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Chapter 11. Heat. Heat. Heat is a transfer of internal energy Units of Joules calorie—amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 g of water by 1 °C 1 cal = 7.186 J Calorie (kilocalorie)—amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 kg of water by 1 °C
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Chapter 11 Heat
Heat • Heat is a transfer of internal energy • Units of Joules • calorie—amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 g of water by 1°C • 1 cal = 7.186 J • Calorie (kilocalorie)—amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 kg of water by 1°C • 1 kcal = 1000 cal = 4186 J • British Thermal Units (Btu)—amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 lb of water by 1°F Mechanical Equivalent of Heat
Specific Heat • 1 molecule of water is lighter than 1 molecule of Iron • 1 kg of water contains more molecules than 1 kg of Iron • Equal amounts of heat added to both distributes among more water molecules than Iron molecules • Iron molecules have greater increase in average KE, therefore higher temperature
Specific Heat • Q = Heat (J) • m = mass of substance (kg) • T = change in temperature (°C or K) • Specific heat (c)—amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 kg of a substance by 1°C • Units of J/kg°C • Larger molecules tend to have smaller specific heats • “heat capacity” • Why antifreeze instead of water?
Specific Heat • Calorimetry—quantitative measure of heat exchange • Needs a closed thermal system (all heat exchange is internal) • Heat lost by one part = heat gained by other part(s) • Used to determine specific heats
Phase Changes • Solid Phase • Molecules are held tightly in place by attractive forces (bonds) • Liquid Phase • Molecules have enough KE to push other molecules out of the way, but not to break free of bonds • Gas Phase • Molecules have enough KE to break free from the bonds • Plasma Phase • Molecules have enough KE to “throw” all electrons off their atoms (atoms become completely ionized)
Phase Changes • Melting—solid to liquid • Freezing—liquid to solid • Evaporation—liquid to gas • Condensation—gas to liquid • Sublimation—solid to gas • Deposition—gas to solid • Frost and snow
Phase Changes • Latent Heat (L)—heat energy associated with phase changes • Heat energy is must be added to go from a lower KE phase to a higher KE phase • Heat energy is released when going from a higher KE phase to a lower KE phase • Latent Heat does not cause a temperature change Sweating as a cooling technique Danger of steam burns
Phase Changes • Latent heat of fusion (Lf) • Melting—substance absorbs Lf • Freezing—substance releases Lf • Latent heat of vaporization (Lv) • Evaporation—substance absorbs Lv • Condensation—substance releases Lv • Latent heat of sublimation (Ls) • Sublimation—substance absorbs Ls • Deposition—substance releases Ls Table 11.2, page 368 Example 11.6 and 11.7, page 370
Phase Changes Lower pressure, lower boiling point Higher pressure, Higher condensing point
Heat Transfer • Conduction—transfer of heat energy through direct contact • Hot plate • Convection—transfer of heat energy by movement mass that contains the energy • Warm air rises, cold air descends • Radiation—transfer of heat energy via electromagnetic radiation • Sun, fire
Heat Transfer • Conduction is due to molecular collisions • Thermal conductors—good conductors of heat • Metals, atoms with lots of free electrons • Thermal insulators—poor conductors of heat • Nonmetals, atoms with few free electrons
Heat Transfer • In general . . . • Gases are the worst conductors • Liquids are better conductors than gases • Solids are better conductors than liquids
Heat Transfer • Q/t = Rate of heat flow through an object • k = thermal conductivity of material (J/ms°C) • A = surface area (m2) • T = temperature difference between the ends (°C or K) • d = thickness of material (m) • Only works for conduction • T/d is sometimes referred to as the thermal gradient Table 11.3, page 374 Example 11.8, page 374
Heat Transfer • Convection • Natural convection—due to density changes via temperature (warm air rising, cold descending) • Land breezes vs. Sea breezes • Forced convection—material is mechanically forced to move • Home furnace • Human circulatory system • Automobile cooling system
Heat Transfer • Radiation • Molecule vibration causes natural emission of electromagnetic radiation • Objects radiate over a range of wavelengths • Most emission occurs in infrared portion of the spectrum • Water naturally vibrates at infrared frequencies, and will absorb this radiation • Peak emission frequency increases with temperature • Red hot, white hot
Heat Transfer • = 5.67 x 10-8 W/m2K4 • Stefan-Boltzmann constant • A = surface area (m2) • e = emissivity of material • No units, always between 0 and 1 • How good an absorber/emitter the object is • Dark surfaces are good absorbers and emitters • Ideal absorber (e = 1) referred to as a blackbody • Shiny surfaces are poor absorbers and emitters • T = absolute temperature (K)
Heat Transfer • Net rate of energy loss/gain between a radiating object and its surroundings • Ts = absolute temperature of surroundings Example 11.10, page 381