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Chapter 17: The First Law of Thermodynamics

Chapter 17: The First Law of Thermodynamics. Thermodynamic Systems Interact with surroundings Heat exchange Q = heat added to the system (watch sign!) Some other form of energy transfer Mechanical Work, e.g. W = done by the system (watch sign!) protosystem: ideal gas.

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Chapter 17: The First Law of Thermodynamics

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  1. Chapter 17: The First Law of Thermodynamics • Thermodynamic Systems • Interact with surroundings • Heat exchange • Q = heat added to the system(watch sign!) • Some other form of energy transfer • Mechanical Work, e.g. • W = done by the system (watch sign!) • protosystem: ideal gas

  2. Work done during volume changes

  3. Isobaric Expansion • expansion at constant pressure • reversed => compression

  4. Isothermal Expansion (example 17-1) • expansion at constant temperature • reversed => compression

  5. Example: 1 m3 of an ideal gas starting at 1 atm of pressure expands to twice its original volume by one of two processes: isobaric expansion or isothermal expansion. How much work is done in each case?

  6. Work Done Depends upon path!!!! A B

  7. Heat Transfer and “Heat Content” • Two constant Temperature processes, same initial state • slow expansion • rapid expansion • Final States (T, V and P) are the same • Heat added in first process, not in second • “Heat Content” not a valid concept

  8. Internal Energy U: • Sum of microscopic kinetic and potential energies • Changes in response to heat addition (Q) to the system • Changes in response to Work done (W) by the system • The First Law of Thermodynamics: • DU = Q- W or Q = DU + W • = Conservation of energy • => DU is independent of path! • U is a function of the state of the system (function of the state variables). U = U(p,V,T) for an ideal gas. • Infinitesimal processes • dU = dQ - dW dU = dQ - dW

  9. For an isolated system • W = Q = 0 • DU = 0 Uf=Ui • the internal energy of an isolated system is constant • For a cyclic process • system returns to its initial state • state variables return to their initial values • Uf = Ui • => Wnet = Qnet

  10. p d b 8.0 x 104 Pa 3.0 x 104 Pa c a 2.0 x 10-3 m3 5.0 x 10-3 m3 • Example: Thermodynamic processes • not an ideal gas • a-b 150 J of heat added • b-d 600 J of heat added

  11. Thermodynamic Processes • Isothermal: constant temperature • generally dV ¹ 0 ; dW ¹ 0 ; dQ ¹0 • Adiabatic: no heat transfer • Q = 0 ; dQ = 0 • Isochoric: constant volume (isovolumetric) • dV = 0 => dW = 0 => Q = DU • Isobaric: constant pressure • dW = pdV => W = pDV • Polytropic processes: one generalization, not (necessarily) iso-anything. • pVr = const p V

  12. Internal Energy of an ideal gas. • adiabatic free expansion • Q = 0; W = 0 => DU = 0 • Dp ¹ 0 ; DV ¹ 0 ; DT = 0 • => U depends upon T only • Kinetic Theory • U = sum of microscopic kinetic and potential energies • each microscopic DOF averages 1/2 kT • => U depends upon T only

  13. Molar Heat Capacities of Ideal Gases

  14. Constant pressure process: • dQ = nCp dT = dU + dW • vs dQ = nCp dT = dU for constant volume => Cp > CV for any material which expands upon heating • For an ideal gas:

  15. With the Equipartition Theorem g , another effective way of characterizing an ideal gas

  16. Adiabatic Processes

  17. Adiabatic Processes (cont’d)

  18. Summary of basic thermodynamic processeses for an ideal gas

  19. Polytropic process for an ideal gas • because not all processes are the basic types (iso*) or can be approximated by one of the basic process types • polytropic exponent r • pVr = const • r = 0 => isobaric • lim r->infinity => constant volume • r = g=> adiabatic • r =1 => isothermal

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