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Laws of Thermodynamics. Thermal Physics, Lecture 4. Internal Energy, U. Internal Energy is the total energy in a substance, including thermal, chemical potential, nuclear, electrical, etc. Thermal Energy is that portion of the internal energy that changes when the temperature changes.
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Laws of Thermodynamics Thermal Physics, Lecture 4
Internal Energy, U • Internal Energy is the total energy in a substance, including thermal, chemical potential, nuclear, electrical, etc. • Thermal Energy is that portion of the internal energy that changes when the temperature changes
Heat, Q • The flow of energy into or out of a substance due to a difference in temperature. • It results in a loss or gain in the Thermal Energy
Work, W • The flow of energy into or out of a substance that is NOT due to a difference in temperature. • It results in a loss or gain in the Internal Energy
First Law • The first law of thermodynamics states that the internal energy of a system is conserved. • Q is the heat that is added to the system • If heat is lost, Q is negative. • W is the work done by the system. • If work is done on the system, W is negative
Example using First Law • 2500 J of heat is added to a system, and 1800 J of work is done on the system. What is the change in the internal energy of this system? • Signs: Q=+2500 J, W= -1800 J
Thermodynamic Processes • We will consider a system where an ideal gas is contained in a cylinder fitted with a movable piston
Isothermal Processes • Consider an isothermal process iso = same, so isothermal process happens at the same temperature. • Since PV=nRT, if n and T are constant then PV = constant
Isothermal Processes • We can plot the pressure and volume of this gas on a PV diagram • The lines of constant PV are called isotherm’s
Isothermal Processes • For an ideal gas, the internal energy U depends only on T, so the internal energy does not change. • Q must be added to increase the pressure, but the volume expands and does work on the environment. • Therefore, Q=W
Adiabatic Processes • In an adiabatic process, no heat is allowed to flow into or out of the system. • Q=0 • Examples: • well-insulated systems are adiabatic • very rapid processes, like the expansion of a gas in combustion, don’t allow time for heat to flow (Heat transfers relatively slowly)
Isobaric Processes • Isobaric processes happen when the pressure is constant
Isovolumetric Processes • Isovolumetric processes happen when the volume is constant
Calculating Work • For our ideal gas undergoing an isobaric process
Calculating Work • What if the pressure is not constant? • The work is the area under the curve of the PV diagram.
Adiabatic Process • Stretch a rubber band suddenly and use your lips to gauge the temperature before and after.
Summary of Processes • Isothermal: T is constant and Q=W since U=0 • Isobaric: P is constant and W=PV • Isovolumetric: V is constant so W=0 and Q = U • Adiabatic: Q=0 so U = -W
Example • An ideal gas is slowly compressed at constant pressure of 2 atm from 10 L to 2 L. Heat is then added to the gas at constant volume until the original temperature is reached. What is the total work done on the gas?
Example (15-5 in textbook) • Work is area under the graph. • Convert pressure to Pa and Volume to cubic meters.
Example (15-5 in textbook) • How much heat flows into the gas?
Example 2: Boiling Water • 1 kg (1 L) of water at 100 C is boiled away at 1 atm of pressure. This results in 1671 L of steam. Find the change in internal energy.
HEAT ENGINE REFRIGERATOR system TH TH QH QH W W QC QC TC TC Engines and Refrigerators • system taken in closed cycle Usystem = 0 • therefore, net heat absorbed = work done QH - QC = W (engine) QC - QH = -W (refrigerator)
HEAT ENGINE TH QH W QC TC Heat Engine: Efficiency The objective: turn heat from hot reservoir into work The cost: “waste heat” 1st Law: QH -QC = W efficiency e W/QH
Heat Engine • 1500 J of energy, in the form of heat, goes into an engine, which is able to do a total of 300 J of work. What is the efficiency of this engine? • What happens to the rest of the energy?
HEAT ENGINE TH 300K QH W QC TC = 77K Heat Engine • Can you get “work” out of a heat engine, if the hottest thing you have is at room temperature? • A) Yes B) No
REFRIGERATOR TH QH W QC TC Refrigerator The objective: remove heat from cold reservoir The cost: work 1st Law: QH = W + QC coeff of performance Kr QC/W
New concept: Entropy (S) • A measure of “disorder” • A property of a system (just like p, V, T, U) related to number of number of different “states” of system • Examples of increasing entropy: • ice cube melts • gases expand into vacuum • Change in entropy: • S = Q/T • >0 if heat flows into system (Q>0) • <0 if heat flows out of system (Q<0)
Second Law of Thermodynamics • The entropy change (Q/T) of the system+environment is always greater than zero (positive) • never < 0 • Result: order to disorder • Consequences • A “disordered” state cannot spontaneously transform into an “ordered” state • No engine operating between two reservoirs can be more efficient than one that produces 0 change in entropy. This is called a “Carnot engine”
Carnot Cycle • Idealized (Perfect) Heat Engine • No Friction, so DS = Q/T = 0 • Reversible Process • Isothermal Expansion • Adiabatic Expansion • Isothermal Compression • Adiabatic Compression
Carnot Efficiency • The absolute best a heat engine can do is given by the Carnot efficiency:
Carnot Efficiency • A steam engine operates at a temperature of 500 C in an environment where the surrounding temperature is 20 C. What is the maximum (ideal) efficiency of this engine? • What is the operating temperature were increased to 800 C ?
HEAT ENGINE TH QH W QC TC Engines and the 2nd Law The objective: turn heat from hot reservoir into work The cost: “waste heat” 1st Law: QH -QC = W efficiency e W/QH =W/QH = 1-QC/QH
Summary • First Law of thermodynamics: Energy Conservation • Q = DU + W • Heat Engines • Efficiency = 1-QC/QH • Refrigerators • Coefficient of Performance = QC/(QH - QC) • Entropy DS = Q/T • 2nd Law: Entropy always increases! • Carnot Cycle: Reversible, Maximum Efficiency e = 1 – Tc/Th