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h a n g e Vi ew h a n g e Vi ew y bu to .d o m w .c o m c u -tr a c k C lic k C H A P T E R 12 o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W ! PD XC N O W F- er ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k TEMPERATURE AND HEAT It is winter, and these Macaque monkeys are enjoying a dip in the Jigokudani hot springs in Japan. The water in the photograph exists in three forms or phases , solid (snow), liquid , and gas (water vapor). Water can change from one phase to another, and heat plays a role in the change , as we will see in this chapter. (@ Shusuke Sezai/Corbis) COMMON TEMPERATURE SCAlES Fahrenheit scale 1212 0 F 』∞ ω百坦ωzzω 的ωω 』 Z币比。∞叫 ωEMω 的 HO 而呻呻 -MEUO To measure temperature we use a thermometer. Many thermometers make use of the fact that materials usually expand with increasing temp巳rature. For example , Figure 12.1 shows th巳 common mercury-in-glass th巳rmom巳ter, which consists of a mercury-filled glass bulb conn巳cted to a capillary tub巳 . When the mercury is heated , it expands into the capillary tube , the amount of expansion being proportional to the chang巳 in t巳 mperature. The outside of th巳 glass is marked with an appropriat巳 scale for reading the t巳 mp巳 rature. A number of different temp巳raωre scales have be巳 nd巳vised , two popular choic巳 s being the Celsius (formerly, centigrad巳) and Fahrenheit scales. Figure 12.1 illustrates these scales. Historically,* both scales were d巳自 ned by assigning two temperature points on the scale and then dividing the distance betw巳en them into a number of equally spaced intervals. One point was chosen to b巳 the temperature at which ic巳 melts under one atmosphere of pressure (the "ice point") , and the other was th巳 temperature at which water boils under one atmosphere of pressur巳 (the "steam point"). On the Celsius scale , an ice point of 0 oC (0 degrees Celsius) and a st巳am point of 100 oC wer巳 s巳lected. On the Fahrenheit scale , an ice point of 32 OF (32 degrees Fahrenheit) and a st巳 am point of 212 oF w 巳r巳 chosen. The Celsius scale is used worldwide , while th巳 Fahrenheit scale is used mostly in the United States , often in home medical thermometers. There is a subtle differenc巳 in the way the temperature of an object is reported , as compared to a change in its temperature. For example,由e temperature of th巳 human body is about 37 oC , where 由巳 symbol oC stands for "degr,巳巳s Celsius." Howev町,由e change between two temperaωres is specified in *Today, the Celsius and Fahrenh巳 it scales are defined in terms of the Kelvin temperature scale; Section 12.2 discllsses 由e Kelvin scale 357 .c h a n g e Vi e y bu to k Example 1 Ah巳 althy p巳rson Converting from a Fahrenheit to a Celsius Temperature has an oral temperatur巳 of 98.6 oF. What wou ld this reading be on th巳 Cel s iu s sca l 巳? Reasoning and Solution A po 川 of 32.0 oF. 缸 S mc 怡t 巳mp巳ratωur陀巳 of 98.6 OF 比 is 66.6 F址抽11 巳 nh巳 eit d巳gr巳es abov巳 t由 h巳 l陀 c巳 ( 1C \ (66.6 F O) l ; '::0 ! = 37.0 C 。 、 3 ‘ ' Thus , the person 's temperature is 37.0 Celsius degrees above th巳 ic巳 poin t. Adding 37.0 Celsius d巳grees to th巳 ice point of 0 oc on th巳 Celsiu s scale giv巳 s a Celsius t巳 mperature of o 137.0 c l 。 0 白 E xamp盯 CωOαon阳 叫 M 阳 we V昭阳刚叫叫 町创呐「叫叫tin e 叼 l咱 仰 ρ 钊 9 肘 阳川 h f什 romαom 阳「阳 m 盯 丁利1 刊 a 山叫 Cωωe 创|阳 S创创圳叩 l忱uω 川』 旧川川 川 β S川to a 川 n叶巾巾 怡 h1旧 e山1币 1阳阳 per 凹r 叫 e Atim巳 and 怡t 巳mp巳ratωure 毡 sign on a bank indi比cat优 :es 由 t ha 创t 由 t h巳 outdoor t巳 mperature is - 20.0 oc. Find on the Fahr巳 nheit scale th 巳 corresponding temp巳rature Reasoning and Solution The temperature of -20.0 oc is 20.0 Celsius point of 0 oC. This numb巳r of Celsius degre巳s corr巳 sponds to (20.0 C) !飞 主二) = 1 CJ 36.0 degr巳巳 s below th巳 ice F。 The t巳 mp巳 ratur毡, then , is 36.0 Fahrenheit d巳grees b巳low th 巳 lC巳 poin t. Subtracting 36.0 Fahrenheit d巳gr些 s from the ic巳 point of 32.0 oF on the Fahrenheit scale gives a Fahrenheit temperature of 卜 4.0 。 叫 。 The reasoning strategy us巳d in Examples 1 and 2 for converting is summariz巳 d below. betwe巳 n differ巳 nt t巳 mp巳ratur巳 scal巳 s REASONING STRATEGY Converting Between Different Temperature Scales 1. Determine the magnitude of the difference between the ice point on the initial scale. th巳 stated temp巳rature and 2. Convert this number of degrees from one scale to the other scal巳 by using the appropriat巳 conv巳rsion factor. For conversion betw巳en th 巳 Celsius and Fahrenheit scales , the factor is bas巳d on the fact 阳t 1 C。二 ; F。 3. Add or subtract the on th巳 n巳w scal巳. numb巳r of degrees on the new scale to or from the ice point ~ CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING (The answer is given at the end of the book.) 1. On a new temperature scale the steam point is 348 oX , and the ice point is 112 oX. What is the temperature on this scale that corresponds to 28.0 oC? o .c m lic c u -tr a c k C m o .d o w body temperature rises to 39 oC , the change in temperature is 2 Celsills d 巳gre巳 s or 2 C O, w not 2 oc. .c .d o c u -tr a c k As Figure 12.1 indicates , the separation b巳tween the ice and steam points on th巳 Celsius scal巳 is divided into 100 Celsills degr巳白, while on the Fahrenheit scale the s巳pa ration is divided into 180 Fahr巳 nheit degrees. Therefore , th 巳 size of th巳 Celsius degree is larger than that of the Fahrenheit d巳gree by a factor of f击, or ~ . Examples 1 and 2 illustrate how to convert betwe巳 n the Celsills and Fahrenheit scales using this factor. w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W ! XC N ! CHAPTER 12 TEMPERATURE AND HEAT F- er 358 w PD h a n g e Vi e O W XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi e 359 O W N k Steam point C\i ll ... ,. o nunu 内u 吃 5 门U 2u 叮i‘ 吁,, 14 d巳grees (1 2.1) 273.15 The number 273 .1 5 in Equation 12.1 is an exp巳rimental result , obtained in studies that utilize a gas-bas巳d thermom巳ter. When a gas confined to a fixed volum巳 is heated , its pressure increases. Conversely, wh巳n the gas is cool 巳d , its pr巳 ssur巳 decr巳 as巳s. For 巳xample , the air pressur巳 in automobil 巳 tires can rise by as mllch as 20% after the car has been driven and the tires have become wann. Th巳 chang巳 in gas pressure with temperature is th巳 basis for the constant-volume gas thermometer. A constant-volum巳 gas thermometer consists of a gas-fi lI巳d bulb to which a pressure gallge is attached , as in Figur巳 12.3. The gas is oft巳 n hydrogen or h巳 l illm at a low density , and th巳 pr 巳 ssur巳 gaug巳 can be a U-tllb巳 manometer filled with m巳rcury. The blllb is placed in thermal contact with th巳 sllbstance whos巳 temp巳rature is b巳II1 g m 巳 asured . The volume of the gas is held constant by raising or lowering the right column of the U-tllbe manometer in order to keep the mercury level in the left column at th巳 same r巳f巳 rence leve l. Th 巳 absolllt巳 pressllr巳 ofth巳 gas is proportional to the height h of the mercury on the righ t. As th巳 t巳mp巳rature chang巳s , the pressllr巳 chang巳s and ca l1 b巳 used to indicate the temperature , onc巳 th巳 cO l1 stant-volllme gas thermomet巳r has b巳巳 n calibrated. Sllppose that th巳 absolllt巳 pr巳ssure ofth巳 gas in Figur巳 12.3 is measur巳d at different temperatures. If the results are plott巳d on a pressure-versus-t巳mperature graph , a straight line is obtained , as in Figure 12 .4. If th巳 straight lin巳 is extended or 巳xtrapolated to lower and lower t巳mperatw白, the Li n巳 crosses the temperature axis at -273.15 o In reality , 110 gas can be cooled to this t巳 mperature , becaus巳 all gases liqllify before reaching i t. However, helium and hydrogen liquify at such low temperatures that they are often llsed in th巳 thermometer. This kind of graph can be obtained for differ巳nt amounts and types of low-density gases. In all cases , a straight line is found that 巳xtrapolates to -273.15 0 C on th巳 temperature axis , which suggests that th巳 valll巳 of -273 .1 50 C has fundam巳ntal significance. The significance of this nllmber is that it is th巳 absolute zero point for t巳 mperatllre measuremen t. The phras巳 " ab SOlllt巳 zero" means that temperatures lower than - 273.15 oC cannot be reach巳d by continllally cooling a gas or any oth巳r substanc巳. If lower t巳 mp巳ratures could b巳 r巳 ach巳d , th巳n fllrther extrapolation of th巳 straight line in Figur巳 12 .4 wOllld sugg巳st that negativ巳 absolute gas pressures could 巳Xl c. Absolute -.J I All thermom 巳ters make u ature. A property that changes with temperature is called a thermometric proper,砂.FOl巳X ampl巳, the thermometric prop巳rty ofthe m巳 rcury tbermometer is th 巳 l 巳 ngth of the mercury 7J Figure 12.2 A comparison of the and Celsius temperature scales. K巳 l vin 」一一一γ一....-/ U-tube Substance whose manometer temperature is bei ng measured Figure 12.3 A constant-volum巳 gas thermomete r. Absolute pressure / ~I THERMOMETERS nu zero 民d T=]飞+ One kelvi 门 equals one Celsius degree m/ 』 kelvin ." Th 巳 kelvin is the SI base unit for t巳 mperature. Figure 12.2 comp创r巳s th巳 Kelvin and Celsius scales. The siz巳 ofon 巳 kelvin is id巳 ntical t。 由e size of one C冶 lsius d巳gree because there are one hundred divisions betwe巳n the ice and steam points on both sc aJ es. As we will discuss shortly,巳xp巳 rim巳 nts have shown that thel它 ex ists a lowest possible t巳 mp巳ratur毡, below which no substance can be cool巳d. This low巳 st temp巳rature is defined to be the zero point on the Kelvin scale and is referred to as absolute zero. The ic巳 point (0 oc) occurs at 273. j 5 K on the Kelvin scale. Thus , th巳 Kelvin temperature T and the Celsius temperatur巳 Tc are related by Ice point qζ 11 Although the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales are widely used , the Kelvin temperature scale has greater scientific significance. It was introduced by the Scottish physicist William Thompson (Lord Kelvin , 1824-1907) , and in his honor 巳ach degree on the scale is call巳d a kelvin (K). By international agreement , the symbol K is not written with a degre巳 sign (0) , nor is the word "degrees" us巳d when quoting temperatures. For exampl 巳, a t巳 mperature of 300 K (not 300 OK) is read as "three hundred kelvins ," not "three hundr 巳 d m lic C m o .c to bu y N y bu to k lic C c u -tr a c k w .c .d o c u -tr a c k 373.15 一一一一一 100.00 w w .d o w Celsius , oc Kelvin , K NII THE KELVIN TEMPERATURE SCALE w w w ! XC 12.3 THERMOMETERS er O W F- w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- -200 - 100 +100 +200 Temperature , oc negative-pressure reglon Figure 12.4 A plot of absolute pressure V巳rsus temperature for a low-density gas at constant volume. The graph is a straight line and , when 巳xtrapolated (dash巳d line) , crosses the temperature axis at -273.15 oC TEMPERATURE AND HEAT O W ! h a n g e Vi e y .c .d o Hot junction Constantan Reference junction Ice-point bath , 0 oc (a) Figure 12.5 (α) A thermocouple is made from two diffl巳rent types of wires , copper and constantan in thjs case. (b) A thermocouple junction between two different wires. (b , @ Omega Engineering , Inc. AlI rights reserved. Reproduced with permission of Omega Engineering , lnc. , Stamford , CT, www. om巳ga.com.) Figure 12.6 Invasive carcinoma (cancer) of th巳 bre a st registers colors from red to yellow/white in this thermogram , indicating markedly el巳vated temperatures. (Science Photo Library/ Photo Researchers, lnc.) The physics of thermography. Figure 12.7 Thermogram showing a smoker's forearms before (left) and 5 minutes after (right) he has smoked a cigarette. Temperatures range from over 34 oC (white) to about 28 oC (blue). (Dr. Arthur Tuc k巳 r/S c i en ce Photo Library/Photo Researchers, Inc.) (b) column , while in the constant-volume gas th巳rmometer it is th巳 pressure of the gas. Several oth巳r important thermometers and their th 巳rmometnc prop巳rties will now b巳 discussed. Th巳 thermocouple is a thermometer used 巳xt巳 nsively in scientific laboratori 巳 s. It consists of thin wires of different metals , welded together at the ends to form two junctions , as Figure 12.5 illustrates. Often th巳 m巳tals ar巳 copper and constantan (a copper-nickel alloy) On巳 of the junctions , called the "hot" junction , is placed in thermal contact with th巳 0均巳 ct whose temp巳rature is being measured. Th巳 other junction ,也rm巳d the "reference" jllnction , is k巳pt at a known constant temp巳rature (usually an ic巳-water mixture at 0 oC). The th巳 r mocouple g巳n巳rates a voltage that depends on th巳 difJ社 rence in temperature betwe巳n th巳 two junctions. This voltag巳 is the thermom巳 tric prop巳rty and is measur巳 d by a voltmet町, as the drawing indicates. With the aid of calibration tables , the temperature of the hot junction can b巳 obtained from th巳 voltage. Thermocouples ar巳 used to measure t巳 mperatures as high as 2300 oC or as low as - 270 。巳 Most substances offer resistanc巳 to th巳 flow of electricity, and this resistanc巳 changes with temp巳rature . As a r巳 sult, 巳lectrical resistance provides another th巳rmometric property. Electrical resistance thermometers are often made from platinum wire , b巳caus巳 platinum has excellent mechanical and electrical properties in th巳 temperatur巳 range from -270 oc to + 700 o Th巳 resistance of platinum wire is known as a function of temperature. Thus , the temperatur巳 of a substance can be det巳rmined by placing th巳 resistanc巳 thermometer in th巳rmal contact with the substance and measuring the resistance of the wir巳Radiation emitt巳d by an object can also be used to indicate temperature. At low to moderate t巳mperatur町, th巳 pr巳dominant radiation emitted is infrared . As the temp巳rature lS ra1 S巳d , th巳 mt巳 nsity of th巳 radiation incl 巳 ases substantially. 1n on 巳 interesting application , an infrared camera regist巳rs the intensity of the infr缸.ed radiation produced at different locations on the human body. The cam巳ra is connected to a color monitor that displays the diff,巳r巳 nt infrared intensities as di 征"erent colors. This "thermal painting" is called a thermograph or thermogram. Thermography is an important diagnostic tool in medicine. For example , br巳 ast cancer is indicat巳d in th巳 thermogram in Fig c. m o m o c u -tr a c k C lic k to bu y bu to k C lic w w w .d o w w w w N 12 XC N O W CHAPTER F- er 360 w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c NEAR THERMAL EXPANS ION 361 N y to k lic c .d o m o . ack C m w o c u -tr w bu y bu to k lic C Ll NEAR THERMAL EXPANSION w w .d o w w w ! h a n g e Vi e N O W XC er 12 .4 Ll F- O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k NORMAL SOllDS Have you ever found the metallid on a glass jar too tight to open? On巳 solution is to run hot water over th巳 lid , which loosens it becaus巳 the metal 巳xpands more than the glass does. To varying 巳xt巳nts , most materials expand when heat巳d and contract when cooled. Th巳 mcr巳 ase in any one dimension of a solid is called linear expansion, linear in the sense that the 巳xpansion occurs along a line. Figure 12.9 illustrates the linear expan sion of a rod whose length is Lo when th巳 t巳mperature is T o. When the temperature of the rod increases to T o + !1 T , the length becomes Lo + !1 L , wh巳re !1 T and !1 L are the changes in temp巳rature and length , respectively. Conv巳rsely, when th巳 t巳mperature decreases to To - !1 T , the length d巳creas巳s to Lo - !1L. For modest temperature changes , exp巳rim巳nts show that the change in length is directly proportional to the change in temp巳rature (!1 L IX !J.T) . In addition , the change in l巳ngth is proportional to the initiallength of 出巳 rod , a fact that can be und巳rstood with th巳 aid ofFigur巳 12 . 10. Part a of th巳 drawing shows two identical rods. Each rod has a 1巳ngth Lo and expands by !1 L wh巳n the temperature incr巳 as巳 s by !1T. Part b shows th巳 twoh巳 ated rods combined into a single rod , for which the total expansion is th巳 sum of the expansions of 巳ach part-namely, !1 L + !1 L = 2 !1L. Clearly, th巳 amount of expansion doubles if th巳 rod is twice as long to begin with. In other words , the change in length is dir巳ctly proportional to th巳 originall巳ngth (!1 L IX Lo). Equation 12.2 expr巳sses th巳 fact that !1 L is proportional to both Lo and !1 T (!1 L IX Lo !1 T) by using a proportionality constant α, which is called the coeJ.声cient 01 linear expansion. Figure 12.8 A thermogram of the 1997/98 El Niño (r巳d) , a large region of abnormally high temperatures in the Pacifìc Ocean. (Courtesy NOAA) Ll NEAR THERMAL EXPANSION OF A SO Ll D The length Lo of an object changes by an amount !1 L when its an amount !1 T: t巳 mperatur巳 changes !1 L= αLo !1 T whereαis th巳 coefficient by (1 2.2) Temperature = To lTempe of linear expansion. ωm仰 Uni,咖 the Coφcie叫 Line川xpans毗古=阶 l LO Solving Equation 12.2 for αshows that α = !1L1 (Lo !1 T). Sinc巳 th巳 l巳ngth units of !1 L and Lo algebraically cancel , the co巳fficient of linear expansionαhas th巳 unit of (CO)- l when th巳 temperature difference !1 T is expressed in Celsius degrees (C O). Different materials with the same initial length expand and contract by diff,巳 rent amounts as the / 2 ð. L Figure 12.10 (α) Each of two identical rods expands by ßL when heated. (b) When the rods ar巳 combined into a single rod of length 2L口, the "combined" rod expands by 2 ß L. ð. L Fig ure 12.9 When the t巳 mperature of a rod is raised by ßT, th巳 length of the rod increases by ß L. .c TEMPERATURE AND H EAT F- h a n g e Vi e ! XC y to k lic .c Coeffìcient ofTh巳rmal Expansion (CO) - I S lI bstanc巳 Linear (α) Volume .d o (β) Solids 23 X 10- 6 A111minllm 10- 6 19 X 12 X 10- 6 17 X 10- 6 Brass 3.00000 m (a) Concr巳 te Copper Glass (common) (1)) Figure 12.11 (α) Two concl 巳t巳 s l abs completely fill the space between the buildings. (b) When the te mperatUl巳 incr巳a ses , each slab expands , causing the sidewalk to buckle. Lead Nickel QlI artz (fllsed) 10- 6 10- 6 10- 6 10- 6 26 X 10- 6 9.9 X 10- 6 42 X 10- 6 13 X 10- 6 39 X 10- 6 1.5 X 10- 6 X X X X X 0.50 X 10- 6 19 X 1O- 6 Silver X X X X 10- 6 10- 6 10- 6 10- 6 10- 6 8.5 3.3 14 12 29 Glass (Pyrex) G01d lron or steel 69 57 36 51 36 X 10- 6 87 X 10- 6 57 X 10- 6 Liquids b 1240 X 10- 6 1240 X 10- 6 1120 X 10- 6 Benz巳n 巳 Carbon tetrachlorid巳 Ethyl alcohol Gasolin巳 950 182 1200 207 M巳rcury Methyl alcohol Water • x 10 X 10- 6 X 10- 6 X 10- 6 "The valu巳sforαand βp 巳 rta ll1 10 a 1巳 mpe rature near 20 oC bSince liquids do not have fìxed shapes , the coeffì ci巳 nt of linear expansion is not defìned for them temperature changes , so th巳 v al l1巳 of αdep巳 nds on th巳 nature of th 巳 material. Tabl巳 12 . 1 shows some typical valll巳 s . Coefficients of linear expansion also vary somewhat dep巳 nd ing on the rang巳 of t巳 mperatur巳 s involved , bllt the values in Table 12.1 ar巳 adequate approximations . Exampl 巳 3d巳 al s with a sitllation in which a dramatic effect due to thermal expansion can be observed , even though the change in temp巳rature is small. 。 Example 3 Buckling 们 S i dewalk A concrete s id巳walk is constrllcted b etw巳巳 n two bllildings on a day when the , temp巳rature is 25 oc . Th巳 sidewalk consists of two slabs , each thre巳 meters in length and of negligible thickness (Figllre 12.11a) . As the t巳 mp巳rature rises to 38 oc , the slabs expand , bllt no s pac巳 is provided for thermal 巳x pan s ion. The buildings do not move , so the slabs buckl 巳 upw创'd. D巳termm巳 the vertical di s tanc巳 y in part b of th 巳 draw ing Reasoning Th巳巳x pand巳 d length of 巳 ach slab is eqllal to its originallength pllls the chang巳 In length I:::. L dll巳 to th巳 ri se in temp巳rature. We know the original length , and Eqllation 12.2 can be used to fì nd th 巳 chan g巳 in length. Once th 巳 ex pa nd 巳d length has be巳 n determined , th 巳 Pythagorean theorem can b巳巳 mployed to fìnd the vertical distanc巳 y in Figur在 12.11b. Solution The change in temp巳 rature is I:::. T = 38 oc - 25 oc = 13 C O, and the co巳f白 c i e nt of linear expansion for concrete is g iv巳 n in Table 12. 1. The change in 1 巳 ngth of each slab associated with this temperature change is O 6 I:::. L = α Lo l:::. T = [1 2 x 10- (CO) - I](3 .0 m) (1 3 C ) = 0.00047 m (1 2.2) Th巳 expanded by applying Figure 12.12 An expansionjoint in a bridge. (Richard Choy/Peter Arnold , Inc.) length of 巳ach slab is , thus , 3.00047 m. Th 巳 V巳rtical distanc巳 to the right triangl 巳 in Figure 12.11b : y can be obtain 巳d th巳 Pythago rea n theor巳 m y= 的 00047 m)2 一 (3 . 00000 m) 2 = I 0.053 m I 。 m o o c u -tr a c k C m w w w .d o bu y bu C lic k to Table 12.1 Coefficients of Thermal Expansion for Solids a nd Liquids a w w w w N 12 O W CHAPTER N O W w er 362 PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c XC h a n g e Vi e 363 N to bu y o w w m w .d o o m Actuator spri ng k k lic C w lic Movable plunger to The buckling of a sidewalk is on巳 cons巳 qu巳 nce of not providing s u ffici 巳 nt room for therm a1 expansion. To eliminate such probl巳 ms , engine巳rs incorporat巳巳xpan s ion joints or .c .d o c u -tr a c k spaces at intervals along bridge roadbeds , as Figure 12.12 shows ÞJ" The physics 01 an antiscalding device. Although Example 3 shows how thermal expansion can cause problems , ther 巳 are also times when it can be usefu l. For instance , each year thollsands of children ar巳 taken to em巳rg巳ncy rooms sllffering from burns caus巳d by scalding tap water. Such accid巳 nts can be redllced with the aid of the antiscalding devic巳 shown in Figure 12.13. This devic巳 scr巳ws onto the 巳 nd of a faucet and qllickly shuts off the ftow of water when it becomes too hot. As th巳 wat巳r temperature rises , the actuator spring expands and pllshes th巳 plllng巳r forward , shlltting off th巳 ftow. Wh en the water cools, the spring contracts and the water ftow reSllmes. w w w C bu y N O W F- ! 