1 / 8

2B_2_2: Heat Energy

2B_2_2: Heat Energy. Types of Energy:. Mechanical Energy = KE + PE Kinetic Energy [KE] is associated with MOTION [speed]. Potential Energy [PE] is associated with position [height, separation]. Gravitational PE : Separation of masses. Masses attract [pull on] one another.

pegeen
Download Presentation

2B_2_2: Heat 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. 2B_2_2: Heat Energy

  2. Types of Energy: • Mechanical Energy = KE + PE • Kinetic Energy [KE] is associated with MOTION [speed]. • Potential Energy [PE] is associated with position [height, separation]. • Gravitational PE: Separation of masses.Masses attract [pull on] one another. • Electric PE: Separation of charges.Opposites attract [pull]; Similar repel [push]. • Chemical PE: Separation of atoms within molecules.

  3. Heat Energy • Heat Energy is associated with the vibration of atoms and molecules. Heat is proportional to the TOTAL KE of the particles. • Temperature is also associated with the vibration of atoms and molecules. Temperature, in Kelvin [not Celsius or Fahrenheit], is proportional to the AVERAGE KE of the particles. • Here’s the difference: one drop of boiling water versus one gallon of boiling water … spilled on your hand. Same temperature, different heat energies!

  4. Heat Energy • Heat Energy flows from high T to low T. • Cold does not exist. Cold is the absence of heat.

  5. Definitions: • System: What you are looking at. • Surroundings: What is around the system. • Universe = System + Surroundings. • Closed System: No mass enters or leaves.[Open System: Mass can enter or leave.] • Isolated System: No energy enters or leaves.[Non-isolated: energy can enter or leave.]

  6. Energy is conserved. Always. • An isolated system is insulated from its surroundings. Remember, the system + surroundings = universe. • No heat flows into or out of the system because the system is insulated. • Energy of an isolated system does not change. • Energy of the surroundings doesn’t change. • Energy of the universe doesn’t change. • Think hot chocolate in a double Styrofoam cup! Heat doesn’t flow to your hand.

  7. Energy is conserved. Always. • A non-isolated system isn’t insulated at all. Or isn’t insulated very well. • If the system is not insulated, energy will flow between the system and the surroundings, from HIGH T to low T. • If the system is at a higher T than the surroundings: • The system will lose heat energy. • The surroundings will gain heat energy. • The energy of the universe won’t change! • Think hot cocoa in a metal cup without a handle. Energy lost by the cocoa is gained by your hand. Quickly. Ouch.

  8. Energy is conserved. Always. • Most systems are between the two extremes, neither uninsulated nor perfectly insulated. • Heat Energy flows, but it flows slowly. • Even a Styrofoam cup allows the slow transfer of energy.

More Related