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Thermodynamics

Thermodynamics. AP Physics 2. Thermal Equilibrium. Two systems are said to be in thermal equilibrium if there is no net flow of heat between them when they are brought into thermal contact

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Thermodynamics

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  1. Thermodynamics AP Physics 2

  2. Thermal Equilibrium • Two systems are said to be in thermal equilibrium if there is no net flow of heat between them when they are brought into thermal contact • Temperature is an indicator of thermal equilibrium in the sense that there is ___________________ between two systems in thermal contact that have the ____________________.

  3. Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics • Two systems individually in thermal equilibrium with a third system are in thermal equilibrium with each other. • This indicates there can be no net flow of heat within a system in thermal equilibrium

  4. First Law of Thermodynamics • Suppose a system gains heat energy, Q (and nothing else occurs) • Law of Conservation of Energy tells us the internal energy of the system increases from an initial value of Ui to a final value of Uf, the change being ΔU = Uf – Ui = Q • Sign convention: heat Q is positive when the system gains heat and negative when the system loses heat

  5. Internal Energy can also change when there is work done by a gas or on a gas… Suppose you had a piston filled with a specific amount of gas. As you add heat, the temperature rises and thus the volume of the gas expands. The gas then applies a force on the piston wall pushing it a specific displacement. Thus it can be said that a gas can do WORK.

  6. Work is the AREA of a P vs. V graph The _________ sign in the equation for ______is often misunderstood. Since work done ____ a gas has a positive volume change we must understand that the gas itself is USING UP ENERGY or in other words, it is losing energy, thus the negative sign. When work is done ___ a gas the change in volume is negative. This cancels out the negative sign in the equation. This makes sense as some __________ agent is __________ energy to the gas.

  7. Internal Energy (DU) and Heat Energy (Q) All of the energy inside a system is called INTERNAL ENERGY, DU. When you add HEAT(Q), you are adding energy and the internal energy INCREASES. Both are measured in joules. But when you add heat, there is usually an increase in temperature associated with the change.

  8. First Law of Thermodynamics “The internal energy of a system tend to increase when HEAT is added and work is done ON the system.” The bottom line is that if you ADD heat then transfer work TO the gas, the internal energy must obviously go up as you have MORE than what you started with.

  9. Example • Jogging along the beach one day you do 4.3 x 105 J of work and give off 3.8 x 105 J of heat. What is the change in your internal energy? • Switching over to walking, you give off 1.2 x 105 J of heat and your internal energy decreases by 2.6 x 105 J. How much work have you done while walking?

  10. Example Sketch a PV diagram and find the work done by the gas during the following stages. • A gas is expanded from a volume of 1.0 L to 3.0 L at a constant pressure of 3.0 atm. • The gas is then cooled at a constant volume until the pressure falls to 2.0 atm

  11. Example continued • The gas is then compressed at a constant pressure of 2.0 atm from a volume of 3.0 L to 1.0 L. • The gas is then heated until its pressure increases from 2.0 atm to 3.0 atm at a constant volume.

  12. Example continued What is the NET WORK?

  13. Example A series of thermodynamic processes is shown in the pV-diagram. In process ab 150 J of heat is added to the system, and in process bd , 600J of heat is added. Fill in the chart.

  14. Internal Energy is a function of state – it depends only on the state of a system, not on the method by which the system arrives at a given state • Quasi-static – a process that occurs slowly enough that a uniform pressure and temperature exist throughout all regions of the system at all times. There is no friction nor dissipative

  15. Thermodynamic Processes - Isothermal To keep the temperature constant both the pressure and volume change to compensate. (Volume goes up, pressure goes down) “BOYLES’ LAW”

  16. Thermodynamic Processes - Isobaric Heat is added to the gas which increases the Internal Energy (U) Work is done by the gas as it changes in volume. The path of an isobaric process is a horizontal line called an isobar. ∆U = Q - W can be used since the WORK is NEGATIVE in this case

  17. Thermodynamic Processes – Isovolumetric / Isochoric

  18. Thermodynamic Processes - Adiabatic ADIABATIC- (GREEK- adiabatos- "impassable") In other words, NO HEAT can leave or enter the system.

  19. In Summary

  20. Remember: Area under a pressure-volume graph is the work for any kind of process. • Example • A gas expands from an initial volume of 0.40 m3 to a final volume of 0.62 m3 as the pressure increases linearly from 110 kPa to 230 kPa. Find the work done by the gas.

  21. Second Law of Thermodynamics • Heat flows spontaneously from a substance at a higher temperature to a substance at a lower temperature and does not flow spontaneously in the reverse direction. Heat can flow in the reverse direction if WORK is done to make it (example: air conditioner) • Heat will not flow spontaneously from a colder body to a warmer body AND heat energy cannot be transformed completely into mechanical work.