12 .4 L1 NEAR THERMAL EXPANSION er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c Water flow Figure 12.13 An antiscalding devic巳. THERMAL STRESS If the concrete slabs in Figure 12.11 had not bllckled llpward , they would have be巳n to imm巳nse forc巳s from the buildings. Th巳 forc巳 s n 巳巳d巳d to prev巳 nt a solid ob j 巳ct from expanding mllst be strong enough to COllnt巳ract any cha吨巳 in length that wOllld occur du巳 to a change in temperature. A1 though th巳 change in t巳 mperature may be small , th巳 forces-and hence the stresses-can b巳 enormou s. Th 巳y can , in fact , lead to serious structllral damag巳. Example 4 illllstrates jllSt how large th巳 str巳 sses can b巳 . Sll均 ect巳d A[~lil l'.. . \'._\~.I.II. :I .4 ' ''-IIi'I E P T P R 1.:'. :fI \'J"~ Example 4 The Stress on a Steel Beam A steel beam is used in th巳 roadb巳d of a bridge. The beam is mo unt巳db巳tween two concrete supports wh巳n the temp巳rature is 23 oC, with no room provided for thermal expansion (see Figure 12 .1 4). What compressional stress must the concr巳t巳 sup ports apply to each 巳 nd of the beam , if they ar巳 to k,巳巳p th巳 b巳 am from 巳xpanding wh 巳 n th巳 temperature rises to 42 OC? Assume that th巳 distanc巳 between th巳 concret巳 supports does not change as the temperature rises. Reasoning When th巳 temperatllre ns巳s by an amollnt ð. T, the natural tendency of the beam is to 巳xpand. If the b巳am were fr巳e to 巳xpand , it would lengthen by an amount ð. L = αLo ð. T (Eqllation 12.2). How巳V巳r, the concrete sllpports prevent this 巳xpansion from occllrring by exerting a compressional force on 巳 ach 巳 nd of the beam. The magnitude F of this forc巳 d巳pends on ð. L throllgh the relation F = YA( ð.L/Lo) (Equation 10.1 7) , where Y is Young's modulus for steel and A is the cross-sectional area of the beam. Accord ing to the discussion in Section 10.8 , th巳 compressional str巳 ss is eqllal to the magnitude of the compr巳 ssional force divided by th巳 cross 四 sectional area , or Str巳 ss = F/A. Knowns and Unknowns The data for this problem are listed in the Description tabl巳: Value 23 Concrete support oc m r-a -HU L mα e V且,同 U n iv A ν 且 ,A 町 AmmM 巳咀 St 『 ·· 气J· ny m … w ffρLVL l 4EE 巳 7 a--nur -md Z dnd dph Ltf tE t t idDA EJU lejO IHWO i l U}I dm c - Frhur Unknown Variable Stress supp口时 m川m 42 0 C Concrete L 山刀 To T m附 lnitial temperature Final temp巳rature Symbol The physics 01 thermal stress. L Modeling the Problem E圃 S… compr'陀巳s岱sional forc巳 div 叮id巳d by 由 th巳 cross-s巳ctional area A of 由 th巳 be缸丑 (s巳巳 Section 10.8 创) , or S仕ess =王 A Continued I F- w XC h a n g e Vi e w N y bu to k lic m ( ð. L \ YAI 一一-1 \ Lo / Y is Young's modulus , ð.L is the change in length , and La is the originallength of tress c;r: -i.. ‘ Substituting this expr臼 sion for F into the d巳finition of stress giv巳s Equation 1 in 由巳 right colurnn. Young's modulus Y for st巴巴1 is k:nown (see Table 10 .1), but we do not k:n ow 巳ither ð.L or La. However, M is proportionalω 勾, so we will focus on ð.L in Step 2. 、 出巳 beam. / ·飞 where .d o , ,, E固z 岛缸 Linear The 忧阳 e创rn 巳xpand巳d 、 J ‘ E aLo(T rsE飞 |ð.L = 唱 EA by an amount M =αL 乌o ð. T (Equation 12.2) , where αis the coefficient of linear expansion. The change in temperature is the final temperature T rninus the initial temperature To, or ð. T = T - To. Thus , the beam would have expand巳d by an amount ω | expression the variabl巳s T and To are k:nown , and αis available in Table 12. 1. We substitute this relation for ð.L into Equation 1, as indicat巳d in th巳 right colurnn. 1n 由is Solution Algebraically combining the results of each step , we have Stress ,_ ð. L Y 丁一 "'0 , Y α与(T 一 To ) y,α (T - To) "'0 Note that 由巳 original length Lo of the beam is elirninated alg巳braically from this resul t. Taking the value of Y = 2.0 X 10 11 N/m 2 from Table 10.1 and α= 12 X 10- 6 (C O ) - 1 from Table 12.1 , we find that Stress = Yα (T - To) = (2.0 X 10 11 N/的 [12 X 10- 6 (C O )- I](42 oC - 23 0 C) = I4.6 X 10 7 阳时| This is a large stress , equivalent to ne缸忖 on 巳 rnillion Related Homework: Problems 20, pounds per square foo t. 2 又 98 THE BIMETAL Ll CSTRIP A bimetallic strip is made from two thin strips of metal that have different co巳ffi Cl巳nts of linear expansion , as Figure 12 . 15αshows. Often brass [α= 19 X 10- 6 (C )- I] O (a) (b) Heated (c ) Cooled Figure 12.15 (a)A bim巳tallic strip and how it behaves when (b) heated and (c) cooled O and steel [α= 12 X 10- (C ) 一 1] are selected. The two pieces ar巳 welded or riveted togeth巳r. When the bimetallic strip is heated , th巳 brass , having th巳 larger value of α , expands more than th巳 ste巳1. Since the two metals 缸 e bonded together, the bimetallic strip b巳 nds into an arc as in part b , with the longer brass piece having a larger radius than the steel piec巳 When the strip is cooled , the bimetallic strip bends in the opposite direction , as in part c. The physics of an automatic coffee maker. Bim巳 tallic strips are frequ 巳 nt ly us巳 d as adjustable automatic switches in el 巳ctrical appliances. Figure 12.16 shows an automatic coffee m丛cer that turns off when the coffee is brewed to the selected str巳 ngth. 1n part a , while the brewing cy c1 e is on ,巳 lectricity passes through the heating coil that h巳 ats th巳 water. The 巳lectricity can f1 0w becaus巳 th巳 contact mount巳d on the bimetallic strip touches th巳 con tact mount巳d on the "strength" adjustm巳 nt knob , thus providing a con tÎ nuolls path for the 巳lectricity. When the bimetallic strip gets hot enough to bend away , as in part b of th巳 drawing , the contacts separate. The electricity stops becaus巳 it no longer has a continuolls path along which to f1 ow, and th巳 brewing cy c1 e is shut off. Tllrning the "str巳 ngth" knob adjusts th巳 brewing tim巳 by adjusting th巳 distanc巳 through which the bimetallic strip must bend for the contact points to separat巳. 6 o m w .c c u - t r a c k supports F= C According to Equation 10.17 , the magnitude of the compressional force that the concrete 巳xert on each end of th巳 st巳el beam is given by o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W ! PD CHAPTER 12 TEMPERATURE AND HEAT er 364 ! h a n g e Vi e O W XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c -X C h a n g e Vie w N y bu to lic k c u -tr a c k Bimetallic strip (cold) I Contacts closed (0) Coffee , I辈革 pot 、 n " \ (b) THE EXPANSION OF HOlES An interesting example of linear expansion occurs wh巳n there is a hole in a piec巳 of solid material. We know that the mat,巳rial itself expands when heat巳d , but what about the hole? Do巳 s it expand , contract, or remain the sam巳? Conceptual Example 5 provides som巳 insight into the answer to this question. L. .d o m w o .c C m ( 队厂 H L l o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W 365 ! 12.4 Ll NEAR THERMAL EXPANSIONF er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k Bimetallic strip (ho t) Coffee pot "o ff" Figure 12.16 A bimetallic strip controls whether this ∞仔ée pot is (α) "on" (strip cold , straight) or (b) "off" (strip hot, bent). Co nceptual Example 5 Do Holes Expand or Contract When the Temperature Increases? Figure 12.17a shows eight square tiles that are attach巳 d tog巳ther and arrang巳 d to form a square pattern with a hol巳 in th巳 center. lf the tiles ar巳 heated , does the size of th巳 hole (a) decrease or (b) incr巳 ase? Reasoning We can analyze this problem by disass巳 mbling the pattern into separate tiles , heating them , and then reassembling the pattern. What happ巳 ns to each of the individual tiles can b巳 explained using what w巳 know about linear expansion. Answer (a) is incorrect. When a tile is heated both its length and width expand. It is tempting to think , therefor巳 , that the hole in the pattern decreases as th巳 surrounding tiles 巳xpand into it. However, this is not corr巳 ct , b巳cause any on巳 tile is prev巳nted from expanding into the hole by the expansion of the tiles next to it. Answer (b) is correct. Sinc巳巳ach tile expands upon heati吨, th巳 pattern also expands , and 由ehole along with it , as shown in Figure 12.17b. In fact , if w巳 had a ninth tile that was id巳ntical to the oth巳rs and heat巳dittoth巳 same extent , it would fit exactly into the hol 巳, as Figure 12.7c indicates. Thus , not only does the hole expand , it does so exactly as 巳 ach of th巳 tiles does. Since the ninth tile is made of the same materi aJ as th巳。由巳rs , w巳 S巳巳 that the hole expands just as if it were mad巳 of th巳 mat巳rial of th巳 sUlTounding tiles. The thermal expansion of 由 e hole and the surrounding material is an aJ ogous to a photographic enlarg巳ment:巳verything is enlarged , including holes. Related Homework: Problems 13, 23 。 Instead of the separat巳 tiles in Example 5 , w巳 could hav巳 used a squar巳 plate with a square hole in the c巳 nter. Th巳 hole in the plate would hav巳巳xpand巳d jllSt lik巳 the hole in the pattern of tiles. Fllrth巳 rmore , the same conclllsion applies to a hole of any shap巳. Thus , [Jil〔巴山川 」 副「口 MV- 口 | 川 山 丁 口 口口已D川 (a) Unheated (b ) Heated 二口口 (c) Figure 12.17 (α) The tiles are arranged to form a square pattern with a hole in the center. (b) Wh en the tiles are heated , the pattern , including th巳 hole in the center,巳xpands. (c) The 巳xpanded hole is the same size as a heated tile. .c XC h a n g e Vi ew ! F- c u -tr a c k y to k Example 6 A Heated Engagement Ring A gold 巳n gagem巳nt ring has an inner diameter of 1.5 x 10- 2 m and a t巳 mp巳rature of 27 oc. The ring falls into a sink of hot water whose te mp巳 rat ure is 49 oc. What is the change in th 巳 diameter of th巳 h o l e in the ring? Reasoning The hole expands as if it were 白 ll ed with gold , so th巳 change in th巳 diameter is given by !::.L = αLo!::.T, whereα= 14 X 10 - 6 (C O)- I is the coefficient oflin巳ar expansion for gold (Table 12.1) , Lo is the ori ginal di am巳ter, and !::.T is the c han g巳 10 temp巳ratur巳. Solution The change in th巳 ring 's diameter is !::.L= αLo !::.T = [1 4 X 10- 6 (C O)- I] (l .5 X 10- 2 m)(49 oC - 27 0 C) = I4.6 X 10- 6 ml The previous two examples illustrate that ho les expand lik巳 th e surrounding mat巳rial when h巳 ated . Therefore , holes in materials with larger coefficients of linear expansio n 巳x pand more than those in materials with smaller coefficients of linear expansion. Conceptual Example 7 巳xplores this asp巳ct of thermaJ expansio n. 。 Concep叫 Example 7 Ex阳 nding C州的 Figure 12.18 shows a cross-sectional view of three cylind巳rs , A , B , and 巳 One is made from lead , one from brass , and one fro m stee1. AU three have the same tem p巳ratu re, and they barely fìt in side each other. As the cy Jj nd ers 缸它 h eated to the sam巳 higher temp巳 rature , C falls off, whi le A becomes tightly wedged agai nst B. Which cylinder is made fro m which material ? (a) A is brass, B is lead , C is steel (b) A is lead , B is brass , C is steel (c) A is lead , B is steel , C is brass (d) A is brass , B is st叫, C is lead (e) A is steel , B is brass , C is lead (f) A is steel , B is lead , C is brass (α) Re asoning We will consider how the outer and inner diameters of each cy lind巳 r change as th巳 temp巳ratu re is raised. In particular, with regard to th巳 mn巳r diameter we note that a hole expands as if it were fìlled with the surrounding materia l. According to Table 12.1 , lead has the gr巳atest coefficient of Jj near expansion, followed by brass , and then by steel. Thus , th巳 outer and inner diam巳ters of the lead cy Jj nder change the most , while those of th巳 ste巳 I cy lind巳r change the leas t. Answers (a) , (b) , (e) , and (1) are incorrect. Since the s也巳 I cylinder expands the least, it cannot b巳 th巳 o uter one , for if it were , th巳 greater 巳xpan s i o n of the middle cy Jj nder would prevent the steel cy lind er 仕om fa lJ ing 0旺" as outer cylinder C actuaUy d o巳s. The ste巳 I cylinder also cannot be the inner one , because then 由e gr飞eater 巳xpa n si o n of th巳 middle cyLinder would allow th巳 steel cylind巳r to fall out , contrary to what is observed for inner cy linder A (b) Figure 12.18 ConceptuaJ Example 7 discusses the arrangements of the thre巳 cylinders shown in cutaway views in parts a and b. Answers (c) and (d) are correct. S in ce 出e steel cylinder cannot be on th巳 o utside or on 出巳 in s ide, it must be the middle cy Jj nder B. Figure 12.18a shows th巳 lead cy lind巳r as 由巳 o u ter cylinder C. It wiU fall off as the temperaωre is rai s时 , since lead expands more than steel. The brass inner cyLinder A expands more than the s te巳I cy lind巳 r that surrounds it and b巳co m es tightly wedged , as observed. Similar reasorung applies aJ so to Figure l 2.18b , which s hows 由巳 brass cy hnd巳r as the o ut巳r cylinder and 出巳 lead cy Jj nder as the inn巳ron巳, since bo由 brass and l ead 臼 pand more 由 an steel yl' CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING (The answers are given at the end of the book.) Aluminum frame 2. A rod is hung from an aluminum frame , as the drawing shows. The rod and the frame have the same temperat ure , and there is a small gap between the rod and the floor. The frame and rod are th en heated uniformly. Will the rod ever touch the floor if the rod is made from (a) aluminum , (b) lead , (c) brass? 3. A simple pendulum is made using a long , thin meta l wire. When the temperature drops , does th e period of the pendulum increase , dec rease , or remain the sa me? ←一一-Smal l gap o .c m lic C m o .d o w w w it follows that a hole in a piece of solid material expands when heated and contracts when cooled, just as 扩 it were filled with the material that surrounds it. If the hole is cirw .c .d o c u tr a c k c ular, the equation ð. L = αLo ð. Tca n b巳 us巳d to find the change in any linear dimensio n of the hol 巳, such as its radius or diameter. Examp l 巳 6 illustrates this type of linear expansion . w w C lic k to Problem-solving insig ht bu bu y N ! O W TEMPERATURE AND HEAT N 12 er CHAPTER O W h a n g e Vi ew 366 PD XC er PD F- w N o Itl :: .d o m o m w .c crete (concrete that is reinforced with embedded steel rods). Table 12.1 shows that the coefficient of linear expansionαfor concrete is the same as that for stee l. Why is it important that these two coefficients be the same? 5. One type of cooking pot is made from stainless steel and has a copper coating over the outside of the bottom. At room temperature the bottom of this pot is flat , but when heated the bottom is not flat. When the bottom of this pot is heated , is it bowed outward or inward? 6. A metal ball has a diameter that is slightly greaterthan the diameter of a hole that has been cut into a metal plate. The coefficient of linear expansion for the metal from which the ball is made is greaterthan that for the metal of the plate. Which one or more of the following procedures can be used to make the ball pass through the hole? (a) Raise the temperatures of the ball and the plate by the same amount. (b) Lower the temperatures of the ball and the plate by the same amount. (c) Heat the ball and cool the plate (d) Cool the ball and heat the plate . 在 A hole is cut through an aluminum plate. A brass ball has a diameter that is slightly smallerthan the diameter of the hole . The plate and the ball have the same temperature at all times. Should the plate and ball both be heated or both be cooled to preventthe ball from falling through the hole? c u -tr a c k N C lic k to bu y N y bu to k lic C 4. For added strength , many highways and buildings are constructed with reinforced con- w w .d o w w w ! C h a n g e Vie VOLUME THERMAL EXPANSION F 367 O W 12.5 er O W -X w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k VOlUME THERMAl EXPANSION Th巳 volum巳 of a normal material increases as the temp巳rature incr巳 ases. Most solids and liquids behave in this fas hio n. By analogy with lin巳 ar thermal expansion , the change in volume !1 V is proportional to th巳 change in temp巳rature !1 T and to the initial volum巳 Vo , provided th巳 change in temperatur巳 is not too larg巳 Th ese two proportionalities can b巳 conv巳rted into Equation 12.3 with the aid of a proportionality constant ß, known as th巳 coefficient ofvolume expansion. The algebraic form of this 巳quation is similar to that fo r linear expansion , !1 L = αLo !1 T VOLUME THERMAL EXPANSION The volum巳 Vo ofan obj 巳ctchang巳s by an amount !1 V when its temperature changes by an amount !1 T: !1 V = ßVo!1 T where 卢 is the co巳fficient (12.3) of volume expansion . Coolant reservoi r O Common Unit for the Coefficient of 协lume Expansion: (C )一 l The unit for ß, like that forα, is (c o )- I. Values for ß depend on the natur巳 of the material , and Table 12.1 lists some examples measured near 20 。巳 Th 巳 values of ß for Ji quids are substantially larger than those for solids , becaus巳Ii quids typica lly expand more than solids , giv巳 n the same initial volumes and temperature changes. Table 12.1 also shows that , for most solids , the co巳fficient of volum巳巳 xpansion is thre巳 tim巳 s as much as th巳 co巳伍 ci 巳nt of lin 巳 ar expans io n: 卢 =3α. If a cavity exists within a solid object , the volume of the cavity increases wh巳n the object expands , just as if the cavity were filled with the surrounding material. Th巳 expans lO n of the cavity is analogous to the expansion of a hole in a s h e巳t of m at巳rial. Accordingly, the chang巳 in volum巳 of a cavity can be found using the r巳lation !1 V = ßVo!1 T , wh巳re ß is the coef自 cient of volume 巳xpa nsion of th巳 mat巳rial that surrounds th巳 c a vity. Example 8 illustrates this poin t. Figure 12.19 An automobile radiator and a coolant reservoir for catching the overflow fro111 the radi atoI二 。 …… 川ut叫e 叫主tor A small plastic contain巳 r, called the coolant 1 巳s巳rvoir, catches the radiator f1 uid that overflows whe n an a utomobi l 巳 en gi n e becomes hot (see Figure 12. 19). The radiator is made of copper, and th巳 coolant has a coefficient of volume ex pansion of ß = 4 .10 X 10- 4 (C O )- I. If the radiator is fìlled to its 15-quart capacity wh巳 n the e n gi n巳 i s cold (6.0 oc) , how much overflo w wiU spill into the r巳 servoir when th 巳 coolant r巳 ac h es its operating temperature of 92 OC? The physics of the overflow of an automobile radiato r. .c XC h a n g e Vi ew O W ! F- y bu to Solution When the temperature increases by 86 C O, the coolant expands by an amount ð. V = ßVoð. T = [4.10 x 10- 4 (C ) 一 1] (1 5 quarts)(86 C O) = 0.53 quarts (12.3) O The radiator cavity expands as if it w巳re fìlled with copper [β = 51 X 10- 6 (CO) - I; se巳 Tabl e 12.1] . Th巳巳x pan s ion of the radiator cavity is ð. V = ßVoð. T = [51 X 10- 6 (C O)- I] ( 15 qu缸 ts)(86 CO) = 0.066 quarts The 0阳日 ow volume is 0.53 quarts - 0.066 quarts = I0 .46q川s l Although most substances expand wh巳nh巳ated , a few do no t. For instance , if water at o oC is heated , its volume decreases until the temperature reaches 4 oc. Abov巳 4 oC wa- The physics of ice formation and the survival 0' aquatic life. ter behaves normally, and its volume increases as the temperature increases. Because a given mass of water has a minimum volume at 4 0 C , the d巳 n sity (mass per unit volume) of water is greatest at 4 oC , as Figure 12.20 shows . The fact that water has its greatest density at 4 oC , rath巳r than at 0 oC , has important consequences for the way in which a lak巳 fr巳ez巳s . When the air t巳mperature drops , the surface layer of water is chilled. As the temperature of the surface layer drops toward 4 oC , this layer b巳comes more d巳nse than th巳 warmer water b巳low. The denser water sinks and pushes up the deeper and warm巳r water, which in turn is chilled at the s urfac巳 . This proc巳ss continues until the t巳mperature of the entire lake reaches 4 o Further cooling of the s urfac巳 water below 4 oC makes it l ess dense than the d巳eper layers; consequently, the surface layer does not sink but stays on top. Continu巳d cooling of the top layer to 0 oC leads to the formation of ice that fioats on th巳 water, because ice has a small巳rd巳 nsity than water at any temperature. Below the ice , h owev巳r, the water temperature remains above 0 o Th 巳 s h巳 et of ice acts as an insulator that reduc巳 s the loss of heat from 由巳 lake , esp巳 cially if th巳 ice is cov巳red with a blanket of snow , which is also an insulator. As a result , lakes usually do not freeze solid , even during prolonged cold spells , so fì sh and other aquatic life can survive. The physics 0' bursting water pipes. Th巳 fact that the density of ic巳 is smaller than the d巳nsity of water has an important consequenc巳 for homeown巳rs , who have to contend with 由e possibility of bursting wat巳r plp巳s during severe winters. Water often fre巳zes in a section of pipe exposed to unusually cold temperatures. The ice can form an immovable plug that prevents th巳 subsequent fiow of wat巳r, as Figure 12.21 illustrates. wh巳n water (larger density) turns to ice (smaller d巳nsity) , its volume expands by 8.3%. Th巳refore , when more wat巳r fre巳zes at th巳 left sid巳 of 出e plug , the 巳xpanding ice pushes liquid back into the pipe leading to 由巳 stre巳t connection , and no damage is don巳 How巳ver, when ice forms on 出e right side of 由e plug , the 巳xpanding ice pushes liquid to th巳 right-but it has nowhere to go if the faucet is closed. As ice continues to form and expand , 出e water pres s ur巳 b巳tween th巳 plug and faucet rises c. c. 1000.0 m E bEEO 的 ha QdQJQJ QJau7' nyQJnwd nynuJqd 999.6 4 8 10 Temperature , oC Figure 12.20 The density of water in the temp巳rature range from 0 to 10 o At 4 oC water has a maximum density of 999.973 kg/m3 . (This value is equivalent to the often-quoted density of 1.000 00 grams per milliliter.) O 2 c. ~ CHECK Y 。 