1 / 20

Chapter 21 Thermal Energy

Chapter 21 Thermal Energy. Section 1 Temperature and Thermal Energy. Temperature is…. How much heat something has or does not have. Measure of the average amount of kinetic energy in the molecules of a substance Kinetic energy = movement = heat

henryv
Download Presentation

Chapter 21 Thermal Energy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 21 Thermal Energy

  2. Section 1 Temperature and Thermal Energy • Temperature is…. • How much heat something has or does not have. • Measure of the average amount of kinetic energy in the molecules of a substance • Kinetic energy = movement = heat • The higher the temp. the faster the molecules move.

  3. Thermal Energy • The sum of the kinetic and potential energy in molecules • Kinetic = energy of motion • Potential = energy stored in bonds • Increases when: • Number of bonds or molecules increase • Motion of molecules increase • Space decreases

  4. Thermal Expansion • Almost all substance will expand when heated and contract when cooled. • Why? • Gases expand more than liquids and liquids expand more than solids. • Marshmallow in microwave

  5. Temperature scales • Celsius • Fahrenheit • Kelvin

  6. Conversions • Fahrenheit to Celsius • (° F – 32) * 5/9 • Celsius to Fahrenheit • (° C * 9/5) + 32 • Celsius to Kelvin • K = ° C + 273

  7. Homework – convert! • Fahrenheit to Celsius: • 32 • 212 • 80 • 55 • 72 • Celsius to Fahrenheit: • 0 • 100 • 14 • 27 • 33 • Convert to Kelvin: • 0c • 100c • 44c • 72F • 11F

  8. Complete the flow chart.

  9. Homework • Convert 31° F to Kelvin • Convert 250 K to Celsius. • Convert 320 K to Fahrenheit.

  10. Section 2 Heat • Kinetic energy that is transferred from the molecules of one object to another. • + =

  11. 3 ways heat is transferred • Conduction • Heat transfer by direct contact • Kinetic energy of molecules transfers from moving particles to slower moving particles • Hot chocolate on your tongue • Ice cube in your hand • Egg in a skillet.

  12. Radiation • Heat is transferred electromagnetic waves • Waves carry energy • How the sun heats the earth. • Heat you feel from a camp fire. • How food is heated in a microWAVE.

  13. Convection • Heat is transferred by molecules moving from one area to another in a gas or liquid • When boiling water for Mac and Cheese. • Turn stove on and burner transfers heat to pot through conduction. • Heat transfers from pot to first water molecules through conduction. • Water molecules on the bottom that have heat move to the top and the entire pot of water is heated by convection. • Macaroni is heated through conduction.

  14. Natural Convection • Swimming pools and lakes. • Warmer water is always on top. • Wind • Created by cool dense air pushing it’s way toward warmer less dense air. • Why the ocean is a great place to fly a kite.

  15. Thermal conductors • Any material that easily transfers heat. • Can you name a few? • Metals • Gold • Copper • Iron • Titanium

  16. Thermal insulators • A material that heat does not flow easily. • Used to handle hot objects or insulate houses and buildings. • Wood • Fiberglass • Plastic • Rubber • Air

  17. Thermal Absorption • Different materials absorb heat at different rates. • On a hot summer day would you rather stand barefoot for an hour on a paved parking lot surface or on the grass? • Parking lot absorbs and retains heat.

  18. Thermal pollution • The increase in the overall temperature of a body of water due to warm water inflow. • Plants and factories that sit on the banks of a river use the water to cool their machines and then release the warmed water back into the natural environment. • Effects = • warm water can retain less oxygen than cool water. Aquatic life needs oxygen.

  19. Assignment. 10 pts. • Find an article on thermal pollution caused by human activity. • Write a short paragraph explaining the impacts on the environment and how we as humans could fix the problem. • Design an energy efficient house. Label all areas where radiation, conduction, and convection will take place. Make sure to put a (+) beside those areas that are good for energy use and a (-) beside areas where the heat transfer is bad.

More Related