usually
experiences extremes of temperature. Land, with
a lower specific heat capacity, gets hot in
summer but cools rapidly in winter.
39
  • 8. In which three ways can the thermal energy (or
    heat) of a substance be transferred?

40
  • Heat can be transferred by conduction, by
    convection, and by radiation.

41
22.1 Conduction
  • In conduction, collisions between particles
    transfer thermal energy, without any overall
    transfer of matter.

42
22.1 Conduction
Heat from the flame causes atoms and free
electrons in the end of the metal to move faster
and jostle against others. The energy of
vibrating atoms increases along the length of the
rod.
43
22.2 Convection
  • In convection, heat is transferred by movement of
    the hotter substance from one place to another.

44
22.2 Convection
  • Convection occurs in all fluids.
  • Convection currents transfer heat in air.

Hot, less dense fluid rises in the presence of
cooler, more dense fluid.
45
22.2 Convection
  • Convection occurs in all fluids.
  • Convection currents transfer heat in air.
  • Convection currents transfer heat in liquid.

When fluid particles at the bottom of the pan
begin to vibrate faster, they expand and decrease
in density, making the hotter fluid more buoyant.
46
22.3 Radiation
  • In radiation, heat is transmitted in the form of
    radiant energy, or electromagnetic waves.

47
22.3 Radiation
Most of the heat from a fireplace goes up the
chimney by convection. The heat that warms us
comes to us by radiation.
48
  • Radiation is caused by moving electrons or
    charged particles in matter. The faster the
    particles move, the higher the frequency of the
    electromagnetic radiation.

49
22.3 Radiation
  1. Radio waves send signals through the air.

50
22.3 Radiation
  1. Radio waves send signals through the air.
  2. You feel infrared waves as heat.

51
22.3 Radiation
  1. Radio waves send signals through the air.
  2. You feel infrared waves as heat.
  3. A visible form of radiant energy is light waves.

52
  • 11. What happens to the frequency of radiant
    energy as the temperature of the substance
    increases or decreases?

53
  • The frequency of radiant energy increases as the
    temperature of the substance increases.

54
http//mail.jsd.k12.ca.us/bf/bflibrary/images/elec
tromagnetic-spectrum.jpg
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