ωUR 川 U川 ND 、唱aωDERS τ ANDI川川 N唱 Closed pressure pressure faucet Figure 12.21 As water freezes and expands , enormous pressure is applied to the liquid water between the ice and the closed fauce t. (The answers are given at the end of the book.) 8_ Suppose th at liquid mercury and glass both had the same coefficient of volume expan- sion. Would a mercury-in-glass thermometer still work? 9. Is the buoyant force provided by warmer water (above 4 OC) greater than , less than , or equal to the buoyant force provided by cooler water (also above 4 C)? 0 o m lic C m o The way. c in which the level 01 a liquid in a c u -tr a c k container changes with temperature depends on the change in volume 01 both the liquid and the containe r. w w .d o Reasoning When the temperature increas町, both th巳 coolant and th 巳 radiator expand. If th 巳y w were to expand by the same amount, there would be no overflow. How巳ver, the liquid coolant .c .d o c u -tr a c k expands more than th巳 radiator, and the overflow volume is the amount of coolant expansion minus the amount of the radiator cavity expansion w w w k Problem-solving insight C lic k to bu y N O W TEMPERATURE AND HEAT N 12 er CHAPTER PD h a n g e Vi ew 368 ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi e w N y to bu c u -tr a c k k lic An object with a high temperature is said to be hot, and th巳 word "hot" brings to mind the word "heat." Heat f1 0ws from a hotter object to a cooler 0时 ect wh 巳 n the two are placed in contac t. It is for this reason that a cup of hot coffee feels hot to the touch , while a glass of ic巳 water fe巳 Is cold. When th巳 p巳rson in Figure 12.22a touches the coffee cup , heat f1 0ws from the hotter cup into th巳 cooler hand. When th巳 person touches the glass in part b of the drawing , heat again f1 0ws from hot to cold , in this case from th巳 warmer hand into th巳 colder glass. Th巳 r巳spons巳 of the n巳rves in th巳 hand to th巳 arrival or departure of heat prompts the brain to identify the coffe巳 cup as being hot and th巳 glass as being cold. What exactly is heat? As the following defìnition indicat巳 s , h 巳at is a form of en巳rgy, energy in transit from hot to cold. .d o o w .c m C m HEAT AND INTERNAL ENERGV o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N 369 ! XC O W 12.7 HEAT AND TEMPERATURE CHANGE : SPECIFIC HEAT CAPACITY F- er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k (α) DEFINITION OF HEAT Heat is energy that f1 0ws from a higher-temperature obj 巳ct b巳cause of th巳 differenc巳 in temperatures. obj 巳ct to a lower-temperature SI Unit of Heat: joule (J) Being a kind of energy, heat is measured in the same units used for work , kin巳 tic energy, and potential energy. Thus , the SI unit for h巳 at is th巳 joule. The heat that f1 0ws from hot to cold in Figure 12.22 originates in the internal energy ofth巳 hot substanc巳 . The internal energy of a substanc巳 is th巳 sum of the molecular kin 巳 tic energy (due to random motion of th巳 molecules) , the molecular pot巳 ntial energy (due to forces that act betw巳巳n the atoms of a molecul 巳 and between molecules) , and other kinds ofmol巳cular energy. When heat f1 0ws in circumstances wh巳r巳 no work is done , the internal en巳rgy of th巳 hot substanc巳 decreases and th巳 internal energy of the cold substance increas巳 s. Althollgh h巳 at may O!毡 inate in the internal energy supply of a sllbstance , it is not correct to say that a substance contains heat. The substance has internal 巳 nergy, not hea t. The word "heat" only refers to the 巳 nergy actually in transit from hot to cold. The next two sections consider som巴巴ffl巳cts of hea t. For instance , when preparing spaghetti , the fìrst thing that a cook does is to heat the water. Heat from the stove callses the internal energy of the wat巳 r to incr巳 ase . Associat巳d with this increase is a rise in t巳mpera ture. Aft巳r a while , the t巳mperature reach巳 s 100 oC , and th巳 water b巳gins to boil. During boiling , th巳 add巳d heat causes the water to change from a liquid to a vapor phase (steam) Th巳 n巳xt section inv巳 stigates how the addition (or removal) of h巳 at causes th巳 temperature of a substance to chang巳. Then , Section 12.8 discusses th巳 I 巳lationship betw巳en h巳 at and phas巳 chang巳, such as that which occurs wh巳 n water boils. HEAT AND TEMPERATURE CHANGE: SPECIFIC HEAT CAPACITV SOllOS ANO lI QUIDS Greater amounts of heat ar巳 needed to raise th巳 temperature of solids or liqllids to higher values. A great巳r amount of heat is also required to rais巳 th巳 temp巳 ratur巳 of a greater mass of mat巳 rial. Similar comments apply when th巳 t巳 mperature is low巳 red ,巳xcept that h巳 at must b巳 r巳 mov巳d. For limited temperature rang巳 s , experiment shows that the heat Q is directly proportional to the chang巳 in t巳 mperature I1 T and to th巳 mass m. These two proportionalities are expressed below in Eqllation 12 .4, with the help of a proportionality constant c that is referred to as the specifìc heat capacity of the m at巳 ria l. HEAT SUPP Ll ED OR REMOVED IN CHANGING THE TEMPERATURE OF A SUBSTANCE The heat Q that must be supplied or removed to chang巳 of mass m by an amount I1 T is Q = cm l1 T where c is the sp巳cific heat capacity of the substanc巳 Common Unit for Specifìc Heat Capacity: J/(kg. C O ) the temperatur巳 of a s llbstanc巳 (12 .4) (b) Figure 12.22 Heat is energy in transit from hot to cold. (α) Heat f1 0ws from the hotter coffe巳 cup to the colder hand. (b) Heat f1 0ws from the warmer hand to the colder glass of ice wate r. .c XC h a n g e Vi ew ! F- O W TEMPERATURE AND HE AT y bu Capacity, c J/(kg' C O ) S lI b sta n c巳 Solids AI lI lllinlllll Coppel Gl ass H lI lllan body (37 oC , average) Ice (- 15 oc) lron 0 1' steel Lead Sil ver Liquids Benzene Ethyl alcoho l Glycerin Mercury Water ( 15 oc) 9.00 X 10 2 387 840 to k O Exam回e 9 A Hot Jogger In a ha lf hour, a 65-kg jogger can g巳nerat巳 8.0 x 10s J of hea t. This h巳at is removed frolll the j ogger's body by a variety of Ill eans , inclllding th 巳 body 's own telllp巳 ratllre- regul at in g Ill echani sllls. If the h巳at were not rellloved , how Ill llch wOllld the j ogger's body t巳Ill peratllre incl 巳 as巳? 2.00 X 10 3 Reasoning The increase in body telll peratllre dep巳 nd s on th 巳 a mount of heat Q generated by the jo gg町, her Ill ass m , and the s p巳 c ifì c heat capacity c of the hllman body. Sinc巳 nlllll e ri ca l valU 巳 s are known for these thr巳:e variables , we can deterllline the potenti al ris巳 in t巳Ill perature by using Eg llation 12 .4. 452 128 Solution Tab le 12.2 gives the av巳 rag巳 s p巳c ifìc heat capacity of the human body as 3500 J/(kg' C O ) . With thi s va llle, Egll ati on 12 .4 shows that 3500 235 Q cm 1740 2450 2410 139 4186 "Except as noted, the values are for 25 oc and 1 alm of press Ul 巳 8.0 x 10 s J [3500J/(kg'C )](65kg) 厅7士~ ð. T = 一一-------- = 13.5 C 门 O '-一一一」 An increase in body telllperatllre of 3.5 oC cOllld b巳 life-threatening. 0ne way in which the it fro lll occllrring is to relllov巳 excess h 巳 at by perspiring. ln contras t, cats, sllch as the on 巳 in F igllre 12.23 , do not perspire bllt often pant to relllove 巳xcess hea t. j ogge l、 body pr 巳V巳 nts 。 。 Exam帅 10 Taking a Hot Shower Co ld water at a telllperatllre of 15 oC enters a h 巳 ate r, and the 1 巳 s lll ting hot water has a telllpe ratllre of 6 1 o A person lI ses 120 kg of hot wat巳 r in taking a shower. (a) F ind th巳巳n e rgy n 巳ed ed to h巳 a t th巳 wat巳 r. (b) Ass urIlÍ ng that the lI tility cOlllpany charges $0.10 per kilowatt . hOllr for e lectrica l energy, determin 巳 th 巳 cos t of h巳atin g the wate r. c. Reasoning The amollnt Q of heat needed to raise th 巳 wa te r te mperatllre can b巳 fO llnd fro lll the relation Q = cm ð. T , since the spec ifi c heat capacity , Ill ass , and temperatur巳 c h a n g巳 of the water are know n. To d e terlllin 巳 th 巳 cost of thi s 巳 n 巳 rgy , we Ill llltipl y the cost per lI nit of e nergy ($0.10 per kilowatt . hOllr) by th 巳 a mollnt of e ne rgy lI sed , ex pressed in energy lI ni ts of kilowatt. hours . Solution (a) The alllollnt of heat needed to h巳at th 巳 wa ter IS Q = cm ð. T = [41 86 J/(kg ' C )]( 120 kg)(6 1 oC - 15 oc) = I 2.3 X 10 7 J O (1 2 .4 ) (b) The kilowatt. hOllr (kW h) is th巳 lI nit ofe n 巳 rgy that lI ti lity cOlllpanies u s巳 i n YOllr electric bi ll. To ca l c lll at巳 th e cost , w巳 n eed to deterllljne the nlllllb巳 r of j Ollles in one ki lowatt . hOll r. Recall that 1 kilowatt is 1000 watts (1 Kw = 1000 W) , 1 watt is 1 jOllle per second (l W = 1 J/s; s巳E Table 6.3), and 1 hour i s 巳gll al to 3600 seconds (1 h = 3600 s). ThllS, I 1000 W \ I 1 J/s \ I 36心O 叭 1 kWh = (l kWh) 1 一一一一 11 一一一 11 一一一=- 1 = 3.60 飞 1 kW / \ 1 W } \ 1 h } The nlllllber of kilowatt . hours of energy lI sed to heat Figure 12.23 Cats , such as thjs Bengal tl g巳 1', often pant to g巳t rid of 巳xce ss hea t. (PhotoDisc Blue/PhotoDisc , Tnc.l Gelty Images) (2.3 X 10' J) 1 k认/ h 飞 3.60 X At a cost of $0.10 κ th 巳 water 1 = 10 õ J } x , 10 õ J is 6 .4 kWh P川Wh, the bi 灿川巳川 1 $0.641 or 64 cen Example 1 1 Heating a Swimming Pool Figllre 12.24 shows a swimming pool o n a sunny day. If the water absorbs 2.00 X 109 J of heat from the slln , what is the cha nge in the volum巳 of the wat巳 r? 。 m o m o Sp巳cifìc H巳 at lic k lic C w c u -tr a Solving Eq uatio n 12 .4 for the specifìc h巳 at capacity shows that c = Q/(m ð. T) , so the unit for specifìc heat capacity is J/(kg ' C O ). Table 12.2 r巳 veal s that the value of the specifìw .cd o .c c u -tr a c k heat capacity d巳p巳nds on the n atUl毡 of the materi a l. Examples 9 , 10, and 11 illustrate the u s巳 of Eq uation 12 .4. w Table 12.2 Specific Heat Capac ities a Solids and Liquids .c . d o of Some ck w w w C to bu y N 12 N O W CHAPTER er 370 PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- C h a n g e Vie HEAT AND TEMPERATURE CHANGE: SPECIFIC HEAT CAPACITY F 371 ! w N y bu to k lic Description H巳at absorb巳d Value Q 2.00 X 109 J D. V ? vo lum巳 ofwater m Figure 12.24 When water absorbs heat Q from the sun , th巳 water expands. (David Wa]]J Danita Delimont) Unknown Variable Change in c u -tr a c k probl巳mar巳· Symbol by water .d o o m w c u -tr a c k Knowns and Unknowns The data for this C Reasoning As the water heats up , its volum巳 increases . .c According to th巳 relation D. V = 卢 Vo D. T (Equation 12.3) , th巳 chang巳D. V in volume dep巳nds on the change D. T in temp巳rature. The change in temperatur巳, in turn , depeods 00 出巳 amouot of heat Q absorbed by the water and 00 th巳 mass m of water b巳ing heat巳d , sinc巳 Q = cm D. T (Equatioo 12 .4). To 巳valuate the mass , we r巳cognize that it depends on the density p and th巳 initial volume Vo, SIDC巳 ρ = m/Vo (Equation 11.1). Thes巳 three relations will be used to deterrnin巳 th巳 chang巳 in vol ume of the wat旺 o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W 12.7 er O W -X w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- Modeling the Problem E圃 阳 Voolum um 田 囚me川叫巾 The 阳阳 E忧e町 川 lern e町口 rrm mal an am 丑loun 川 lt D. T , th巳 volum巳 ofth巳 water changes by ao amouot D. V, as given by Equation 12.3: D. V = ßVo D. T, wh巳r巳 Vo is the initial volume and ß is th巳 co巳fficient of volume expansion for water. Both Vo and D. T ar巳 unknown , how巳V巳r, so w巳 wiUd巳 al with D. T in Step 2 and Vo in Step 3. =H E (1 2.3) E圃 H 阳阔创…… 阳山叫 taa缸 削 m nd 咀dCαωhan 吨叩 a缸n吨叫呻 E咆灿川 ge 耶盼内 ein i叮 TI 创 Tempe era by an amount D.T. The relation betw巴巴n Q and D. T is giv巳n by Equation 12 .4 as Q = cm D. T, wh巳re c is th巳 specifìc heat capacity and m is th巳 mass of th巳 water. Solving this 巳quation for D. T yields t由 h巳 water 优 t emp巳ratur巳 chang巳s to the mass density p by Equation 1 1. 1 as p = m/Vo. Solviog this mass yields 巳quation for the E三日 for m can be substituted into Equation 1, as indicated in the right column. Solution Algebraic aU y combining the V 二 , nn ( r 巳sults of the Q川 , nn thr巳巳 steps , I Q I D. V 二 ßVo D. T 二 ßVo \ C:l 尸 ßVo l 石可J we h ßQ ~; = Not巳 that the initial volum巳 Vo of the water is eliminated algebraically, so it does not expression for D. V. Taking valu巳s of β= 207 X 10- 6 (C O ) 一 I from Table 12.1 , c = 4186 J/(kg. C O) from T¥ble 12.2 , and p 二1. 000 X 103 kg/m 3 from Table 1 1.1, w巳 have that βQ [207 X 10- 6 (C O)- I](2.00 X 109 1) In , n_O τ l D. V=.!:一 【 ~= I 9.89 x 1O - ~ m J I cp [4186 J/(kg.CO)]( l. OOO X 10 3 kg/m3) I ._-_ appearin 出巳 final M " o L.. Related Homework: Problems 53, 55 J th巳 h巳 at E回 M制 Dens均川…川川叫 of ……elated expr巳ssion (12.3) 、l which can be substituted into Equation 12.3 , as shown at th巳 righ t. We know Q absorbed by the water, and we will consider the mass m in th巳 n巳xt step. This D. V = 卢 Vo D. T =去| 唱EA D. T (1 2.3) rs-、、 | ßVo D. T D. V = _ _ _- - - - ' ( -A) .c F- h a n g e Vi e ! XC N y bu k .d As we wiJI see in Section 15.6 , th巳 valu 巳 of th巳 specific heat capacity depends ono c u - t r a c k whether the pressure or volum巳 is held constant while energy in the form of heat is add巳d to or removed from a substance. The distinction betwe巳n constant pressure and constant volum巳 is usually not important for solids and liquids but is significant for gases. As we wi lI see in Section 15.6 , a greater value for the specific heat capacity is obtained for a gas at constant pressure than for a gas at constant volume. HEAT UNITS OTHER THAN THE JOUlE There are three heat units oth巳r than the joule in common us巳. One kilocalorie (1 kcal) was defin巳d historicalI y as the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of one kilogram of water by one Celsius degree.* With Q = 1. 00 kcal , m = 1. 00 kg , and 6. T = 1.00 C O , the equation Q = cm 6. T shows that such a definition is 巳quivalent to a specific heat capacity for water of c = 1. 00 kcal/(kg . C O ) . Similarly, on巳 calorie (1 cal) was defined as the amount of h巳 at ne巳ded to raise th巳 temperatur巳 of one gram of water by on巳 O C巳 Isius degre巳 , which yields a value of c = 1. 00 cal/(g' C ). (Nutritionists use th巳 word "Calori巳," with a capital C , to specify th巳巳 nergy content of foods; this use is unfortunate , since 1 Calorie = 1000 calories = 1 kca l.) The British thermal unit (Btu) is the oth巳rcom monly used h巳at unit and was defined historically as the amount of heat ne巳ded to rais巳 th巳 temperature of on巳 pound of water by one Fahrenheit degree. It was not until the time of James Joule (1 818-1889) that the relationship betw巳巳n energy in the form of work (in units of joules) and 巳n巳rgy in the form of heat (in units of kilocalories) was firmly 巳stablished . Joule ' s 巳xperim巳nts reveal巳d that the performance of mechanical work, like rubbing your hands together, can make the temp巳rature of a sub stance rise , just as the absorption of h巳 at can. His 巳xp巳nm巳 nts and those of later workers have shown that 1 kcal = 4186 joules or 1 cal = 4.186 joul巳s Because of its historical significance , this conversion factor is known as the mechanical equivalent 01 heat. CAlORIMETRV 川勺Fj Calorimeter cup Insulating container Unknown material Figure 12.25 A calorimeter can be used to measure 由e specific heat capacity of an unknown material. 1n Section 6.8 we encountered the principle of conservation of energy, which states that energy can be neither cr巳 ated nor destroyed , but can only be converted from one form to another. There w巳 dealt with kinetic and pot巳 ntial energies. 1n this chapter we hav巳 ex panded Ollr conc巳pt of en巳rgy to incllld巳 h巳 at , which is en巳rgy that flows from a highertemperature object to a lower-temperature object because of the difference in t巳 mperatur巳 No matter what its form , whether kinetic en巳 rgy, potential energy, or heat , energy can b巳 neither created nor destroyed. This fact governs th巳 way objects at different temperatures come to an equilibrium t巳 mperature when they are plac巳d in contac t. 1f ther巳 is no h巳 at loss to the 巳xternal surroundings , the heat lost by the hotter objects equals the heat gained by the cooler on巳 s , a process that is consistent with the conservation of en巳rgy. J llSt this kind of process occurs within a thermos. A p巳rfect th巳rmos would prevent any heat from leakt h巳 foαrm ing Ol1 t or in. How 巳V巳町r, 巳 n巳r鸣gy in 由 t由 h巳町rmos tωot由 h巳 巳xt臼巳 川 nlt 由 t ha 创tt由 h巳叮 y have dωif征 fe 臼ren 川 lt 优 t emp巳町ra 创tures; for example , between ice cubes and warm tea. Th巳 transfer of 巳n巳rgy continues l1 ntil a common temp巳rature is reached at thermal equilibrillm The kind ofh巳at transfer that occurs within a thermos of iced tea also occurs within a calorimeter, which is the experimental apparat l1 s used in a technique known as calorimetry. Figure 12.25 shows that, like a thermos , a calorimeter is essentially an insulat巳d contain 巳r. 1t can be used to determine th巳 specific heat capacity of a substance , as the next example illustrates. "From 14.5 to 15.5 oc o c m lic w o c u -tr . ack C m C lic k GASES w w .d o w w w w to to bu y N O W CHAPTER 12 TEMPERATURE AND HEAT O W w er 372 PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- .c h a n g e Vi ew PD XC h a n g e Vi ew O W y to bu y bu k lic .c Th巳 ca 刻l o rime 创te 缸r cup in Figure 口 1 2.2 5 βi s m ad巳 fro m 0 .15 kg of a luminum and co nta ins 0.20 kg of wate r. Initi ally, the wate r and the cup have a common te mperature of 1 8. 0 。巳 A 0 .040-kg mass of unknown mate ri al is heated to a temperature of 97.0 oC and then added to th巳 w ater. The temperature of the wate r, the cup , and the unknown mate rial is 22.0 oC after the rmal equilibrium is reestablished . Ig noring the sm all amount of heat ga in 巳d by the th e rmo m et町, find th巳 specific heat capacity of the unknown materia l. .d o m o w o c u -tr a c k C m to k lic C υ Exa 副曹叫冒 w w .d o w w w ! 373 N O W F- HEAT AND PHASE CHANGE : LATENT HEAT N 12.8 er ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k Reasoning Since energy is conserved and there is negligible heat flow between th巳 calorim ete r and the outside surroundings , the heat gained by the cold water and the aluminum cup as 出 ey warm up is equ al to the heat lost by the unknown m ateri al as it cools down. Each quantity of heat can be calculated using the re lation Q = cm ð. T, where , in calorimetry, th巳 ch an ge in te mperature ð. T is always th巳 hi gher te mperature minus the lower temp巳 rature . The equ ation "H eat gained = Heat lost" co ntai ns a single unknown qu antity, the desired specific heat capac ity. Problem-solving insight Solution m- -3 -au 1l t l -7 at 町 町 EanH , + 、 t cAlmAI ð. T A1 n川 Cunknown 一已。 、 Heat gained by aluminum and water H W -创 (cm ð. T )water = (cm ð. T)unknown - + 一HM (cm ð. T )AI Cwalermwnter ð. Twnter """",.. un Kn o飞.V Il ð. _ T. ... ...l. U Il Kno、v n The changes in temperature for the th ree substances are ð. TA1 = ð. Twa,er = 22.0 oC - 18.0 0 C = 4 .0 C O, and ð. Tunknown = 97 .0 oC - 22.0 oC = 75.0 C O. Table 12.2 contains values fo r the specific heat capacities of a luminum and wate r. Substitutin g these data in to the equ ati o n above , we find that [9.00 X 10 2 J/( kg ' CO)](0. 15 kg)(4 .0 CO) + [4 186 J/(kg' C O)](0.20 kg)(4 .0 C O) Cunknown (0.040 kg)(75.0 C O) =11 300 除g ' Cη ~ CHECK V 。 ωUR 川 U川 ND ‘唱4ωDERSTA 酌NDII 川 N、唱4 (The answers are given at the end of the book.) 10. Two different objects are supplied with equal amounts of heat. Which one or more of the following statements explain why their temperature changes would not necessarily be the same? (a) The objects have the same mass but are made from materials that have different specific heat capacities. (b) The objects are made from the same material but have different masses. (C) The objects have the same mass and are made from the same materia l. 11. Two objects are made from the same material but have different masses. The two are placed in contact, and neither one loses any heat to the environmen t. Which object ex periences the temperature change wit h the greater magnitude , or does each object experience a temperature change of the same magnitude? ó. T( CO) m(kg) 12. Consider an object of mass m that ex periences a (a) 2.0 15 change ó. Tin its temperature. Various possibilities for these variables are listed in the table . Rank these (b) 1.5 40 possibilities in descending order (l argest first) according (C) 3.0 25 to how much heat is needed to bring about the change in (d) 2.5 20 temperature. 