  22. Engines Heat flows from a HOT reservoir to a COLD reservoir QH = remove from, absorbs = hot QC= exhausts to, expels = cold

  23. Engine Efficiency In order to determine the thermal efficiency of an engine you have to look at how much ENERGY you get OUT based on how much you energy you take IN. In other words:

  24. Example A heat engine with an efficiency of 24.0% performs 1250 J of work. Find (a) the heat absorbed from the hot reservoir, and (b) the heat given off to the cold reservoir.

  25. Rates of Energy Usage Sometimes it is useful to express the energy usage of an engine as a RATE. For example: The RATE at which heat is absorbed! The RATE at which heat is expelled. The RATE at which WORK is DONE

  26. Efficiency in terms of rates

  27. Is there an IDEAL engine model? Our goal is to figure out just how efficient such a heat engine can be: what’s the most work we can possibly get for a given amount of fuel? The efficiency question was first posed—and solved—by Sadi Carnot in 1820, not long after steam engines had become efficient enough to begin replacing water wheels, at that time the main power sources for industry.  Not surprisingly, perhaps, Carnot visualized the heat engine as a kind of water wheel in which heat (the “fluid”) dropped from a high temperature to a low temperature, losing “potential energy” which the engine turned into work done, just like a water wheel. 

  28. Carnot Efficiency Carnot a believed that there was an absolute zero of temperature, from which he figured out that on being cooled to absolute zero, the fluid would give up all its heat energy.  Therefore, if it falls only half way to absolute zero from its beginning temperature, it will give up half its heat, and an engine taking in heat at T and shedding it at ½T will be utilizing half the possible heat, and be 50% efficient.  Picture a water wheel that takes in water at the top of a waterfall, but lets it out halfway down.  So, the efficiency of an ideal engine operating between two temperatures will be equal to the fraction of the temperature drop towards absolute zero that the heat undergoes.

  29. Carnot Efficiency Carnot temperatures must be expressed in KELVIN!!!!!! • The Carnot model has 4 parts • An Isothermal Expansion • An Adiabatic Expansion • An Isothermal Compression • An Adiabatic Compression The PV diagram in a way shows us that the ratio of the heats are symbolic to the ratio of the 2 temperatures

  30. Example If the heat engine from the example before is operating at a maximum efficiency, and its cold reservoir is at a temperature of 295 K, what is the temperature of the hot reservoir?

  31. Example A particular engine has a power output of 5000 W and an efficiency of 25%. If the engine expels 8000 J of heat in each cycle, find (a) the heat absorbed in each cycle and (b) the time for each cycle

  32. Example The efficiency of a Carnot engine is 30%. The engine absorbs 800 J of heat per cycle from a hot temperature reservoir at 500 K. Determine (a) the heat expelled per cycle and (b) the temperature of the cold reservoir

  33. Entropy – amount of disorder in a system The relationship for a Carnot engine, can be rearranged to . The quantity Q/T is the change in entropy, ΔS: The temperature, again, must be in Kelvins, the subscript R refers to reversible process. Units for entropy = J/K Entropy is a function of state (like internal energy) – only the state of the system determines the entropy

  34. Example Calculate the change in entropy when a 0.125 kg chunk of ice melt at 0ºC. Assume the melting occurs reversibly.

  35. The entropy of a Carnot Engine: • as the engine operates, the entropy of the hot reservoir decreases, since heat QH leaves. the change in the entropy of the hot reservoir is (minus indicates decrease in S) • the change in the entropy of the cold reservoir is • Thus, the total change in entropy is (equals zero because ) • Thus, ΔS = 0 for a Carnot Engine. This is also true for any reversible process: the total entropy of the universe does not change Reversible processes do not change the total entropy of the universe. (The entropy of one part of the universe may change, but if so, the entropy of another part must change in the opposite way by the same amount.) Irreversible processes increase the entropy of the universe. ΔS > 0

  36. Example A hot reservoir at the temperature 576 K transfers 1050 J of heat irreversibly to a cold reservoir at the temperature 305 K. Find the change in entropy of the universe.

  37. (cont.) The Second Law of Thermodynamics in terms of Entropy: The total entropy of the universe does not change when a reversible process occurs and increases when an irreversible process occurs. Entropy and Disorder Increase in entropy equates to an increase in disorder. Decrease in entropy equates to a decrease in disorder (increase in order). Heat flow increases entropy, add heat to a solid and it becomes a liquid (less ordered). Thus, increases entropy increases disorder. The Third Law of Thermodynamics It is not possible to lower the temperature of any system to absolute zero in a finite number of steps.

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