一-g lf HEAT ANB PHASE CHANGE:LATENT HE盯 Surprisingly, th ere 缸'e situatio ns in which the additio n or rem oval of heat does no t te mperature change. C o ns ider a well-stined g lass of iced tea that has come to the rmal equilibrium. E ven thoug h heat e nters the glass 仕om the warmer roo m , the t巳 mp巳rature of the tea does not rise above 0 oC as lo ng as ice c ubes are pres巳n t. Apparently the heat is be ing used for some purpose other than raising the te mperature. In fac t , the heat is be ing used to me lt the ice , and only when all of it is me lted will the temperature of th巳 )j quid b巳gin to rise. cau s巳 a In the equation "Heat gained = Heat lost ," both sides must have the same algebraic sign. Therefore , when calculating heat contributions , always write any temperature changes as the higher minus the lower temperature. .c h a n g e Vi e y to bu y bu An important point illustrat巳d by the iced tea example is that ther巳 is more than one w .c .d o matter. For instanc巴 , som巳 of the water in the glass is in the solid phas巳 c u -tr a c k (ice) and some is in the liquid phas巳. Th巳 gas or vapor phas巳 is th巳 third familiar phase of matter. In th巳 gas phase , water is referred to as water vapor or steam. All thre巳 phase s of water ar巳 present in the scene d巳plct巳d in Figure 12.26 , although th巳 water vapor is not vi sible in the photograph. Matter can chang巳 from one phase to anoth巳r, and heat plays a role in th巳 change . Figure 12.27 summarizes the various possibilities. A solid can melt orfuse into a liquid if heat is added , while the liquid canfreeze into a solid if heat is removed. Similarly, a liquid can evaporate into a gas if heat is supplied , while the gas can condense into a liquid if heat is tak巳n away. Rapid 巳vaporation , with the formation of vapor bubbles within the liquid , is call巳d boiling. Finally, a solid can sometimes change directly into a gas if heat is provided. We say that th巳 solid sublimes into a gas. Examples of sublimation ar巳(1) solid carbon dioxid巳 , CO 2 (dry ic时 , tuming into gaseous CO 2 and (2) solid naphthalen 巳 (moth balls) turning into naphthal 巳 ne fumes. Convers巳ly, if heat is remov巳d under the right con ditions , the gas will condense directly into a solid. Figure 12.28 displays a graph that indicates what typically happens when heat is added to a material that changes phase. The graph records temperature v巳rsus heat added and refers to wat巳r at the normal atmospheric pr巳ssur巳 of 1. 01 x 105 Pa. The water starts off as ice at th巳 subfreezing temp巳rature of - 30 o As heat is add巳d , th巳 temp巳rature of O th巳 ice increases , in accord with the speci 自 c heat capacity of ice [2000 J/(kg' C ) ] . Not until the temperature r巳ach巳s th巳 normal melting/freezing point of 0 oC does th 巳 water begin to change phase. Then , when heat is added , th 巳 solid changes into the liquid , the temp巳ra ture staying at 0 oC until all the ice has melted. Once all th巳 material is in the liquid phas巳, additional heat causes the t巳 mperature to incr巳 ase again , now in accord with the specifìc heat capacity of liquid water [4186 J/(kg' C O )]. When the temperature reaches th巳 normal boiling/condensing point of 100 oC , the water b巳gins to change from th巳 liquid to the gas phas巳 and continues to do so as long as h巳 at is added. The temperature remains at 100 oC until all liquid is gone. When all of the material is in the gas phas巳, additional heat Once again causes the t Figure 12.26 Th巳 three phases of water: solid ice is ftoating in liquid wat巳r, and water vapor (invisibl巳) is present in the aír. (K.I ein/Peter Arnold , Inc.) c. 。些些哩芒些mple 13 Saving Energy 哩'型= Figure 12.27 Thre巳 familiar phases of matter-solid , Ii quid , and gas-and the phase changes that can occur between any two of them Suppose you ar百 cooking spaghetti , and the instmctioos say "boil 由巳 pasta in water for ten minlltes." To cook spagh巳tti in an open pot using 由巳 least amount of en巳rgy, should you (a) tllrn lIP th巳 bl1 rner ωits fl111巳st so the water vigoro l1 s1y boils or (b) tl1 rn down th巳 burner so th巳 water barely boils? Reasoning Th巳 spaghetti n巳巳ds to cook at the temperature of boiling water for t巳 n min l1 tes. ln an op巳n pot the pressure is atmosph巳ric pre s sur毡, and water boils at 100 oC , regardless of whether it is vigoro l1 s1y boiling or jllst barely boiling. To convert water into steam req l1 ires en ergy in th巳 form of h巳 at from the bllrn町, and th巳 greater the amO l1 nt of water converted , th巳 greater the amount of energy needed. Answer (a) is incorrect. Cal1 sing the water to boil vigorously jllst was tes All it accomplishes is to conv巳rt more water into steam. 巳nergy l1 nn 巳cess arily. Answer (b) is correct. Keeping the water j l1 st barely boiling l1 S巳 s the 1巳 ast amount of e n巳rgy to k巳巳p the spaghetti at 100 oC , becal1 s巳 it minimizes the amO l1 nt of water convert巳d into steam υ100 Water boils o Ql 』 = Water warms up H ro 」 αJ Figure 12.28 The graph shows th巳 way 由e temperatur巳 of water changes as heat is added , starting with ice at 30 oc. The pressure is atmospheric pr巳 s sure . 0. E Ql • - 30 Heat Water vapor warms up m o m o typ巳 or phas巳 of c C lic k to k lic C c u -tr . ack w w .d o w w w w N O W ! XC N O W CHAPTER 12 TEMPERATURE AND HEAT F- er 374 w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi ew N y to bu y bu to k lic o .d o m C m w o k lic C When a s ub stanc巳 cha n ges fro m o ne phas巳 to another, the amoun t of heat that must b巳 .c added or removed depends o n t h巳 ty p巳 ofmat巳 r i a l and th 巳 natur巳 ofth 巳 pha s e chang巳. The k c u -tr a c heat per Iá logram associated with a phase c h ang巳 is referred to as latent heat: w w .d o w w w ! PD XC N O W F- HEAT AND PH AS E CHANGE: LATEN T HEAT 375 er 12.8 O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k HEAT SUPP Ll ED OR REMOVED IN CHANGING THE PHASE OF A SUBSTANCE The h巳at Q that must be supplied or removed to change the phase of a mass m of a substance is Q =mL where L is the latent heat of th 巳 (1 2.5) substance SI Unit of Latent Heat: J/k g The latent heat of fusion Lr refers to the change between solid and Ii quid phases , the latent heat ofvaporization Lv applies to the chang巳 between liquid and gas phases , a nd th巳 latent heat of sublimation Ls refers to the chang巳 b巳tween solid and gas phases . Table 12.3 gives some typical values of latent heats of fusion and vapori zation . For instance , the latent h巳at of fusion for water is Lr = 3.35 X 105 J/kg. Thus , 3.35 X 105 J of h巳 at must b巳 s upplied to melt on 巳 kilogram of ice at 0 oc into liquid water at 0 oC; convers巳Iy, this amount of heat must be remov巳d from o n 巳Iá l ogra m of liquid water at 0 oc to freeze the liquid into ic巳 at 0 oC. In co mpaJ怡o n , the latent heat of vaporization for water has the much larger value of Lv = 22.6 X 10 5 J/kg. When water boils at 100 oc , 22.6 X 105 J of heat must be supplied for eac h ki logram of liquid turned into steam. And when steam condenses at 100 oc , this am o u 川 of h巳at is releas巳d fro m 巳ac h Iá logram of steam that changes back into liquid . Liquid wat巳r at 100 oc is h ot 巳no u gh by itself to cause a bad burn , and th巳 additional 巳仔巳ct of the large late nt heat can cau s巳 S巳vere tissue dam age if condensation occurs on th巳 slán . By taláng advantage of th 巳 latent heat of fusion, d巳signers can now e ngi neer clothing that can absorb or release heat to help maintain a comfortable and approx imately constant temperature close to your body. As the photograph in F i g ur巳 12.29 shows , the fabric in this typ巳 of clothing is coated with microscopic balls of heat-resistant plastic that contain a substance known as a "phase-change material" (PCM). When yo u are e njoyi ng your favorite winter sport, for example , it is easy to beco m巳 overh巳 ated. The PCM prevents this by melting , absorbing excess body heat in the process. When you are taking a break and cooling down , however, th巳 PCM fr巳巳Z巳 s and releases heat to keep you w aJ.m. The temperature range over wruch the PCM can maintain a comfort zo n 巳 i s re lated to its melting/freezing t巳mperature , which is determin 巳d by its ch巳 mical com posi tio n. Examples 14 and 15 illustrate how to take into account the 巳ff,巳ct of latent h巳 at when usi ng th巳 cons巳 rvation-of-energy principle. 冒 The physics of ~ steam burns. The physics of high-tech clothing. Table 12.3 Latent Heats. of Fus ion a nd Va porization Sub s tanc巳 Melting Point (OC) Ammonia 一77. 8 Be n z巳n 巳 5.5 1083 Copper Ethy l alcohol Gold Lead Mercury Nitrog巳n Oxyg巳 n Water 一 114 .4 1063 327.3 -38.9 -210.0 -218.8 0.0 "The vallles pertain to I atm pressure. Latent Heat of Fusion, Lr (J /kg) Boiling Point (OC) Latent Heat of Vaporization , Lv (J/kg) 33.2 X 10 4 12.6 X 10 4 20.7 X 10 4 10.8 X 10 4 6.28 X 10 4 2.32 X 10 4 1. 14 X 10 4 2.57 X 10 4 1. 39 X 10 4 33.5 X 104 -33 .4 80.1 2566 78.3 2808 1750 356.6 - 195.8 -1 83.0 100.0 13.7 X 10 5 3.94 X 10 5 47.3 X 10 5 8.55 X 10 5 17.2 X 10 5 8.59 X 10 5 2.96 X 10 5 2.00 X 10 5 2.1 3 X 10 5 22.6 X 105 Figure 12.29 Th.i s highly magn.i fied image shows a fabric that has been coated with microscopic balls of heat-resistant plastic. The balls contain a substance known as a "phase-change Ill aterial," the Ill elting and freezing of which absorbs and releases hea t. Such fabrics autolllatically adjust in reaction to your body heat to help Ill aintain a constant temperature next to your ski n (Collrtesy Olltlast Technologies , Boulder, CO) .c TEM PERATU RE AN 0 H EAT O W ! h a n g e Vi e c u -tr y c k lic .d o 0 oC is pJaced in a Styrofoam cup containing 0.32 kg of lemonade at 27 oc. Th 巳 specific heat capacity of lemonade is virtually the same 也s that of wat巳r; that is , c = 4186 J/(kg . C O ). After the ice and lemonade reach an equilibrium temperatur毡 , som巳 ice still remains . Th巳 latent heat of fusion for wat巳r is Lr = 3.35 X 10 5 J/kg . Assum巳 that the mass of the cup is so small that it absorbs a negligible amount of heat , and ignore any heat lost to the surroundings Det巳rmine the mass of ice that has melted . Ic巳 at m o . ack C w o m to bu y bu to k lic C 。 Exam回e 14 Ice-Cold Lemonade w w .d o w w w w N 12 XC N O W CHAPTER F- er 376 w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k Reasoning According to the principle of 巳 n 巳rgy conservation , the h巳at gained by the melting ice equals th巳 heat lost by the cooling lemonade. According to Equation 12.5 , the heat gained by th巳 melting ic巳 is Q = mLr, where m is the mass of the melted ice , and Lr is the latent heat of fusion for wate r. The h巳 at lost by the lemonade is giv巳n by Q = cm /::"T, where /::"T is the higher temperature of 27 oC minus the lower equilibrium temperature. The equilibrium t巳mper ature is 0 oC , because ther 巳 is some ic巳 remaining , and ice is in equilibrium with liquid water when th巳 temp巳rature is 0 oC. (mLrhe = (cm /::,. T)lemom由 Solution Th巳 mass 肌β m 、----v--' '-----v------' Heat gained by ice H 巳at Iost by 1 巳 monade mice of ice that has melted is ( cm /::,. T)le阳阳 e白l1川 1 E阳 C出 Lr 3.妇 35 x 斗 L一一一二二 10 铲5 川J/川kg 。 0些??町 mp 附 E恒 e 臼 1 5 Gωωω 创创 t忱 t川 A 7.00-kg glass bowl [c = 840 Jν/(仪 kg'C。η)] contains 16.0 kg of punch 瓜 a t 25.0 o 巳 C. Two-and-a-half kilograms of 比 i c巳 [c = 2.00 X 10 3 Jν/(仪 kg ' C。η)] 缸 ar巳 add巳d to the punch. The ic巳 has an initial temperature of -20.0 oC , having been kept in a very cold 仕'eez巳r. The punch may be treated as if it O W巳re water [c = 4186 J/(kg' C ) ], and it may be assumed that th 巳re is no h巳at f1 0w between th巳 punch bowl and the extemal 巳nvironmen t. The latent heat of fusion for water is 3.35 X 10 5 J/k g. When thermal equilibrium is reached , all the ice has melted , and the final temperature of the mixture is above 0 oC. Det巳rmine this temperatur巳. Reasoning Th巳 final temperature can b巳 found by using the cons巳rvation of energy principle: the h巳 atgam巳d is equal to the heat los t. H巳 at is gained (a) by the ice in warming up to th巳 melt ing point, (b) by th巳 lC巳 in changing phase from a solid to a liquid , and (c) by the liquid that results from the ice warming up to the final temperature; h巳at is lost (d) by th巳 punch and (e) by the bowl in cooling down. The heat gained or lost by each component in changing t巳mp巳 rature can be d巳termined from the relation Q = cm /::"T, where /::,. T is the high巳r temperature minus the lower t巳 mp巳rature. The h巳 at gained wh巳n water changes phase from a solid to a liquid at 0 oC is Q = mLr, where m is the mass of water and Lr is the latent heat of fusion. Solution The heat gained or lost by each component is list巳 d as follows: (a) Heat gained when ice warms to 0.0 oC = [2.00 X 10 3 J/(kg' C O )](2.50 kg)[O.O o C 一 (-20.0 o C)] (b) Heat gain巳d when ice melts at 0.0 oC = (2.50 kg)(3 .3 5 X 10 5 J/kg) (c) Heat gained when melt巳d ice (liquid) warms = [4186 J/( 峙的 ](2.50 kg)(T - 0.0 oc) to temperature T (d) Heat lost when punch cools to t巳mperature T (e) Heat lost when bowl cools to temperatur 巳 T = [4186 J/(kg 'C O ) ] (l 6.0 kg)(25 .0 oC - T) = [840 J/(kg . C O )](7 .00 kg)(25.0 oC - T) .c h a n g e Vi ew N y bu to lic k gained equal to the heat lost gives: c u -tr a c (a) 十 (b) + (c) = (d) .d o m w + (巳) o o m th巳 heat c k. w w .d o w w w C Setting C lic k to bu y N 377 ! PD XC er O W F- 12 .9 EQUI Ll BRIUM BETWEEN PHASES OF MATTER O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k 、--、~ Heat gained Heat lost This eq 。 The physics 01 a dye-sublimation color printe r. An interesting application of the phase change b巳 tween a solid and a gas is found in on巳 kind of color print巳r used with computers. A dye-sublimation printer uses a thin plastic film coated with separate panels of cyan (blue) , yellow, and magenta pigment or dye. A full sp巳ctrum of colors is produced by using combinations of tiny spots of these dyes. As Figure 12.30 shows , th巳 coat巳d film pass巳S in front of a print h巳 ad that 巳xtends across th巳 width of the paper and contains 2400 h巳 at mg 巳 lements. Wh en a heating element is turned on , th巳 dye in front of it absorbs heat and goes from a solid to a gas-it sublimes-with no liquid phase in between. A coating on the paper absorbs the gaseous dye on contact, producing a small spot of color. The intensity of the spot is controlled by the heating element, since each elem巳 nt can produce 256 different temperatures; the hotter the element, the greater the amount of dye transf,巳rred to the paper. The paper makes three separate pass巳s across the print head , once for each of the dyes. The final result is an image of near-photographic quality. Som巳 printers also employ a fourth pass , in which a clear plastic coating is deposited over th巳 photograph . This coating makes the print wat巳rproof and also helps to prevent premature fading. ~ CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING 川加 m1 (The answers are given at the end of the book.) 13. Fruit blossoms are permanently damaged at temperatures of about - 4 oC (a hard freeze) . Orchard owners sometimes spray a film of water over the blossoms to protect them when a ha rd freeze is expected. Why does this technique offer protection? 14. When ice cubes are used to cool a drink , both Temperature Mass of ice their mass and temperature are important in how of ice cubes cubes effective they are. The table lists several possibili一 6.0 C ties for the mass and temperature of the ice cubes (a) used to cool one particular drink. Rank the possi(b) -12 C bi lities in descending order (best first) according to (c) - 3.0 C their cooling effectiveness. Note that the latent heat of phase change and the specific heat capac ity must be considered. Gaseous dye Figure 12.30 A dye-sublimation printer. As the plastic film passes in front of 由巳 print head , 出e heat from a given heating element causes one of three pigments or dyes on the film to sublime from a solid to a gas. The gaseous dye is absorbed onto 由e coated pap巳r as a dot of color. The size of the dots on the paper has been exaggerated for clarity. o 0 0 (a) CJ} II 吧。 UI Ll BRIUM N BETWEEN PHASES OF MATTER Under specific conditions of t巳mperature and pressure , a substanc巳 can eXlst at equilibrium in mor巳 than one phas巳 at the sam巳 time. Consider Figure 12.31 , which shows a container k巳pt at a constant temp巳rature by a large reservoir of heated sand. Initially the contain巳r is evacuated. Part a shows itjust after it has be巳 n partially filled with a liquid and a few fast-moving mol巳cules are escaping the liquid and forming a vapor phas巳. Thes巳 mol巳cules pick up th巳 required 巳 nergy (the latent heat of vaporization) during collisions with neighboring molecules in the liquid. However, the reservoir of heated sand replenishes the 巳n巳rgy carried away, thus maintaining the constant temperature. At first , the movement of molecules is pr巳dominantly from liquid to vapor, although som巳 molecules in the vapor phas巳 do reent巳r the liquid. As the molecules accumulate in the vapor, the number reentering the liquid eventually equals the number entering the vapor, at which point 巳quilibrium is establish巳d , as in part b. From 出is point on , the concentration of molecules in the vapor phase does not change , and th巳 vapor pressure remains constan t. The pressure of the vapor that co巳xists in equilibrium with the liquid is called the equilibrium vapor pressure of the liquid. (b) Fig ure 12.31 (α) Some of the molecules begin entering the vapor phase in 由巳 evacuated space above th巳 liquid. (b) Equilibrium is reach巳dwh巳n 由巳 number of molecules entering 由e vapor phase equals the number retuming to 由巳 liquid . .c ! O W HEAT y .d o 』2阳的ω』且 而且-ω 3 x 10 5 2 x 10 5 1.01 x 10 5 0.53 x 10 5 O 'τ o -50 50 ] 自 83 100 150 Temperature , oc The equilibrium vapor pressure do巳 s not dep巳 nd on the volu 日1巳 of space above the liquid. If more spac巳 were provided , more liquid would vaporize , until equilibrium was reestabbshed at the same vapor pressure , assuming the sam巳 temperature is maintained. In fact , th巳 equilibrium vapor pressure d巳pend s only on th巳 temperature of the bquid; a higher temp巳rature causes a higher pr巳 ssure , as the graph in Figure 12.32 indicates for the spe cifìc cas巳 of water. Only when th 巳 temperature and vapor pr巳 ssure corr巳 spond to a point on the curved bne , which is called th 巳 vapor pressure curve or th巳 vaporization curve, do liquid and vapor phases co巳xist at 巳 quilibrium. To illustrate th巳 use of a vaporization curv巳, let's consider what happens when water boils in a pot that is open to the ai r. Assume that the air pr 巳 ssure acting on the water is 1.01 X 10 5 Pa (on巳 atmospher巳). When boiling occurs , bubbles of wat巳r vapor form throughout the liquid , ris巳 to the surfac巳, and break. For these bubbles to form and ri se , th 巳 pressure of th巳 vapor inside th巳 m must at least equal th 巳 air pressure acting on the surfac巳 of the water. According to Figur巳 12.32 , a valu巳 of 1.01 x 10 5 Pa corresponds to a temperature of 100 o Cons巳qu 巳 ntl y, water boils at 100 oC at one atmosph 巳 re of pres sure. In gene时, a liquid boils at the temperature for which its vapor pressure equals the external pressure. Water wiU not boil , th 巳 n , at s巳 a level if the temperature is only 83 oC , because at this temperature the vapor pr巳ssur巳 of water is only 0.53 X 10 5 Pa (s巳巳 Figur巳 12.32) , a value less than th巳巳xt巳rnal pr巳ssur巳 of 1. 01 X 10 5 Pa. How巳ver, water does boil at 83 oC on a mountain at an altitude of just under fìve kilometers , because the atmospheric pressure ther巳 is 0.53 X 10 5 Pa. The fact that water can boil at a temperature less than 100 oC leads to an inter巳 sting ph巳nom巳 non that Conceptual Example 16 discusses. c. 也叫 5 1 4 令 一一-Water Conceptual Example 冒 6 How to Boil Water That Is Cooling Down Figure 12 .33a shows water boiling in an op巳 n flask . Shortly after the flask is removed from the burner, the boiling stops. A cork is then placed in the neck of the flask to seal it , and wat巳 r is pour巳 d over the n 巳ck of the flask , as in part b of th巳 drawing. To restart the boiling , should the wat巳r poured ov巳r the neck be (a) cold or (b) hot-b l1 t not boiling? Reasoning When the open flask is removed from the burner, the water b巳gins to cool and the pressure above its surfac巳 is on巳 atmosph巳re (l. 01 X 10) Pa). Boiling quickly stops , b巳cause water cannot boil when its t巳 mperatur巳 is less than 100 oC and the pressure abov巳 its surface is one atmosph巳re. To 1 巳 staft the boiling , it is necessary either to reheat the water to 100 oC or reduce the pr 巳 ssure abov巳 th巳 water in the corked flask to something less than one atmosph巳I 巳 s o that boiling can occur at a temp巳rature less than 100 oC. Water boiling again Figure 12.33 (α) Wat巳r is boiling at a temperatllre of 100 oc and a pressure of one atmosphere. (b) The water boils at a temperature that is 1巳ss than 100 oc , because the cool water reduces the pressure above the water in the flask (b) Answer (b) is incorrect. Certainly, pouring hot water over th巳 corked flask wiU reheat 由e wate r. However, since the water being pour 巳d is not boiling , its temperature must be less than 100 o Thel 巳fore, it cannot reheat the water within the flask to 100 oC and restart 由巳 boiling. c. Answer (a) is correct. wh巳 n cold water is pour巳d ov巳 r the corked flask , it causes some of 出e water vapor inside to condense. Consequently, th巳 pressur 巳 above the l.i quid in the flask drops. When it drops to the value of the vapor pressure of the water in the flask at its current t巳 mpe r ature (which is now less than 100 OC) , th巳 bo ilin g restarts. m w o o m 4 x 10 5 C lic k to bu y bu to k lic C Figure 12.32 A plot of the eqllilibrillm vapor . cpress lI re v巳rS lI s t巳 mperatur巳 I S c u -tr a c k called th巳 vapor pr巳 ssure curve or th巳 vaporization curve, the example shown b巳ing that for the liquid/vapor eqllilibri l1 m of wate r. w w .d o w w w w N O W TEMPERATUR 巨 AND h a n g e Vi e N CHAPTER 12 XC er 378 F- w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c XC N y bu to k lic c u -tr a c k .d o o .c m C m w o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W PD h a n g e Vi ew 379 er O W F- 1 2.9 EQUI Ll BRIU M BETWEEN PHASES OF MATTER ! h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k High-pressure propellant vapor Tube Uquid propeliant plus product (α Figure 12.34 (α) A Liqu id propellant plus product (b) closed spray can containing liquid and vapor in equilibrium. (b) An open spray can 而 且 a ω 』2的的ω 』且 Temperature , oc (0) 而 ι Normal meltin g!lreezing point 01 H20 a ω』2的的ω』 止 The physics of spray cans. The operati on of spray cans is based on the equilibrium between a liquid and its vapor. Fi gure 12 .3 4a shows that a spray can contain s a liquid propellant that is mi x巳 d with the product (s uch as hair spray). In side th 巳 can , propell ant vapor forms over the liquid. A propell ant is chosen that has a n 巳quilibrium vapor pressure that is greater than atmospheri c press ure at room temperature. Co n sequ 巳 ntl y, when th 巳 n ozz le of th 巳 c an is pressed , as in part b of the draw ing , the vapor pressure forces the liquid p rop巳 ll a nt and product up the tube in th巳 c an and out th 巳 n ozz l 巳 as a spray. When the nozzle is released , the coiled spring r巳 seal s the can and the propell ant vapor build s up once again to its equilibrium value. As is the case fo r liquid/vapor equilibrium , a solid can b巳 in equilibrium with its liquid phase only at specific conditi ons of temperature and pr巳 s s ure. For each te mp巳 ra ture , there is a single press ure at which the two phases can co巳 x i s t in equilibrium. A pl ot of the equilibrium pressure versus equilibrium t巳 mp eratu r巳 i s referred to as the fu sioll curve, and Figure 1 2 . 3 5 αs h o w s a typi cal c urv巳 fo r a normal substance. A normal substance expands on meltin g (巳 g . , carbon di ox id 巳 and sulfllr). Since hi gher pr巳 ss ur巳 s make it more difficult for slI ch materials to 巳 x p a nd , a higher melting temperature is n e巳 d e d for a higher press ure, and th 巳 fll s i o n cllrve slopes upward to th巳 ri gh t. Part b of the pictllre illustrates th 巳 fu sio n curve for water, one of the few substances that contract when they melt. Higher p ress ur巳 s make it easier fo r such s ub s tanc巳 s to melt. Consequently, a lower melti ng temperature is associated with a hi gher pressure , and th巳 fll si o n c urv巳 s l o p es dow nward to the right. It shollld be noted thatjust because two phases can coex ist in eqllilibrium d o巳 s not n ec巳 ssaril y mean that they wilL Other fac tors may pr巳ve nt it. Fo r 巳 xa mpl e , wat巳 r in an open bowl may n 巳v e r com 巳 into eqllilibrium with water vapor if air currents are present. Under such conditions the liquid , perhaps at a temperatur巳 of 25 oC, attempts to establi sh the corr巳s pondin g eqllilibrium vapor press Ul 巳 of 3.2 x lO :l Pa. If air currents continllally blow th巳 water vapor away , h ow ev町,巳quilibrium will n 巳V巳 rb巳巳 s t abli s h 巳 d , and eventuall y th 巳 water will evaporate co mpletely. Each kilogram of water that goes into the vapor phase takes along the latent heat of vaporization. Becall se of thi s h 巳 at loss , th巳 re maining liqllid wOllld Solid 1. 01 x 10" 1 - --- - -- 1 / U O Temperature , oc (b) Figure 12.35 (α) The fusion curve for a normal substance that expands on melting. (b) Th巳 fu s i o n curve for water, o n巳 of the few substances that contract on melting The physics of evaporative cooling of the human body. .c h a n g e Vi e y It takes less heat to boil water high on a mountain , b巳cause the boiling point becomes less than 100 oC as the air pressur巳 decreases at higher elevations. (Gregg Adams/Stone/Getty Images) The physics of relative humidity. to k m lic w .c .d o (The answers are given at the end of the book.) c u -tr a c k 15. A camping stove is used to boil water high on a mountain , where the atmospheric pressure is lower than it is at sea leve l. Does it necessarily follow that the same stove can boil water at sea level? 16. 节. Medical instruments are sterilized at a high temperature in an autoclave , which is 曹 essentiallya pressure cooker that heats the instruments in water under a pressure greater than one atmosphere. Why is the water in an autoclave able to reach a very high temperature , while water in an open pot can only be heated to 100 OC? '在 A jar is half filled with boiling wate r. The lid is then screwed on the jar. After the jar has cooled to room temperature , the lid is difficult to remove. Why? Ignore the thermal expan sion and contraction of the jar and the lid. 18. A bottle of carbonated soda (sealed and under a pressure greater than one atmosphere) is left outside in subfreezing temperatures , although the soda remains liquid . When the soda is brought inside and opened immediately, it suddenly freezes. Why? 19. When a bowl of water is placed in a closed container and the water vapor is pumped away rapidly enough , why does the remaining liquid turn into ice? ~ II 一 ω *HUMIDITY Air is a mixture of gases , in cI uding nitrogen , oxyg巳n , and water vapor. The totaI pres sure of the mixture is the sum of th巳 partial pressures of the component gases. The partial pressure of a gas is the pressure :it would 巳xert if it alone occupied the entire volume at th巳 sam巳 temperaωre as th巳 mixture. The parti a1 pressure of wat巳r vapor in air depends on weather conditions. It can be as low as zero or as high as th巳巳quilibrium vapor pressure of water at th巳 giv巳 n temperature. To provide an indication of how much water vapor is in the air, weath 巳 r forecast巳 rs usually give the relative humidity. If the relative humidity is too low, the air contains such a small amount of water vapor that skin and mucous membranes tend to dry ou t. If the r巳 1ative humidity is too high , especial1 y on a hot day , we become v巳ry uncomfortable and our skin feels "sticky." Under such conditions , the air holds so much wat巳 r vapor that the water exuded by sw巳 at glands cannot evaporate effici巳 ntly. Th巳 relative humjdity is defined as th巳 ratio (巳xpressed as a percentage) of the partial pressure of water vapor in the air to th巳 equilibrium vapor pressure at a given temp巳rature. Percent relativ巳 humidity Parti a1 pressure of water vapor Eq uilibrium vapor pressure of wat巳r at 出e x 100 (I 2.6) eXJstmg temperature The term in the denominator on the right of Equation 12.6 is given by th巳 vaporization curve of water and is the pressure of the water vapor in equilibrium with th巳 liquid. At a glV巳 n temperature , th巳 partial pressure of the water vapor in the air cannot exc巳ed this value. If it did , the vapor would not b巳 111 巳quilibrium with the liquid and would condense as dew or rain to reestablish 巳quilibrium. When the partial pr巳ssure of th巳 water vapor 巳quals the equilibrium vapor pressur巳 of water at a giv巳n temperature , the relative humidity is 100%. In such a situation , th 巳 vapor is said to be saturated because it is present in the maximum amount , as it would b巳 abov巳 a pool of liquid at equilibrium in a cI os巳d container. If th巳 relative humidity is less than 100% , th巳 water vapor is said to be unsaturate d. Example 17 demonstrates how to find the relative humidity. 0 阳 E xa 恒咀倒叩叩 副 a am 甜 叫 m 町 τnp 附'恒 e 17 R州叫 u 川耐州叫 ml 门 忖峭毗 11 凶刷 id 伽 dii让怕 til旧 阳 e On巳 day, the partial pressure of wa与r vapor in th巳 air is 2.0 X 10 3 Pa. Using the vaporization curve for wa阳 in Figure 12.36 , determine the I毛lative humidity if the temp巳rature is (a) 32 oC and (b) 21 oc. o .c C m o c u -tr a c k w w .d o bu y bu C lic k to ~ CHECK YOωUR UNDERSTANDI川川 N唱 w w w w N O W ! XC N O W CHAPTER 12 TEMPERATURE AND HEAT F- er 380 w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- PD XC h a n g e Vi ew 381 O W N to bu y N y bu k lic Relative humidity at 32 oC 2.0 X 10 3 Pa 4.8 X 10 3 Pa =飞 4 .8 x 103 e x r-:-:-::-:-l 100 = 142% 1 '-一一」 .d o m o m w o c u -tr C to k lic C Reasoning and Solution (a) According to Figure 12.36 , the equilibriurn vapor pressure of water at 32 oC is 4.8 X 10 3 Pa. Equation 12.6 reveals that th巳 relative humidity is .c ack w w .d o w w w er O W F- 12.11 CONCEPTS & CALCULATIONS ! h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k c.. (l) :::J '"'" (l) 』 ι (b) A similar caIculation shows that Relative hurnidity at 21 oC = - 2.5 x 10。 2.0 X 10 3 Paπ-:-:-:-l 、 x 100 =问0% 1 2.5 X lO J Pa '-一一」 O O When air containing a given amount of water vapor is cooled , a ternperature is reached in which 出ep缸tial pressure of the vapor equals the equilibriurn vapor pressure. This temperature is known as the dew point. For instance , Figure 12.37 shows that if th巳 parti al pressure of water vapor is 3.2 X 10 3 Pa, the dew point is 25 oC. This partial pressure would correspond to a relative humidity of 100% , if the ambient t巳 rnperature were equal to th巳 dew-point temp巳rature . The physics of fog formation. Hence , the dew point is the temperature below which water vapor in the air cond巳nses in the forrn of liquid drops (d巳w or fog) The closer the actual temp巳rature is to the dew point , the closer the relative humidity is to 100%. Thus , for fog to form , the air temperature must drop below the d巳w poin t. Similarly, water condenses on the outside of a cold glass wh巳 n the temperature of th巳 air next to the glass falls below the d巳w poin t. The physics of a home dehumidifie r. The cold coils in a home dehumidifi巳r (see Figure 12.38) function very much in the same way that th巳 cold glass does. The coils are kept cold by a circulating refrigeran t. When the air blown across them by the fan cools below the dew point, water vapor condenses in the form of droplets , which collect in a receptacle. ,(' CHECK 32 Temperature , oc Figure 12.36 The vaporization curve of water. 4 x 10 3 m c..、 ai 3.2 x 10~ 2x 1O ~ 2 '" ct'" (l) O 40 O YOUR UNDERSτANDING (The answers are given at the end of the book.) 20. A bowl of water is covered tightly and allowed to sit at a constant temperature of 23 oC for a long time. What is the relative humidity in the space between the surface of the water and the cover? 21. Is it possible for dew to form on Tuesday night and not on Monday night , even though Monday night is the cooler night? 22. Two rooms in a mansion have the same temperature. One of these rooms contains an indoor swimming poo l. On a cold day the windows of one of the two rooms are 飞teamed up." Which room is it likely to be? Figure 12.37 On the vaporization curve of water, the dew point is the temp巳rature that co盯esponds to the actual partial pressure of water vapor in the air. Dehumidified air This section contains examples that discuss one or more conceptual questions , followed by a related quantitative problem. Example 18 provides insight on the variables involved when the length and volume of an object change due to a temp巳rature change. Example 19 discusses how different factors affect th巳 te mperature change of an object to which heat is being added. 0 … Concepts ~垦 Calculations Example Lin nd Volur川lermal Expansion 18 甘 26·K 阳 lMωmA ml 川 Jdbα h 川 怆 、 owνu oo 吁南山 fHPt inut -t au α somdo wd 门 缸 -dNd 出 川 ωdate -HOX Tolω t 怡,创陀 归 剧' t 电 aa k1ut rr.d E Concept Questions and Answers D。自由e change in the vertical height of a block depend only on its height, or do巳 s it also depend on its width and depth ? Without doing any calculations , rank the blocks according to their chang巳 in height , largest firs t. mmmw-m • (-Muecmh WmAFMmrEll: lmLHKd 二 • 则 Figure 12.39 sho问时 three rectangular blocks made from the same material. The initial dimensions of each are expressed as multip 1es of D , where D = 2.00 cm. The blocks are heated and their temperatures incr巳 ase by 35.0 C O. The coefficients of lin巳ar and volume expansion are α= 1. 50 X 10 (CO) - I and ß = 4.50 X 10 (CO)-I , respectively. Determin巳 the chang巳 in the (a) vertical heights and (b) volumes of 由巳 blocks .c XC h a n g e Vi e ! PD F- N to bu y N y bu to k c u -tr a c k Figure 12.39 The temp巳ratures of the three blocks are raised by the same amoun t. Which one(s) 巳xperi巳 nce the greatest chang巳 in height and which the greatest change in volume? o .c Does the change in the volume of a block dep巳 nd only on its height , or does it also d巳p巳nd on its width and d巳 pth ? Without doing any calculations , rank th巳 blocks according to their greatest change in volume , largest fìrst Answer According to Eq l1 ation 12.3 , ð. V = ßVo ð. T , the change ð. V in the volum 巳 of an object dep巳 nds on its original volum巳 Vo , the change in temperature ð. T , and the coefficient of volum巳 expansion , ß. Thus , the change in volume d巳p巳 nds on height , width , and depth , because the original vol l1 me is the product of th巳 se three dim巳 nsions. Th巳 initial volumes of A , B , and C , are , respectiv巳Iy, D x 2D x 2D = 4D 3 , 2D X D X D = 2D 3 , and 2D X 2D X D = 4D 3 . Blocks A and C have equal volum邸, which are greater than that ofB. Thus , w巳 expect A and C to 巳对libit th巳 great巳 st 1I1 creas巳 in volume , while B exhibits the small巳 st increase. Solution (a) The change in the height of each block is giv巳 nby Equation 12.2 as ð. L A = αD ð. T = [1.5 0 X 盯5 (C勺一 1](2.00 cm)(35 .0 CO) = I 1. 05 X 10- 3 cm I ð. L ß = α (2D) ð. T = [1. 50 X 10→ (C O ) 一 1](2 ð. Lc = α(2D) ð.T = [1.5 0 X 10- 5 (C O )- I](2 X 2.00 叫 (35.0 C O ) = I2.10 X 10- 3 th 巳 heights As expected , (b) The change in the ð. VA = ß(D X of B and C vol l1 m 巳 of X 2.00 cm)(35.0 C O ) = I2 .10 X 10- 3 cm I increas巳 more 叫 than the height of A. each block is given by Equation 12.3 as 2D X 2D) ð. T = [4.50 X 10- 5 (CO) - I][4(2.00 叫3](35.0 C可 =15.04 X 盯2 时| ð. Vß = ß(2D X D X D) ð. T = [4.50 X 10- 5 (CO) - I][2(2.00 cm)3](35 .0 CO) = I2 .52 X 10- 2 cm3 1 ð. Vc = 卢 (2D X 2D X D) ð. T = [4.50 X 10- 5 (C O ) 一 1][4(2. 00 cm)3](35 .0 CO) = I5.04 X 10- 2 cm 3 1 As discuss巳d 巳 arlier, th巳 great巳 st chang巳 in vol l1 me occurs with A and C followed by B. 。 0 Glass \ Concepts & Calculations Example 1 9 Heat and Temperature Ch 叫 es Ob吁巳cts A and B in Figure 12 .40 are made from ∞pp巳r, bl1 t the mass of B is three times the mass of A. Object C is made from glass and has the same mass as B . The same amount of heat Q is suppliedω 巳ach one: Q = 14 J. Determin 巳 th巳 rise in 臼 mperature fOl巳ach. Concept Questions and Answers Which object, A or B , 巳xperience s the gl 巳 at巳 ri s e in temperatul 巳? Figure 12.4 0 Wh ich block has the greatest chang巳 in temperature when the same heat is supplied to each? Answer Consid巳r an extrem巳巳xample. Suppose a cup and a swimming pool 创毛白lI ed with water. For the same heat input , w0111d you intuitively 巳xpect the temperature of th 巳 C l1 p to nse mor 巳 than the t巳 mperature ofthe pool? Yes , because th巳 cup has less mass. Another way to 创 rive at this conclusion is to solve Equation 12 .4 for the change in temperature: ð. T = Q/(cm). Since the heat Q and the specifìc heat capacity c are the same for A and B , ð. T is inversely proportional to the mass m. So th 巳 0均巳ct with the small巳 r mass exp巳[1enc巳 s the larger temperature chang巳. Therefore , A has a greater t丑 mp巳rature change than B. Which object , B or C , exp巳riences the greater rise in m lic o w w .d o C m C lic k Answer According to Equation 12.2 , ð. L = αLo ð. T , the change ð. L in th 巳 height of an o均 ect depends on its original h巳ight Lo , the chang巳 in temperature ð. T , and the coeffìci 巳 nt w .c .d o c ack of lin巳创·巳xpansion , α It do巳 s not d巳pend on the width or depth of the objec t. Sinc巳 block s u - t r B and C have twice the height of A , their h 巳ights will incr巳 as巳 by twic巳 as much as that of A. The heights of B and C , howev町, wiU incr巳 as巳 by th巳 same amount , even though C is twice as wide. w w w w er O W w CHAPTER 12 TEMPERATURE AND HEAT O W h a n g e Vi e 382 ! XC er PD F- temp巳 rature? Answer Objects B and C are made from different materials. To see how the ri se in temperature depends on th巳 type of material , let's again l1 se Equation 12 .4: ð. T = Q/(cm) . Since the heat Q and the mass m are the same for B and C , ð. T is inversely proportional to th巳 specifìc heat capacity c. So the object with th 巳 small 巳r specifìc heat capacity 巳xper卜 enc巳 s the larger temp巳ratur巳 chang巳. Table 12.2 indicates that th巳 sp巳cifìc heat capacities XC 383 c u -tr N y Solution According to Equation 12 .4, the ð.T^ 门 ο14 = 一二L一= ð. T = D temp巳rature CA Jn A J lic k of copp巳r and glass ar巳 387 and 840 J/(kg . C勺, respectively. Since B is made from copp巳r, which has the smaller specific heat capacity, it has the great巳 r t巳 mperature chang巳. .d o m w o c to bu . ack C m o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W PD h a n g e Vi ew er O W F- CONCEPT SUMMARY ! h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k change for each object is r-:-=-τ丁1 •凋 kg) = 11 8 C 叮 L一一」 [387 J/(kg' CO)](2.0 X 10 οl4J ----=:..一= csm ß __ 1 同 = 1 6.0C 叮 O J [387 J/(kg' C )](6.0 X lO- kg) LI -- - - ' ο14 J I _ _ __ I ð. T,户立一口 .8 C 叮 Ccmc [840 J/(kg' C O)](6.0 X lO- J kg) L一一一」 As anticipated , ð. TA is greater than ð. T ß , and ð. T B is greater than ð. Tc. CONCEPT SUMMARV If you need more help with a concept , use the L巳arning Aids noted next to the discussion or equation. Examples (Ex.) are in the text of this chapter. 00 to www.wiley.com/college/cutnell for the following Learning Aids: Interactive learningWare (I l\的 一 Additional Concept 5imulations (C5) Interactive 5olutions (15) - examples solved in a five-step interactive forma t. An imated text figures or animations of important conc巳pts. Models for certain types of problems in the chapter homework. The calculations are carried out interactively. Topic Celsius lemperalure scale Fahrenheillemperalure scale 『 MU au ea 咱a βb 『 v n"ta-mE at nu旷 UR aE Learning Aids Discussion aE 冒 2.1 COMMON TEMPERATURE SCALES On the Celsills temp巳rature scale , there are 100 equal Ex. 1 , 2 divisions between the ice point (0 o c) and the st巳am point (1 00 o c). On th巳 Fahrenheit temperature scale , there are 180 eqllal divisions between the ice point (32 OF) and the steam point (212 OF) 12.2 THE KELVIN TEMPERATURE SCALE For scientific work , the Kelvin temperature scale is the scale of choice. One kelvin (K) is equal in size to one Celsius d巳gree . However, the temperature T on the Kelvin scale differs from the temperature Tc on the Celsius scale by an additive constant of 273.15: T= 汇+ (12.1) 273 .15 The lower Ii mit of temperature is called absolute zero and is designated as 0 K on the Kelvin scale. Absolule zero Thermomelric properly 12.3 THERMOMETERS The operation of any thermometer is based on the change in some physical property with temperature; this physical property is called a thermometric property. Examples of thermometric properties are th巳 length of a colllmn of mercury, electrical voltage , and electrical reslstance. 12.4 Ll NEAR THERMAL EXPANSION Most substances expand when heated. For linear expansion , temperaωre changes by !1 T: an object of length Lo experiences a change !1 L in length when the 句a 『 l --nnua t knHasr mal nEwAnurnea nunH !1 L whereαis the co巳ffìcient (12.2) Ex. 3 , 18 = α Lo !1 T of Ii near expansion. Thermal slress For an object held rigidly in place , a therm al stress can occur when the obj 巳ct attempts to expand Ex. 4 or contrac t. Th巳 stress can be large , even for small temperature changes. How a hole in a plale expands or conlracls When the temperatllre changes , a hole in a plat巳 of solid material expands or contracts as if the hole Ex. 5 , 6 , 7 were fì lled with the surrollnding materia l. 12.5 VOLUME THERMAL EXPANSION For object of volume Vo is given by !1 V Volume Ihermal expansion whereβis How a cavity expands or conlracls vo lum巳 expansion , th巳 change the co巳fficient = β Vo !1 T !1 V in the volllm巳 ofan (1 2.3) Ex.8 , 18 IlW 12.1 of volume expansion. When the temperature changes , a cavity in a piece of solid material expands or contracts as if the 15 12.29 cavity were filled with the surrounding materia l. .c y bu c k 币 2.6 HEAT AND INTERNAL ENERGY The internal energy of a substance is th巳 sum of the kinetic , potential, and other kinds of energy that the molecules of 出 e substance have. H巳at is energy that ftows from a higher-temperature obj 巳ct to a lower-temperature object because of the difference in temperatures. The SI unit for heat is the joule (J). c u -tr Inlernal energy Heal .d o 12.7 HEAT AND TEMPERATURE CHANGE: SPECIFIC HEAT CAPACITY The heat Q that must be supplied or remov巳d to chang巳 th巳 temperature of a substance of mass m by an amount I1 T is Heal needed 10 change Ihe lemperalure Q = cm l1 T (12 .4) Ex. 9. 10. 11. 12: 1 占, '"J where c is a constant known as the specific heat capacity. Energy conservalion and heal When materials are placed in thermal contact within a perfectly insulated container, the principle 15 12.47, 12.51 of energy conservation requires that heat lost by warmer materials equals heat gained by cooler materials. Heat is sometimes measured with a unit ca l1 ed th巳 kilocalorie (kcal). The conversion factor between kilocalories and joul 巳s is known as the mechanical equivalen t of hea t: 1 kcal = 4186 joules Mechanical equivalenl 01 heal ILW 12.2 冒 2.8 HEAT AND PHASE CHANGE: LATENT HEAT Heat must be supplied or removed to make a material change 台om one phase to another. The heat Q that must be supplied or removed to change th巳 phas巳 of a mass m of a substance is Heal needed 10 change Ihe phase (1 2.5) Ex. 13, 14, 15 Q = mL where L is the latent heat of the substance and has SI units of J/kg. Th巳 latent h巳ats of fusion , va- 1512.95 porization , and sublimation refer, respectively, to the solid/liquid , the Iiqui d! vapor, and the solid/vapor phase changes Vapor pressure curve Fusion curve 12.9 EQUI Ll BRIUM BETWEEN PHASES OF MAπER The equilibrium vapor pressure of a sub- Ex. 16 stance is the pressur巳 of the vapor phase that is in equilibrium with the liquid phase. For a given substance, vapor pressure depends only on temperature. For a liquid, a plot of the equilibrium vapor pressure versus temp巳rature is called the vapor pressure curve or vaporization curv巳. The fusion curve gives the combinations of solid and liquid phases. t巳 mperature and pressure for equilibrium between 12.10 HUMIDITY The relative humidity is defined as follows: Partial pressure of water vapor Percent Relalive humidily r巳lative humidity Dew poinl Equi1i brium vapor pressure of water at th巳 existing temperature x 100 (1 2.6) Ex. 17 The dew point is the temperature below which the water vapor in the air condenses. On the vaporization curve of water, the dew point 自由e temperature that coπesponds to th巳 actual pressure of water vapor in the air FOCUS ON CONCEPTS avω lable Note to lnstructors: The numbering of the questions shown here reflects the fact thαt they are only a representatiνe subset of the total number that are online. Howeve r, αII of the questions are available for αssignment via an online homework manαgement program such as WileyPLUS or \<\帖'Assign Section 12.2 The Kelvin Temperature Scale Section 12.4 Li near Thermal Expansion 1. Which one of the following statements correctly describes the Celsius and the Kelvin temperature scales? (a) Th e size of the degree 2. The drawing shows two thin rods , one made 企om alurr山lUm [α= 23 X 10- 6 (CO)- I] and the 0由er 仕omst臼I[α= 12 X 10- 6 (CO)- I]. on the Celsius scale is larger than 出at on the Kelvin scale by a factor of 9/5. (b) Both scales assign the sarne temperature to 出 e lce p Ol nt , but they assign different temperatures to the steam point (c) Both scales assign the same temperature t。由e stearn point, but they assign di仔erent temperatures to the ice poin t. (d) Th巳 Celsius scale assigns the same values to 由e ic巳 and the ste创n points 由 at 由巳 Kelvin scale assigns. (e) The size of the degree on each scale is the sarne Each rod has 由e sarne length and attached at one end to an immov able wall , as shown. Th e tempera tures of 由e rods are increased , both by 由巳 sarne arnount , until 由e gap betw巳en 由e rods is CI osed Where do th巳 rods m巳巳t when 出巳 由e same initial temperaωre Midpoint and is m o m w o . ack lic k lic C learning Aids w w .d o w to Di scussion Topic w w w C to bu y N O W ! h a n g e Vi e N ! CHAPTER 12 TEMPERATURE AND HEAT XC er 384 F- w PD h a n g e Vi e O W XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c h a n g e Vi e w N y (d)α。 αA , αB Section 12.5 (e)αA , αB , αc to bu 4. A ball is slightly too large to fit A through a hole in a f1 at p l at巳 . The τ丁~\ C drawing shows two arrangements B of this situation. In Arrangement 1 飞飞~之咀伊/ 出巳 ball is made from metal A and Arrangement 11 Arrangement 1 the plate from metal B. When both the ball and the plate are cooled by the same number of Celsius degrees , the ball passes throu gh the hole. 1n Arrangement II the ball is also made from metal A , but the plate is made from metal C. Here , the ball passes thro l1 gh the hole when both the ball and th巳 plate are heated by the same number of Celsius degrees. Rank the coefficients of lin巳ar thermal expansion of metals A , B , and C in d巳scendin g order (l argest first): (a)α日 , αA , αc (b)αB , αC'αA (c)αC' αB , αA 巳xperiences k the smallest drop in temperature , and which one experiw ences the largest drop? .c .d o c u -tr a c k O Sample A. 4.0 kg of water [c = 41 86 J/(kg ' C )] Sample B. 2.0 kg of oil [c = 2700 J/(kg ' C O)] Sample C. 9.0 kg of dirt [c = 1050 J/(kg' C O)] (a) C smallest and A smallest and B larg巳 st and A largest Section 12.8 larg巳st (b) B small巳st and C largest (c) A (d) C smallest and B largest (e) B smallest Heat and Phase Change: Latent Heat 13. The latent heat of fusion for water is 33.5 X 10 4 J/kg , while the latent heat of vaporization is 22.6 X 10 5 J/kg. What mass m of water ml1 st be froz巳n in ord巳 r to release the amount of heat that l. 00 kg of steam releases when it condenses? Section 12.9 Equilibrium Between Phases of MaUer 15. Which one or more of the following freeze water? Volume Thermal Expansion • can be used to A. Cooling the water below its normal freezing point of 0 oC at the normal atmospheric press ure of l. 01 X 10 5 Pa 6. A solid spher巳 and a solid cube ar巳 made from the sam巳 material. The sphere wou ld just fit within the cl1 be, if it could. Both begin at the same temperature , and both are heated to th巳 sa me temp巳ratl1 re. Which object, if either, has the greater chang巳 in vo l l1 m巳? (a) The sphere. (b) The cube. (c) Both have the same change in vol l1 me. (d) 1ns l1 fficient information is given for an answe r. 7. A container can be made from steel [卢= 36 X 10- 6 (CO)-I] or lead [卢= 87 X 10- 6 (C O )一 1]. A liq l1 id is poured into 由巳 contamer, 自 llin g it to the brim. The liquid i s 巳ith er water [β= 207 x 10 (CO)- I] or ethyl alcohol [卢= 1120 X 10- 6 (CO)- I]. When the fl1 11 container is heat时, some liquid spills ou t. To keep the overflow to a minim l1 m, from what material sho l1 ld the container be made and what sho l1 ld the liquid be? (a) Lead , wat巳r (b) Steel , water (c) L巳ad , ethyl alcohol (d) Ste巳 1 , ethyl alcohol t巳chniql1e s B. Cooling the water below its freezing point of -1 oC at a pressure great巳r than l. 01 X 10 5 Pa C. Rapidly pl1 mping away the water vapor above the liq l1 id in an ins111ated container (The insulation prevents heat f1 0wing from th巳 s l1 rro l1 ndings into the remaining liquid.) (a) Only A (e) Only C Section 12.10 (b) Only B (c) Only A and B (d) A , B , and C Humidity 17. Which of the fo llowing three statements concerning relativ巳 hu midity val l1 es of 30% and 40% are true? Note that when the relative humidity is 30% , the air temperatl1 re may be di旺巳rent than it is when the relative hl1 midity is 40%. A. It is possible that at a relative hl1 midity of 30% there is a smaller partial press l1 re of water vapor in the air than there is at a relativ巳 humidity of 40% Section 12.7 Heat and Temperature Change: Specific Heat Capacity 9. Which of the following cases (if any) req l1 ires the greatest amount of heat? 1n each case 由 e material is the s缸ne. (a) l. 5 kg of th巳 ma terial is to be heat巳d by 7.0 CO. (b) 3.0 kg of th巳 m aterial is to be heated by 3.5 C"' (c) 0.50 kg ofthe material is to be heated by 21 CO. (d) 0.75 kg of the material is to be heated by 14 C O. (e) The amount of heat req l1 ired is the same in each of the four previo l1 s cases. 10. The following three hot samples have the same temperatl1 re. The same amO l1nt of heat is removed from each sample. Which one B. 1t is possible that there is th巳 same partial pressure of water vapor in the air at 30% and at 40% relative humidity C. It is possible that at a relative hl1 midity of 30% th巳re IS a greater partial pressure of water vapor in th巳 air than ther巳 i s at a relative humidity of 40%. (a) A , B , and C (b) Only A and B and C (e) Only A (c) Only A and C (d) Only B 在DB Note ω Instructors: Most of the homework problems in this chαpter a时 ava ilable for assignment viα an online homework management program such 川 ileyPLUS 川e协咿,川 ω al a υ 川 nω os 川阳时 刷 r ω 归 k ed ωωv 们 川tν w 讥 闪仰圳帅 ω 心 li 川 ω itt} t川 nte 白ra 町 ct川 IV νi均 η'. See Preface fo r additional details. Note: For problems in this set, use the νalues of a and 卢 in Table 12.1 , and the ssm Solution is in the Student Solutions Manual. www Solution is available online at www.wiley.comlcollege/cutnell Section 12.1 Section 12.2 Section 12.3 Common Temperature Scales , The Kelvin Temperature Scale, Thermometers 1. ssm A t巳mperatl1re of absolute zero occurs at -273.15 oc. What is this temperature on th巳 Fahrenheit scale? νalues of c, L[, and Lv in Tables 12.2 and 12.3, unless stated otherwise γThis icon repre… biomedi叫plication 2. S l1ppO S巳 yo u are hiking down the Grand Canyon. At the top , the temperature early in the morning is a cool 3 oC. By late afternoon , the temperature at the bottom of the canyon has warmed to a sweltering 34 oc. What is the difference betwe巳n the higher and lower temperatures in (a) Fahrenheit degrees and (b) kelvins? o m lic (b) The left of 由e C m gap is c1 osed? (a) The rods meet exactly at the midpoin t. (c) 白1巳 rods meet to rods . c m巴巴t to th巳 right of th巳 midpoin t. c u -tr a c k the midpoin t. o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N 385 ! XC O W PROBLEMS F- er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- XC h a n g e Vi ew ! PD F- N y bu to to bu y N O W CHAPTER 12 TEMPERATURE AND HEAT (a) When the temperature of th巳 plate is increased , wi lJ the radius of the h o l 巳 be larger or smaller than the racl ius at J I OC? Why? w .c .d o c ack (b) When the plate is heated to 110 oc , by what fractio n !:::"rlro will u - t r the rad ius of the hole change? k + _ 14. A thi ck, vertical iron pipe has an inner diameter of 0.065 m. A thin alllminulll di sk , heated to a temperature of 85 oc , has a d iameter that is 3.9 x LO- 5 m gr巳ater than the pipe's inner di ameter. Th巳 disk is laid on top of th巳 ope n upper end of th巳 pipe , perfectly centered on it, and a ll owed to coo l. What is the temperature of the aluminum disk when the disk falls into th巳 pipe ? Ignore the te mp巳 rature change of the pipe. 15. ssm When the telllperatllre of a coin is raised by 75 C O, the +1300 。B coin 's diameter increases by 2.3 X 10- 5 m. If the ori ginal diameter of the coin is 1.8 x 10- 2 m, find th巳 coefficient of linear expansion . 0 16. One January morning in 1943 , a warm chinook wind rapidly raised the te mperature in Spe缸 fish , South Dakota , from below 仕.ee z ing to + 12.0 o As the chinook died away, the temperature fe ll to -20.0 oc in 27.0 minutes. Suppose that a 19-m a lum.i num 日 agpo l e were subj ected to this telllperature change. Find the averag巳 speed at which its h巳 i g ht wou ld d巳crease, assumin g th巳f1 agpole responded insta ntaneously to the chan ging temperature. c. 5. 嗖p' ssm Derm atologists often remove small precancerous ski n lesions by freezing them quickly with liquid nitrog巳 n , which has a temperature of 77 K.认Ih at is thi s temperature on the (a) Celsius and (b) Fahre由巳it scales? 肌 fþ 伽 o 阳巳I ne 川 Oωdi川川 5盯川川Ill刚 1础 ad由巳e创削 白 fflroωom 川 1川le创 ad 削 a nd 叫d an川 1 缸 alre h巳 at优巳d and 巳x p巳创11巳n ce the same c h a n g巳 111 忧 t emp巳ratωur, 陀 e. The length of each rod is the same. If the ini tial length of the lead rod is O.LO m, what is the initial length of the quartz rod? c h an g巳 in 6 . 唱r What's your normal body temperature? It may not be 98.6 oF, the oft-quoted average 出 at was determ.i ned in the n.ineteenth century. A more recent study has reported an average te mp巳rature of 98.2 OF. What is the difference between these averages , expressed in Celsi us degrees? * 18. Concrete s id巳wa lk s are always laid in sections , with gaps besection. For exa mple , the drawing shows three identi cal 2.4-m sections, th巳 outer two of which ar巳 against immovab le walls. The two identical gaps between the secti ons are providecl so that thermal ex pansion will not create the therma l stress that could lead to cracks. What is the Illinimum gap width necessary to account for an increase in temperature of 32 C O? twee n 巳 ac h !' 7. ~ .A.. ........... co n s. . tant-volumeσas thermomet巳 r (see Figures 12.3 and "..... .. 12.4) has a pressure of 5.00 x 10 3 Pa when the gas te mperature is 0.00 o What is the temperature (i n oc) when the pressure is 2.00 X 10 3 Pa? ‘~ ....., .~.....J ...., /;) 飞 c. *8. If a nonhuman civilization were to develop on Saturn's largest moon, Titan , its scientists might well devise a te mperature scale based on the properties of methane , which is much more abundant on the slllface than water is. M巳thane fre巳zes at - 182.6 oc on Titan , and boils at -155.2 oC. Taking the boiling point of methane as 100.0 oM (degrees Methane) and its freezing point as 0 oM , what te mp巳rature on the Methane scale con.巳 sponds to the absolute zero point of the Kelvin scale? ssm On the Rankine temp巳rature scale , which is sometimes used in engineering applications , the ice point is at 49 1.67 OR and the steam point is at 67 1.67 oR. Determine a re lationship (analogous to Equation 12. 1) between the Rankine and Fahrenheit temperaω re scales. ~ 9. Section 12.4 Linear Thermal Expansion 10. An aluminum basebaU bat has a length of 0.86 m at a temp巳ra ture of 17 o When the temperature of the bat is raised , the bat length巳n s by 0.000 16 m . Determine the fin al telllperature of the ba t. c. 11. ssm www Find the approximate length of the Golden Gate Bridge if it is known that the steel in the roadbed 巳xpands by 0.53 m when the telllperature changes frolll +2 to +32 o c. →{卡 Gap 司 19 . The brass bar and the aluBrass minum b缸 in the drawing are each attached to an immovable 2.0 m 一一一叫 wall. At 28 oc the air gap between the rods is 1.3 X 10- 3 m At what temperature will the gap be closed? ' 20. Multiple-Concept Example 4 illustrates the concepts that are pertI nent to 由 is problem. A cylindrical brass rod (cross-sectional area = 1.3 X 10- 5 m2) hangs vertically straight down fro m a cei ling. When an 860-N block is hung from th巳 lower end of the rod , the rod Stl 巳 tc h es. The rod is then cooled such that it contracts to its origi nal length. By how Ill any degrees must the temperature be lowered? 提 2 1. c. 叫 S -ρ uv 叶u 旧 -u h - E 时 --σbv nA 划 创 t ρν tl 兔unH nHmu 刀 σDCIr- a huo u 4H d wz A『飞 4 mUMλ0 SJ h 俨· c. 句a ,c 13. Conceptual Example 5 provides backgrouncl for this problem. A hole is clri l/ ecl throllgh a copper plate whose telllperature is 11 o ssm www A simple pendulum consists of a ball connected to one end of a thin brass wire. The period of th巳 pend u l um is 2.0000 s The temperature rises by 140 C O, and the length of th巳 wire increases. Determine the period of the heated pendulum. t LHr e dstLU nomhh MP o k hM -Steel AEE huhv nu-hu E Ot Aluminum 2h 12. A steel aircraft carrier is 370 m long wh巳 n moving through the icy North Atlanti c at a temp巳rature of2.0 O By how much d o巳 s the carrier l e n g th巳n when it is travelin g in the warm Medit巳rranean Sea at a telηperature of 21 OC? 忏一-2 .4 m 一-叫 o m lic o w w T he drawing shows 4. ( Boiling two thermometers , A and B , whose te mperatures are +60.0 OA_ ~ _ E巴巴 - li measured in 0 A and oB . I I rI The ice and boiling points of water are also indicated. (a) Using the data in the draw ing , determine the Ice number of B degrees on th巳 point B scale that co町es po nd to 一30.0 A1 A 0 on th巳 A scale. (b) If the temperature of a substance reads +40.0 0 A A B on the A sca l巳, what would that temperature read on the B sca l 巳? C m C lic k 3. On the moon the swface temperature ranges from 375 K during the day to 1.00 x 102 K at nigh t. What are these temperatures on the .c .d o c u -tr a c k (a) Celsius and (b) Fahrenheit scales? w w w er 386 O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- XC 387 w N y bu to 23. Consult Conceptllal Exalllple 5 for background pertinent to this problelll. A lead sphere has a diameter that is 0.050% larger than the inner diameter of a steel ring when 巳 ach has a temperature of 70.0 o c. ThllS, the ring will not slip over the s pher巳 . At what common telllperature will the ring just slip over the sphere? A ball ar们仙1 plate al 巳Illade from differeot mat巳rials and h av巳 t he same initial telllperature. The ball does not fit throllgh a hole in the plate , becallse the diameter of the ball is slightly larger than the diameter of the hole. However, the ball will pass throllgh the hole when th巳 ball and th巳 plate are both h eat巳d to a common higher temperatme. In each of th巳 arra ng巳ments in th巳 drawing the diallleter of the ball is 1.0 X 10- 5 m larσer than the diameter of the hol巳 in the thin plate , which has a diallleter of 0.10 m. The initial temp巳ratllre of 巳ach arrangement is 25.0 oC. At what temperature will the ball j注 II through the hol巳 in each arrangement? "24. ( 。 Gold Lead / ' Aluminum 飞 Steel SilveιD 飞\ Arrangement A Arrangement B Arrangement C ** 25. ssm A steel rlller is calibrated to read true at 20.0 o c. A drafts man lI ses the rll 1er at 40.0 oc to draw a lin巳 on a 40.0 oc copper plate. As indicated on the warm ruler, the length of the line is 0.50 m. To what telllp巳rature shollld the plat巳 be cooled , sllch that th巳 length of the line truly becomes 0.50 Ill ? i'* 26. A steel bicycle wheel (withollt the rllbber tire) is rotating freely with an anglllar speed of 18.00 rad/s. The temperature of the wheel changes from -100.0 to +300.0 oC. No net external torq l1 e acts on the wh巳巳 1 , and the mass of the spokes is negligible. (a) Does the ang l1 lar speed increase or decrease as the wheel heats IIp? Why? (b) 明而 at is the angular sp臼d at th巳 hi g h er t巳 mp巳rature ? 不牛 27. Consult M111tip 1e -Conc巳 pt Aluminum wire Example 4 for insight into solving this problem. An al l1 minllm wir 巳 of radills 3.0 X 10- 4 III is stretched between the ends of a concret巳 block, as the drawing illllstrates. When the system (wire and concret巳) is at 35 oc , the tension in the wire is 50.0 N. What is the tension in the wire when the systelll is h巳at巳d to 185 OC? Section 12.5 Volume Thermal Expansion 28. A ftask is filled with 1.500 L (L = liter) of a liq l1 id at 97 .1 o c. When th巳 liq l1 id is cooled to 15 .0 oc , its volllm巳 is only 1.3 83 L , howeve r. Neglect the contraction of th巳 tlask and lI S巳 Tabl e 12.1 to identify the liquid. 29. Interactive Solution 12.29 at www.wiley.comlcollege/cutnell presents a Ill odel for solving problems of this type. A thin sph巳 rical s h巳 11 of silver has an inner rad ills of 2.0 x 10 m when the telllperature is 18 o The shell is heated to 147 o Find th巳 change in th巳 interior vo111me of the shel l. c. c. • 30. A test tube contains 2.54 x 10- 4 1113 of liq l1 id carbon tetrachloride at a temperature of 75 .0 o c. The test tllbe and the carbon t巳tra chloride ar巳 cooled to a temperature of - 13.0 oc , which is above the freezing point of carbon tetrachloride. Find the volllllle of carbon tetrachloride in the test tub巳 at -13.0 oC. 31. ssm A lead object and a qu 创 tz object 巳ach have th巳 sa lll e initial vol l1 me. The vo111me of each incr巳ases by th巳 sam巳 alllO l1 nt, beca l1 se lic k the telllperaωre increases. If the temperaωre of the lead object increases by 4.0 C O , by how Ill uch does th巳 temperature of thew .quartz .c do c ack m C o m same temperature. On巳 is steel, and the other is aluminum. The steel strip is 0.10% longer than the alulllinulll strip. By how Ill llch shollld .c c u -tr a c k the telllperature of the strips b巳 i ncreased , so that the strips have th巳 same length? o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W PROBLEMS h a n g e Vi e ! F- er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- u -tr 。同巳ctincrease? 32. At a temperature of 0 oc , th巳 mass and volume of a ftllid are 825 kg and 1. 17 m 3 . Th巳 coeffici巳nt of vo1ume expansion is 1.26 X 10- 3 (CO) - l. (a) What is the density of the ftllid at this temperature? (b) What is the density of the ftuid when the telllperatlll 巳 has risen to 20.0 OC? 33. Consu lt Interactive LearningWare 12.1 at www.wiley.com/ college/cutnell for help in solving this problem. During an all-night cram session , a student heats up a one-half liter (0.50 X 10- 3 m3) glass (Pyrex) beaker of co1d coffee. Initia l1 y, the temperatm巳 IS 18 oc , and the beaker is fi ll 巳d to the brilll. A short time later when the student returns , the temperature has risen to 92 o The coeffici巳 ot of volume expansion of coffee is the same as that of water. How Ill uch coffee (in c l1 bic meters) has spilled Ollt of the beaker? c. A n川 1川a仙 川 lllmi 川 1m 川川 u川1m 川 川m can IS 伽d 川时n肌 I盯T 34. ~ 灿 and 由 t h巳 liquid 盯 ar巳 h巳at忧巳d so 由 t h巳 l町r 忧t 巳 mp巳 ratm巳 s chang巳 by 由 t h巳 sa!盯 III巳 拟mηlO un t. Th巳 can'、s initial volul a 川 I口 mη1巳 at 5 oc 归 i s 3.5 X 10- 4 m3 . The co efficient of vo111me expansion for alumin l1 m is 69 X 10- 6 (CO)- l When the can and th巳 liquid are heated to 78 oc , 3.6 X 10- 6 11] 3 of liquid spills over. What is the coefficient of volume expansion of th巳 liquid? 35. ssm Suppos巳 that th巳 steel gas tank in your car is completely filled when the temperatul 巳 is 17 o c. How many gallons will spill out ofth巳 twenty-gallon tank wh巳 n the temperature rises to 35 OC? 36. Interactive LearningWare 12.1 at www.wiley.comlcollege/cutnell provides some L1 seful backgrollnd for this problem . Many hot-water heating systems have a reservoir tank connected directly to the pip巳line , to al1 0w for expansion wh巳 n the water becomes ho t. The heating system of a hO Ll se has 76 m of copper pip巳 whose inside radius is 9.5 X 10- 3 m. Wh 巳 n th巳 wat er and pipe are heated frolll 24 to 78 oc , what must be the minilllum vo1ume of the reservoir tank to hold the overftow of water? ι' 37. A solid alllminum sphere has a rad ius of 0.50 III and a telllperature of 75 o Th巳 sphere is then completely immersed in a pool of water whose temperature is 25 o c. The sph巳r巳 cools , while the watel telllperature 1 巳ma ll1 sn巳arly at 25 oc , because the pool is very large. The sph巳re is weighed in th巳 water immediately after being sllb merged (before it begins to coo l) and then again after cooling to 2 c. h a n g e Vi e ! XC w N y bu of mercury in a barometer (see Figure 1 1. 11) has a height of 0.760 m when the pressure is one atmosph巳re and the temperature is 0.0 oc. Ignoring any change in the glass containing the mercury, what will be the height of the mercury column for the sam巳 one atmosphere of pr巳 ssure wh巳n the temperature rises to 38.0 oC on a hot day? (Hint: The pressure in the barometer is given by Pressure = pgh, and the density p 01 the mercury changes when the temperature changes.) Section 12.6 Heat and Internal Energy, Section 12.7 Heat and Temperature Change: Specific Heat Capacity 43. ssm Ideally, when a thermometer is used to measure the temperature of an object, the temperature of the object itself should not change. However, if a significant amount of heat fiows from the object to the th巳rmometer, the temperature will change. A thermometer has a mass of 31.0 g , a specific heat capacity of c = 815 J/(kg' C勺, and a temperature of 12.0 oc. It is immersed in 119 g of water, and the final temperature of the water and thermometer is 41.5 oc. Wh at was the temp巳rature of the water before the ins巳rtion of the thermometer? 44. If the price of electrical energy is $0.10 per kilowatt. hour, what is the cost of using electrical 巳nergy to heat the water in a swimming pool (12.0 m X 9.00 m X 1. 5 m) from 15 to 27 OC? 45. An ic巳 chest at a beach party contains 12 cans of soda at 5.0 oc. Each can of soda has a mass of 0.35 kg and a sp巳cific heat capacity of 3800 J/(kg . C O). Someone adds a 6.5-kg watermelon at 27 oC to the ches t. The specific heat capacity of watermelon is nearly the sam巳 as that of water. Ignore the specific heat capacity of the chest and determine the final temperature T of the soda and watermelon. 46 . 电r When you drink cold wat町, your body must exp巳nd meta bolic energy in order to maintain normal body temperature (37 oc) by warming up the water in your stomach. Could drinking ice wat町, then , substitute for exercise as a way to "burn calories?" Suppose you 巳xpend 430 kilocalories during a brisk hour-long walk. How many lit巳rs of ice wat巳r (0 oc) would you have to drink in order to use up 430 kiloc ~ to k ;' 5 1. Interactive Solution 12.51 at www.wiley.comlcollege/cutnell deals with one approach to solving probl 巳ms such as this. A 0.35-kg coffee mllg is made from a material that has a specific heat capacity of 920 J/(kg . C O) and contains 0.25 kg of wate r. The cup and water are at 15 oc. To make a cup of coffeee , a small electric heater is immersed in th巳 water and brings it to a boil in three minlltes. Assllme that the cup and water always have the same temperature and determine the minimum power rating of this heate r. * 52. ③ Three 阳tions of the same liquid are mixed in a container that prevents the exchange of heat with the environmen t. Portion A has a mass m and a temperature of 94.0 oC , portion B also has a mass m but a temperature of 78.0 oC, and portion C has a mass mc and a temperature of 34.0 oc. What must be the mass of portion C so that tt而且 nal temperature T f of the three-portion mixture is T r = 50.0 OC? Express your answer in terms of m; for exampl巳, mc = 2.20 m. 封 53. M lI ltiple-Concept Example 11 deals with a situation that is sim ilar, but not identical, to that here. When 4200 J of heat are added to a 0.15-m-long silver bar, its length increases by 4.3 X 10- 3 m. What is the mass of the bar? 在 54. The heating element of a water heater in an apartm巳nt building has a maximum power output of 28 kW. Four residents of the building take showers at the same time , and each receives heated water at a volume flow rate of 14 X 10 m3/s. If the water going into the heater has a temperature of 11 oC , what is the maximum possible temperature of th巳 hot water that each showering resident receives? • " 55. ssm Multiple-Concept Example 11 uses th巳 sam巳 physics principles as those 巳mployed in this problem. A block of material has a mass of 130 kg and a volume of 4.6 X 10- 2 m3 . The material has a specific heat capacity and coefficient of volume expansion , respectively, of 750 J/(kg . C O) and 6 .4 X 10 (C O) - 1. How much heat must be added to the block in order to increase its volume by 1. 2 X 10- 5 m3 ? • i叫 56. An insulated container is partly filled with oi l. The lid of the con is removed , 0.125 kg of wat t创 ner Section 12.8 Heat and Phase Change: Latent Heat 57. ssm How much heat must be added to 0 .45 kg of aluminum to chang巳 it from a solid at 130 oC to a liquid at 660 OC (i ts melting point)? The latent heat of fusion for aluminum is 4.0 X 10 5 J/kg. 58. To help prevent frost damage , fruit growers sometimes protect their crop by spraying it with water when overnight temperatures are expected to go below freezing. When th巳 water turns to ice during the night , heat is released into the plants , thereby giving a measure of protection against the cold. Suppose a grower sprays 7.2 kg of wat巳r at 0 oC onto a fruit tree. (a) How much heat is released by the wat巳r when it freez巳s? (b) How much would the temperature of a 180-kg 盯ee rise if it absorbed the heat releas巳d in part (a)? Assume that the specific heat capacity of th巳 tre巳 is 2.5 X 103 J/(kg . C O) and that no phase change occurs within the tre巳 itsel f. 59. Assume that the pressure is one atmosphere and determine the heat required to produce 2.00 kg of water vapor at 100.0 oC , starting o m lic C m 抖 42. Th巳 column 50. A piece of glass has a temperature of 83.0 oc. Liquid that has a temperature of 43.0 oC is poured over the glass , completely covering wit. d, o .c c u -tr a c k and the temp巳rature at 巳quilibrium is 53.0 oc. The mass of the glass and the liquid is the same. Ignoring 由巳 container that holds 出巳 glass and Liquid and assuming 由at 由巳 heat lost to or gained from the surroundings is negligible, determine 由e specific heat capacity of the liquid. w w .d o o lic C w w w 41. ssm www Two identical thermometers made of Pyrex glass con, identical volumes of mercury and methyl aIcoho l. tain , crespectively .c c u -tr a k If the expansion of the glass is taken into account, how many ti盯m 巳s greater is the distanc巳 b巳创tw巳巳n 由 th巳 d巳gre巳 marks on 由 th巳 m巳t白 hy 川1 aIc oholt由 her 口 rrr m盯η101盯 m 丑1巳创t巳町r than 由 th巳 distance on the mer 囚 curηY 由 t h巳创口 r:m k 习 i' to bu y N O W PD CHAPTER 12 TEMPERATURE AND HEAT F- er 388 w O W h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- XC h a n g e Vi e 389 N O W w 60. ( (a) 0均ects A and B have the same mass of 3.0 kg. They melt wh巳n 3.0 X 10 4 J of heat is added to A and when 9.0 X 10 4 J is add巳d to B. Determine the latent heat of fusion for the substance from which each object is made. (b) Find the heat required to melt object A when its mass is 6.0 kg. 61. ssm Find the mass of water that vaporizes when 2.10 kg of mercury at 205 oC is added to 0.110 kg of water at 80.0 oc. 62. A mass m = 0.054 kg of b巳nzene vapor at its boiling point of 80.1 oC is to be condensed by mixing the vapor with water at 41 oC What is the minimum mass of water required to condense all of the benzene vapor? Assume that th巳 mixing and condensation take place 111 a p巳rfectly insulating container 63. 吨,. A person eats a container of strawbe町 yogurt . The i Nutritional Facts label states that it contains 240 Calories (1 Calorie = 4186 J). What mass of p巳rspiration would one have to lose to get rid of this energy? At body t巳 mp巳rature , the latent heat of vaporization of water is 2.42 X 10 6 J/kg 64. A woman finds the front windshield of her car covered with ic巳 at -12.0 oc. The ice has a thickness of 4.50 X 10- 4 m , and the windshield has an area of 1. 25 m2 The density of ice is 917 kg/m 3. How much heat is required to melt the ice? 65. A thermos contains 150 cm 3 of coffe巳 at 85 oc. To cool the coffee , you drop two ll-g ice cubes into the thermos . Th巳 ice cubes ar 巳 initially at 0 oC and melt completely. What is the final temp巳rature of the coffee? Treat the coffe巳 as if it wer 巳 wate r. ;, 66. A snow maker at a resort pumps 130 kg of lake water per minute and sprays it into the air above a ski run . The water droplets freeze in 出巳 air and fall to the ground , forming a layer of snow. If all the water pumped into the air turns to snow, and the snow cools to the ambient air temperature of -7.0 oC , how much heat does the snow-making process release each minute? Assume that the temperature of the lake water is 12.0 oC , and use 2.00 X 10 3 J/(kg . C O) for the specific heat capacity of snow. k lic .d o m o w ;, 7 1. c u -tr a c k ssm It is claimed that if a lead bullet goes fast 巳nough , it can melt completely when it comes to a halt suddenly, and all its kin巳tlC energy is converted into heat via friction. Find the minimum speed of a lead bullet (initial temperature = 30.0 oc) for such an event to happen. ar巳 at 0 oC , and another two grams are at 100 oc. Heat is removed from the water at 0 oC , completely fre缸" ing it at 0 oc. This heat is then used to vaporize some of th巳 water at 100 oc. What is the mass (in grams) of the liquid water that remains? ;, 72. Two grams of liquid water ;'* 73. A locomotive wheel is 1. 00 m in diameter. A 25 .0-kg steel band has a t巳mperature of 20.0 oC and a diameter that is 6.00 X 10- 4 m less than that of the whee l. What is the smallest mass of water vapor at 100 oC that can b巳 condensed on the st巳巳 1 band to heat it, so that it will fit onto the whe巳 I? Do not ignore the water that results from 由巳 condensation. Section 12.9 Equilibrium Between Phases of Matter, Section 12.10 Humidity 74. Use the vapor pressure curve that accompanies 由is problem to determine the t巳 mperaωre at which liquid carbon dioxide exists in 巳qUl librium with its vapor phase when the vapor pressure is 3.5 X 10 6 Pa. 8 x 10 6 '" x 10 0 ι6 ω :::J 4 x 10 0 l)l 也2 CL2 × 106 75. ssm At a temperature of 10 oC O th巳 percent relative humidity is -50 0 50 R IO , and at 40 oC it is R 40' At each Temperature , oc of these temperatures 出e partial Problem 74 pressure of water vapor in the 缸r is the same. Using the vapor pressure curve for water that accompanies this problem , determine the ratio R IO /R 40 of th巳 two humidity values . 8000 7000 / dηζ 。且m〉 2町的E 且 L w 斗内 1063 OC (its melting point). The water boils away, forming st巳am at 100.0 oC and leaving solid gold at 1063 oc. What is the minimum mass of water that must be used? nununununu nununununu nununununu 民JVA 古巴 而且ugmE ;' 68. ③ Wa阳 at 23.0 oC is sprayed onto 0.180 kg of mo阳 gold at 民U ssm Ice at -10.0 oC and steam at 130 oC are brought together at atmospheric pr巳s s ur巳 in a p巳d巳ctly insulated container. After thermal equilibrium is reach巳d , the liquid phas巳 at 50.0 oC is presen t. Ignoring the container and the equilibrium vapor pressure of the liquid at 50.0 oC , find the ratio of the mass of steam to th巳 mass of ice. The specific heat capacity of steam is 2020 J/(kg . C O) v y / / 一 …… 字 69. *70. Occasionally, huge icebergs are found ftoating on the oc巳a n ' s currents . Suppose one such iceberg is 120 km long , 35 km wide, and 230 m thick. (a) How much heat would be required to melt this iceberg (assumed to be at 0 oc) into liquid water at 0 OC? The density of ice is 917 kg/m 3 . (b) Th巳 annual energy consumption by th巳 United States is about 1. 1 X 10 20 J. If this en巳rgy were delivered to the would it take before the ice melted? 在 67. ssm www An unknown material has a normal melting/freezing point of -25 .0 oC, a nd 由 e liquid phas巳 h as a specific heat capacity of 160 J/(kg' C O). One-tenth of a kilogram of the solid at -25.0 oC is put into a 0.150-kg aluminum calorimeter cup that contains 0.100 kg of glycerin. The temp巳rature of the cup and the glycerin is initially 27 .0 oc. All the unknown material melts , and the final temperature at equilibrium is 20.0 oc. The calorimeter neither loses energy to nor gains energy from the external environmen t. What is the l at巳nt heat of fusion of the unknown material? y巳ars year, how many C m o c u -tr a c k iceberg 巳very to bu y N y bu to k lic C (b) 2.00 kg of liquid w w .d o with (a) 2.00 kg of water at 100.0 oC and water at 0.0 oc. .c w w w ! F- PROBLEMS er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- 1000 O O 11 I I I 10 I I I 1111 II I I 20 30 40 Temperature , OC 1 I I I 50 76. On a certain 巳vening , the dew point is 14 oC and the relative hu midity is 50.0%. How many Celsius degrees must the temperature fall in order for the relative humidity to increase to 69%? Use the vapor pressure curv巳 for water that accompanies Problem 75 as needed. As s um巳 that the dew point does not change as the temperature falls 77. 哼,... Suppose that air in the human lungs has a temperature of 37 oC , and the partial pressure of water vapor has a value of 5.5 X 10 3 Pa. What is the relative humidity in the lungs? Consult the vapor pressure curv巳 for water that accompanies Problem 75 ~ .c XC h a n g e Vi e ! F- y A container is fìtted with a movabl巳 pi ston of and radills r = 0.061 m. Inside the container is Li qllid water in eqllilibrillm with its vapor, 豁 出巳 drawin g shows. Th巳 piston remains stationary with a 120-kg block on top of i t. Th巳 air pressure acting on the top of 由巳 piston is one atmos pher巳 . By lI sing th巳 vaporization cllrv巳 for water in Figllr巳 12.32 ,自 nd the t巳mp巳ratllre of the water. n巳g ligibl巳 mass to k 习 83. ssm At a picnic , a glass contains 0.300 kg of t巳 a at 30.0 oC , which is the air temp巳 ratllre. To make iced tea , so meo n巳 add s 0.0670 kg of ice at 0.0 oC and stirs th巳 mixture. When all the ice me lts and th e final t巳 mpera tllre is reach巳d , the glass begins to fog IIp , becall s巳 wat巳 r vapor condenses on the ollter glass sllrface. Using the vapor press lI r巳 cllrve for wat巳r that accompanies Problem 75 , ignoring the specific heat capacity of the glass , and tr巳a tin g the tea as if it were w ate r,巳 s timate the relativ巳 hllmidity. 中' 84. A tall colllmn of water is open to the atmospher 巳. At a depth of 10.3 m below the sllrface , th巳 w a ter is boiling. V,而 at is the temperatllre at this depth? Use the vaporization curv巳 for wat巳r in FigllI 巳 12.32 , as needed. AIDDI Tl ONAL PROBLEMS 85. A steel section of the Alaskan pipeline had a length of 65 m 创ld a temperatllre of 18 oC when it was installed. What is its change io length when the t巳 mpera ture drops to a frigid -45 OC? The latent heat of vaporization of H20 at body temp巳ratllre ij (37.0 oc) is 2 .42 X 10 6 J/kg. To cool th巳 body of a 75-kg jogger [average specific heat capacity = 3500 J/(kg' CO)] by 1.5 C气 how many kiJograms of water in th巳 form of s w巳at have to b巳 evaporated ? 86. "'"苦,.. 87. ssm Liqllid nitrogen boils at a chilly -195.8 OC wh巳 n the pres sllre is on巳 atmosphere . A silver coin of mass 1. 5 X 10- 2 kg and temperature 25 oC is dropped into th巳 boiling Ii qllid. What mass of nitrogen boils off as the coin cools to -195.8 OC? 88. A 0.200-kg piece of a1l1 minllm that has a temperature of - 155 oC is added to 1. 5 kg of water that has a temperatllre of 3.0 o At eqllilibrillm th巳 temp巳 rature is 0.0 o Ignoring the container and assllming that the heat exchanged with the sllrrollndings is negli gibl巴, determine the mass of water that has been frozen into ice. c. c. 89. A commonly lI sed method of fastening one part to another part is called "shrink fìttin g." A steel rod has a diameter of 2.0026 cm , and a flat plate contains a hole whose di ameter is 2.0000 cm. The rod is cooled so that it jllst fìts into the hole. Wh en the rod warms IIp , 出巳 enormolls th巳 rm a l stress exerted by the plate holds the rod sec ur巳 I y to the plate. By how many Celsills degrees shollld th巳 rod be cooled? 90. A thin rod consists of two parts joined together. One-third of it is silver and two-thirds is gold. The temp巳rature decreases by 26 C 。 I1 L D e termin巳 th巳 frac tional decr巳as巳 in th巳 rod ' s L o. Sil ver + L o. Gold length , where L o. Sil vcr and Lo , Gold are the initial lengths of th巳 silve I and gold rods 91. ssm A copper kettle contains water at 24 o c.认rhen th巳 wa ter IS heated to its boiling point, the volllme of the kettle expands by 1. 2 X 10- 5 m3 Determine the volllme of th巳 kettle at 24 oC. 92. When yOll t冰e a bath , how many kilograms of hot water (49.0 OC) mllst yOll mi x with cold water (1 3.0 oc) so that the temperature of the bath is 36.0 OC? The total mass of water (hot pllls cold) is 19 1 kg Ignore any heat flow betw巳en the water and its 口t巳rnal sllITollndings 93. ssm What is the relati ve hll I1lidity 00 a day when th巳 t巳mpera tllre is 30 oC and the dew point is 10 OC? Use the vapor pressllre curve that acco mpanies Problem 75 . 功 94. A copp巳 r-co n s tanta n thermocollple generates a voltage of 4.75 X 10- 3 volts wh巳 n th巳 t巳 mperatllre of the hot jllnction is 110.0 oC and the refere nce jllnction is kept at a t巳 mperature of 0.0 o lf the voltage is proportional to the difference in temperature betw e巳n the jllnctions , what is the temp巳rature of th巳 hot jllnction when the vo ltage is 1. 90 X 10- 3 volts? c. 地 95. Interactive Solution 12.95 at www.wiley.comlcollege/cutnell provides a modeI for solving problems sllch as this. A 42-kg block of ice at 0 oC is sliding on a hori zontal s lI rface. Th巳 i IlÍ tial s pe巳d of the I C巳 i s 7. 3 mJs and the fìnal speed is 3.5 m/s. Assllm巳 that the part of the block th at melts has a very small mass and that all the heat gen巳 rated by kinetic fri cti on goes into the block of ice. D巳 termin e th 巳 mass of i c巳 t hat melts into water at 0 o c. *96. Eqllal masses of two different liqllids have the same temperaωre of 25.0 o Liqllid A has a fre巳zing point of -68.0 oC and a specific heat capac ity of 1850 J/(kg' C O). Liqllid B has a freezing point of 96.0 oC and a specific heat capacity of 2670 J/(kg . C 勺 . The same amollnt of h巳 at mllst be removed from each liqllid in order to freeze it into a solid at its respectiv巳 fr巳巳zing poin t. De termin 巳 th e differ巳 nc巳 Lr. A 一 Lr, ß b etwe巳 n the lat巳 nt h巳ats of fllsion for the s巳 liqllid s 1' 97. c. 电曹~ Refer to Interactive LearnìngWare 12.2 at www.wiley.com/ concepts that play roles in this problem. The box of a well-known breakfast c巳 real states that one ollnce of the cereaJ contains 110 Calori 巳 s (1 food Calori 巳 = 4186 J). If 2.0% of this e o巳rgy cOllld be converted by a weight lifter's body into work don 巳 in lifting a barbell , what is th巳 h eav i est barbell that cOllld b巳 lifted a distanc巳 of 2.1 m? H college/cutnell for a r巳view of th巳 m lic c. ' 82. The te mp巳 rature of th巳 a ir in a room is 36 o A perso n tllrn s on a dehllmidi fier and notic巳 s th at wh巳 n th巳 coolin g coil s 1 巳ac h 30 oC , water begins to co ndense on th 巳 m. What is the relative hllmidity in th巳 room? Use the vapor pre ss ur巳 curve that accompanies Problem 75 o m o 纠 80. w w 79. The temp巳ratllre of 2.0 kg of water is 100.0 oC , bllt th巳 wat巳 r is not boiling , becallse th巳巳xternaJ pressure acting on the water sllrface is 3.0 X 10 5 Pa. Using the vapor press ure curve for water given in Figllre 12.32 , determi 日巳 th巳 amollnt of heat that mllst be added to th巳 water to bring it to the point where it jllst b巳gins to boil A woman has been olltdoors where the temperature is 10 o She walks into a 25 oC h O ll s巳, a nd h巳r glasses "steam IIp.'' Using the va w .c .d o ck por pressllre curv巳 for water that accompanies Problem 75 , fìnd the c u - t r a smallest possible va llle for the relative hllmidity of th巳 roo m. C to k lic C c. 非 8 1. percentage of atmosph巳 llC preSSllI 巳 iβs 由 t hiβs ? Ta~巳 a 创tr盯 mosph巳臼n比 c 庐 p r巳创s .c .d o c u -tr a c k sllre tωob 忱巳 1. 01 3 x 10 ) Pa. (b 剧) What p巳创rc 优巳 ntω age 巳 oft由 h巳 tωotωa 剖1 阳 aJr 阴 p I 巳臼s s饥1I山 11陀 e 川 a t 10 oC is dll巳 to water vapor when th巳 relati ve hllmidity is 100 9盯 (c) The vapor pressllre of water at 35 oC is 5500 Pa. 认rhat is the rel ative hllmidity at this temperatllre if 出巳 partial pr巳ssure of water in the air has not chanσ巳 d from what it was at 10 oC when th巳 D relative hllmidity was 100%? bu y bu 7叩8 ③ The 忱 le 刊 v a叩p阳 O w w w w N ! O W TEMPERATURE AND HEAT N 12 er w CHAPTER O W h a n g e Vi e 390 PD XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi e w N y to bu 忡 102. An 85.0-N backpack is hung from the middle of an aluminum wire , as th巳 drawi n g shows. The temperature of th巳 wire then drops by 20.0 C"' Find the tension in the wire at the lower temperature. Assllme that the distance between the sllpports does not chang巳, and 19nor巳 any th巳 rmal stress. 。 kμ 100. A wir巳 is mad巳 by attaching two segments together, end to 巳 nd. One s巳gment is made of allllninllm and the other is steel. The e旺ec tive coefficient of linear expansion of the two-segment wire is 19 X 10- 6 (CO)- I. What fraction of the length is aluminum? LO LO m lic k A steel rod (ρ= 7860 kg/m 3 ) has a length of 2.0 m. It is bolted w at both ends betwe巳 n imrnobile sllpports . Initially ther巳 is no tension .c .d o c u -tr a c k in th巳 rod , becallse the rod just fits between the supports. Find the ten sion that develops wh巳 n the rod loses 3300 J of h巳at o m o k lic w ' 99. ssm A rock of mass 0.20 kσfalls from rest from a hei 2: ht of 15 m into a pail containing 0.35 kg of water. The rock and water have the sarne initial temperature. The speci 自 c heat capacity of th巳 rock is 1840 J/(kg' C O). Ignor巳 the heat absorbed by the pail itself, and detenni ne the rise in the tem p巳rature of the rock and water 年 半 10 1. w Multiple-Concept Ex创llple 4 reviews the concepts that are inin this problem. A ruler is accurate when the temperatllre is volved .c .d o k c u -tr a c 25 oc. When the temperature drops to -14 oC , the ruler shrinks and no longer m巳asur巳s distances accurately. However, the rlller can be mad巳 to read correctly if a force of magnitllde 1. 2 X 10 3 N is applied to each end so as to stretch it back to its originallength . The rlller has a cross-sectional area of 1. 6 X 10- 5 m2, and it is made from a mat巳 rial whose co巳fficient of linear expansion is 2.5 X 10- 5 (C O ) 一 1 . What is Young's modullls for the material from which the rlller is made? C ψ 98. w w w C to bu y N 391 ! XC O W ADD ITION AL PROBLEMS F- er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi ew h a n g e Vi ew y bu bu y N O W ! PD XC N O W F- c u -tr a c k to k lic .d o THE TRANSFER OF HEAT These workers are pouring a (very) hot liquid into forms . Their helmets , aprons , and clothing are designed to protect them from excess heat. This chapter considers the processes by which heat is transferred from one place to another. (@ Oale O'Oell/ SUPERSTOCK) F.MWF CONVECTION Wh en heat is transferred to 0 1' from a substance , the internal energy of the substance can change , as we saw in Chapter 12. This change in internal 巳 nergy is accompanied by a change in temperature 0 1' a change in phase. The transfer of heat affects us in many ways. For instanc巴, within our homes furnac巳 s distribut巳 heat on cold days , and air conditioners remove it on hot days . Our bodies constantly transfer heat in on巳 direction 0 1' another, to prevent the advers巳巳ffects of hypo- and hyperthermia. And virtually all our energy originates in th巳 sun and is transferred to us ov巳l' a distanc巳 of 150 million kilometers through the void of spac巳. Today's sunlight provides the energy to drive photosynth巳 sis in the plants 由 at provide our food and , henc巳, metabolic energy. Anci巳 nt sunlight nurtured the organic matter that becam巳 the fossil fuels of oil , natural gas , and coal. This chapter examines the 仕rre巳 process巳 s by which heat is transferred: convection , conduction , and radiation. When part of a fluid is warmed , such as th巳 air above a fìre , the volume of that part of the fluid expands , and th巳 d巳 nsity decreases. According to Archimedes ' principle (see Section 11.6) , th巳 surrounding cool巳r and dens巳l' fluid 巳xerts a buoyant forc巳 on the warmer fluid and pushes it upwru.吐 As warmer fluid rises , the surrounding cooler fluid replaces it. This cooler fluid , in turn , is warmed and push巳d upward. Thus , a continuous flow is established , which carries along heat. When巳ver heat is transferred by the bulk movement of a gas 0 1' a liquid , th巳 heat is said to be transferred by convection. The fluid flow itself is call巳d a convection current. CONVECTION Convection is the process in which heat is carried from place to place by the bulk movement of a fluid. 392 o .c m C m w o C lic k to C HA P T E R 1 ~ w w .d o w w w er ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c XC 393 N y 唱 Hot lic k to bu Conceptual Example and Refrigerators .d o o w m C m The smoke rising from the industrial fìre in Figur巳 13.1 is one visible result of convection. Figure 13.2 shows th巳 less visible example of convection curr巳nts in a pot of water .c k c u -tr a c being heated on a gas burner. The currents distribute the heat from 由巳 burning gas to a11 p缸ts of the water. Conceptu a1 Example 1 de a1s with some of the important roles 由 at convection plays in the home o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W PD h a n g e Vi ew er O W F- 13.1 CONVECTION ! h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k Water 8aseboard Heating Hot water baseboard heating units are 仕equently us巳d in homes , and a cooling coil is a m句 or component of a refrigerator. The locations of these heating and cooling d巳vices are diff,巳rent becaus巳巳ach is d巳sign巳d to maxirnize 出 e production of convection currents. Where should the heating unit and the cooling coil be located? (a) Heating unit near the ftoor of the room and cooling coil ne缸出e top of the refrigerator (b) Heating unit near th巳 ceiling of 出巳 room and cooling coil near the bottom of the refrigerator Reasoning An important goal for the heating system is to distribut巳 heat throughout a room. The analogous goal for the cooling coil is to remove heat from all of the space within a r巳frig erator. 1n each case , the heating or cooling device must be position巳d so that convection m 地巳S the goal achievable. Answer (b) is incorrect. If the heating unit were placed near the ceiling of the room , warm air from the unit would remain 出ere , becaus巳 warm air does not fall (i t rises). Thus , th巳re would be very little natural movement (or convection) of air to distribute the heat throughout th巳 room . 1f the cooling coil were located n巳 ar the bottom of the refrigerator, the cool air would remain 由ere , because cool air does not rise (it sinks). There would be very little convection to c缸ry the heat from other parts of th巳 refrigerator to the coil for remova l. Figure 13.1 The plumes of thick , gray smok巳 fro m this industrial fire rise hundreds of meters into the air because of convection. (Scott Shawrrhe Plain Dealer/@APlWide World Photos) The physics of heating and cooling by convection. Answer (a) is correct. Th巳 air above th巳 bas巳board unit is h巳ated, like the air above a fire. Buoyant forces from the surrounding cooler air push 由巳 warm air upward. Cool巳r air near the c巳iling is displaced downward and then warmed by 由 e baseboard heating unit , causing the convection current illustrated in Figure 13 .3a. Within the refrigerator, air in contact with the topmounted coil is cooled , its volume decreases , and its density increases. The surrounding warmer and less d巳nse air cannot provide sufficient buoyant force to support th巳 cooler 组 r, which sinks downward. 1n the proc巳ss , warmer air near the bottom of the re仕igerator is displaced upward and is then cooled by th巳 coil ,巳stablishing 由e convection current shown in Figur巳 13. 3b. Figure 13.2 Convection currents are set up when a pot of water is h巳ated . heating unit (α) (b) Figure 13.3 (α) Air warmed by the baseboard heating unit is pushed to the top of 由巳 room by the cooler and denser air. (b) Air cooled by the cooling coil sinks to the bottom of 出巳 refrigerator. In both (α) and (b) a convection current is 巳stablished. .c h a n g e Vi e ! XC N to bu y N y bu Another example of conv巳ction occurs wh巳n the ground , heated by 出巳 sun 's rays , warms the neighboring air. Surrounding cooler and d 巳 nser air pushes th巳 heat巳 d air up-w . d o .c c u -tr a c k ward. Th巳 I 巳 sulting updraft or " thermal" can b巳 quite strong , depending on the amount of heat that the ground can supply. As Figure 13 .4 illustrates , th巳 se thermals can b巳 us巳d by glider pilots to gain consid巳rable altitud巳 . Birds such as eagles utilize thermals in a similar fashion It is usual for air temp巳rature to decrease with incr巳 asing altitude , and the resulting upward conv巳ction currents are important for disp巳rsing pollutants from industrial sources and automobile exhaust systems. Sometimes , however, m巳teorological conditions cause a layer to form in th巳 atmosphere wh巳 re the temp巳rature increases with increasing altitud巳 Such a lay巳r is called an illversioll layer because its temperature profile is inverted com pared to the usual situation. An inv巳rsion layer aITests the normal upward convection cur rents , causing a stagnant-air condition in which the concentration of pollutants incr巳 ases substantially. This condition leads to a smog layer that can oft巳n be s巳en hov巳ring over large cities. We hav巳 be巳n discussing Il atural cOllvectioll, in which a t巳 mperature differ巳nce caus巳s the d巳nsity at one place in a f1 uid to be different from the density at another. Sometim巳s , natural conv巳ction is inadequate to transfer sufficient amounts of hea t. 1n such casesforced cOllvectioll is often us巳 d, and an external devic巳 such as a pump or a fan mixes th巳 warmer and cool巳r portions of the f1 uid. Figure 13.5 shows an application of forced convection that is revolutionizing th巳 way in which the effects of overheating are being tr巳 ated. Athletes , for 巳xampl巳, are esp巳cially prone to overheating , and th巳 devic巳 illus trated in Figure 13.5 is appearing more and more frequently at athletic events. The t巳 ch nique is known as rapid thermal 巳xchange and takes advantag巳 of specialized blood vessels called arteriov巳 nous anastomoses (AVAs) that are found in the palms of th巳 hands (and soles of the feet). These blood v巳ss巳ls ar巳 used to help dissipate unwanted h巳 at from th巳 body. Th巳 device in th巳 drawing consists of a small chamb巳r containing a curv巳d metal plate , through which cool water is circulated from a refrigerated supply. Th巳 overh 巳 ated athlete inserts his hand into th巳 chamber and places his palm on the plat巳. The chamber seals around the wris The physics of "thermals." The physics of an inversion laye r. Figure 13.4 Updrafts , or thermals , are caused by th巳 convective movement of air that the ground has warmed. The physics of rapid thermal exchange. Figure 13.5 An overheated athlete uses a rapid-thermal-exchange device to cool down. He places the palm of his hand on a curved metal plate within a slightly evacuated chamber. Forced convection circulates cool water through the plate , which cools the blood flowing through the hand. The cooled blood returns through veins to the heart, which circulates it throughout the body m o m o c C lic k to k lic C c u -tr . ack w w .d o w w w w er ! F- O W w CHAPTER 13 THE TRANSFER OF HEAT PD h a n g e Vi e 394 O W XC er PD F- 395 y bu k lic o .d o m C m o w w w w w w C lic k to Figure 13.6 shows the application of forced convection in an automobile engine. As in the previous application , forc巳d convection occurs in two ways. First, a pump circulates .c .d o c u -tr a c k radiator fluid (water and antifre巳ze) through th巳巳ngine to remove excess heat from the combustion process. Second , a radiator fan draws air through th巳 radiator. Heat is transferred from the hotter radiator fluid to th巳 cooler air, ther巳by cooling the f1 uid. to bu y N O W PD C h a n g e Vie w N O W -X er 13.2 CONDUCTIONF ! h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k ~ CHECK Y 。 ωUR 川 U ND 唱..DERSTANDI川酌 N (The answer is given at the end of the book.) 1. The transfer of heat by convection is smallest in (a) solids , (b) liquids , (c) gases. d~ CONDUCTION Figure 13.6 The forced convection generated by a pump circulates radiator fluid through an automobile engine to remove excess hea t. -': 11 Anyone who has fried a hamburger in an a lI -metal ski Il et knows that the metal handle becomes ho t. Somehow, heat is transferred from th巳 burn 巳r to th 巳 handle. Clearly, heat is not being transferred by the bulk mov巳m 巳 nt of th 巳 m巳tal or the surrounding air, so convection can b巳 ruled ou t. Instead , heat is transferred directly through the metal by a process called conduction. CONDUCTION Conduction is the process whereby heat is t:ransferr巳d directly through a material , with any bulk motion of the material playing no role in the transfer. One m巳chanism for conduction occurs when the atoms or molecuJes in a hotter part of the material vibrat巳 or move with greater energy than thos巳 in a cooJer par t. By means of coJJisions , the mor巳巳n 巳rgetic moJ 巳cul巳 s pass on some of the町 energy to their less en 巳 r g巳 tic neighbors. For 巳xample , imagin巳 a gas filI ing the space between two walls that face each oth巳r and ar巳 maintained at different temperat盯巳 s. MoJecules strike the hott巳 r waIl, absorb energy from it , and rebound with a greater kinetic 巳 n巳rgy than when they arrived. As th巳 se more energetic mol巳cuJes coIlid巳 with their less en巳rgetic neighbors , they transfer some of their energy to them. EventuaIl y, this energy is passed on untiJ it reaches the molecules next to the cooler wal l. These molecules , in turn , collide with the wall , giving up som巳 of their energy to it in the proc巳 ss. Through such molecular coIIisions , heat is conducted from the hotter to th巳 cooler wal1. A similar mechanism for 由 e conduction of heat occurs in metals. Metals are di 旺erent from most substanc巳 s in having a pool of electrons that are more or less fr臼 to wander throughout the metal. These free electrons can t:ransport energy and allow metals to transfer heat v巳ry w巳1 1. The free electrons are also r巳 sponsible for th巳巳xceIl巳 nt electrical conductivity that metals hav巳 Those materials that conduct heat weJJ are called thermal conductors, and those that conduct heat poorly 缸巳 known as thermal insulators. Most metals are exceIIent thermal conductors; wood , glass , and most plastics are common thermal insulators. Thermal insulators have many important applications. Virtually all new housing construction incorporates thermal insulation in attics and walls to reduce heating and cooling costs. And the wooden or plastic handles on many pots and pans reduce th巳f1 0w of heat to th巳 cook's hand. To iJJustrate th巳 factors that influenc巳 th巳 conduction of heat , Figure 13.7 displays a rectangular bar. Th巳 ends of th巳 bar are in thermal contact with two bodi町, on巳 of which Figure 13.7 Heat is conducted through the bar when the ends of 由 eb盯盯E maintained at different temperatures The heat flows from the warmer to the cooler end .c h a n g e Vi e h a n g e Vi e ! PD y bu y bu to k lic Heat flow Heat flow is kept at a constant higher temperature , while the other is kept at a constant low巳r temperature. Although not shown for the sake of clarity, the sides of the bar are insulated , so the heat lost through them is negligible. The amount of heat Q conducted through the bar from the warmer end to the cooler end depends on a number of factors: 1. Q is proportional to the time t during which conduction takes place heat ftows in longer tim巳 periods (Qα t). More 2. Q is proportional to the temp巳rature difference !:::.T between the ends of the bar (Q c汇!:::.T) . A larger difference causes more heat to ftow. No heat ftows when both ends have th巳 same temperature and !:::.T = 0 C O. Table 13.1 Thermal Conductivitiesa of Selected Materials Substance Metals Aluminum Brass Copp巳r Iron Lead Silver Ste巳1 (stainless) AMATERIAι The heat Q conducted during a time t through a bar of length L and cross-sectional areaA is 飞 'vh- /- , 一L Q T 一 "Except as noted , the values pertain to temperatures near 20 o c. CONDUCTION OF HEAT THR。υGH A 0.090 0.20 1.1 2450 0.80 0.025 2.2 0.010 0.60 0.15 0.040 ductivi,砂. '飞- 0.0256 0.180 0.0258 0.0265 These proportionaliti巳s can b巳 stated togeth巳r as Q α (A !:::.T) t/L. Equation 13.1 expresses this result with the aid of a proportionality constant k , which is call巳d the thermal con- J' Other Materials Asbestos Body fat Concrete Diamond Glass Goose down Ice (0 OC) Styrofoam Water Wood (oak) Wool 240 110 390 79 35 420 14 4. Q is inversely proportional to the length L of the bar (Qα lIL). Greater lengths of material conduct less heat. To exp巳rience this e仔巳ct , put two insulated mittens (th巳 pot holders that cooks ke巳p near the stove) on the same hand. Then , touch a hot pot and notice that it feels cooler than when you wear only one mitten , signifying that less heat pass巳 s through the greater thickness ("length") of material. A 一 Gases AiI Hydrogen (H 2) Nitrogen (N 2) Oxygen (0 2) Thermal Conductivity, k [1/(s. m. C O)] 3. Q is proportional to th巳 cross-sectional area A of the bar (Qα A). Figur巳 13.8 helps to 巳xplain this fact by showing two identical bars (insulated sides not shown) placed betwe巳n the warmer and cooler bodies. Clearly, twice as much heat ftows through two bars as through one , b巳cause the cross-sectional area has been doubled. 'e '- (13.1) where !:::.T is the temperature differenc巳 between the ends of th巳 bar (the higher temperature rninus the lower temperature) and k is the thermal conductivity of the mat巳rial . SI Unit of Thermal Conductiv句: 1/(s . m . C O ) Since k = QLI(tA !:::.T) , the SI unit for thermal conductivity is 1. m/(s . m 2 • C O) or 1/(s' m . C O). The SI unit of power is the joule per second (1/s) , or watt (W) , so the thermal conductivity is also given in units of W /(m . CO). Different materials hav巳 different thermal conductivities , and Table 13.1 gives some representative values. Because metals ar巳 such good thermal conductors , they have larg巳 thermal conductivities. In comp缸ison , liquids and gas巳s generally have small th巳rmal conductivities. In fact , in most ftuids the heat transferred by conduction is n吨 ligible compared to that transferred by convection when there ar巳 strong convection currents. Air, for instance , with its small thermal conductivity, is an excellent thermal insulator when confined to sm a1 1 spaces where no appreciabl 巳 convection currents can be established. Goose down , o .d o m C m w w w o C lic k to Figure 13.8 Twice as much heat flows through two identical bars as through .c .d o c u -tr a c k one w w w w N ! XC N O W F- er w 396 CHAPTER 1 3 THE TRANS FE R O F HEAT O W XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c -X C h a n g e Vie 397 w N bu y N y bu to k lic o .d o m C m w w w o C lic k to Styrofoam , and wool d巳rive th巳ir fin巳 insulating prop巳rties in p征t from the small dead-air spaces within them , as Figure 13.9 illustrates. The physics of dressing warmly. We also take .c .d o c u -tr a c k advantag巳 of dead-air spaces when we dress "in layers" during very cold weather and put on several layers of relatively thin clothing rather than one thick layer. The air trapp巳d between th巳 layers acts as an excellent insulator. Example 2 deals with the role that conduction through body fat plays in regulating body temp巳rature. w w w ! CONDUCTION F O W 13.2 er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c Heat Transfer in the Human Body th巳rmal conductivity of body fat is given as Q = (kA !1T) t 一 L Q [020 1/(s-m-c。)](17II12)(37O 。c L - -- - -- ,- --- 0.030 m / .J \ . - - -34.0 。C)(1800 ) -", - --- 5 -/ 6.1|X4 10 4 J For comparison , a jogger can generat巳 ov巳r ten times this amount of h巳at in a half hour. Thus , conduction through body fat is not a particularly effective way of removing excess hea t. Heat transfer via blood ftow to th巳 skin is more 巳ffl巳ctive and has the added advantage that the body can vary the blood ftow as n巳eded (see Problem 7) 户、 Reasoning and Solution In Table 13.1 the k = 0.20 J/(s. m. CO ). According to Equation 13.1 , 户、 within the body, it must be transferred to the skin and dispersed if the temperature at the body interior is to be maintained at th巳 normal valu巳 of 37.0 。巳 On巳 POSSl ble mechanism for transfer is conduction through body fa t. Suppose that heat travels through 0.030 m of fat in reaching the skin , which has a total surface area of 1. 7 m2 and a temperature of 34.0 oc. Find the amount of heat that reaches the skin in half an hour (1 800 s). ~ Figure 13.9 Styrofoam is an excellent thermal insulator because it contains many small , dead-air spaces. These small spaces inhibit heat transfer by conv巳ction currents , and air itself has a very low thermal conductivity. 。 Example 3 uses Equation 13.1 to deterrnin巳 what the the warmer and cooler ends of the bar in Figure 13.7. temp巳rature is at a point between …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… . A NALVZING MULTIPLE-CONCEPT PROBLEM Example 3 The Temperature at a Point Between the Ends of a Bar In Figure 13.7 the temperatures at the ends of the bar are 85.0 oc at the warmer end and 27 .0 oc at the cooler end. The bar has a length of 0.680 m. Wh at is the temperature at a point that is 0.220 m from the cooler end of the bar? Reasoning The point in question is closer to th巳 cooler end than to the warmer end of the bar. It rnight be expected , therefore , that th巳 temperature at this point is less than halfway between 27.0 oc and 85 .0 oC. We will demonstrate that this is , in fact , the case , by applying Equation 13. 1. This expression applies because no heat escapes through the insulated sides of the bar, and we will us巳 it twice to deterrnine th巳 desired t巳mperature. Knowns and Unknowns The available data are as follows: Description Temperature at warmer end Temperature at cooler end Length of bar Distance from cooler end Unknown Variable Temperature at distance D from cooler end Symbol Value Tw Tc L D 85.0 0 C 27.0 0 C 0.680 m 0.220 m T q Continued F- XC h a n g e Vi ew N y bu to k lic m m w . .d o The Conduction of H创 Theh创 Q conducted in a time t 阳t the point in question (which is a distance D from the cooler end of 由e bar) is given by Equation 13.1 as Q=~A(T 一 Tc)t - D '' A . 、‘ J QD T= 耳+~一一 ,,‘、 where k is th巳 thermal conductivity of th巳 material from which the bar is made , A is th 巳 bar's cross-sectional ar巳a , and T and Tc are , resp巳ctively, 由 e temperature at the point io question and at the ∞oler end of the bar. Solving for T gives Equation 1 at the righ t. The variables Q , k , A , and t are unknown , so we proce巳d to Step 2 to deal with them. kAt E圃 川n灿 d也1u归削 E伽n叫ofH 川阳阳 ωat山巾阳川川川 e阅 阳阳灿叫 Ree肝 附v材由闹 M 州 i沁i剑i si刷 t优 ted 川臼创叫叫叫 山咖 tω 仙 Qω 由 that 灿川川川 a创川山川 t川川川…… 盯 iiscs oωc ∞O -A 、 1 ,J rs-、 po 创io 川t io qu 巳s创t 叫ion tωo the ∞ c 00ωle 衍r end of the bar originates at the war 肌 rmτn陀阳巳创町r end of the bar Thus , since no heat is lost through the sides , we may apply Equation 13.1 a secood time to obtain an expression for Q: I ~ kA(Tw - Tdt I l . .. 一 I ! L where Tw and Tc ar巳, respectively, 出e temperatures at 由巳 warmer and cooler ends of the bar, which has a length L. This expression for Q can b巳 substituted into Eq uation 1, as indicated at 由e righ t. The terms k , A , and t remainωbe dealt with. Fortunately, however, values for 出em are unnecessary, because 由ey can be eliminated alg巳braic a1ly from 出e 缸lal calculatioo. Solution Combining the results of each step algebraic a1l y, we fìod that ...,..…,.... , , T='= Tr OD + 二二一 = kAt Tr I +-= kA(Tw - Tc )~ID L 」 Simplifying this result gives k A (Tw T = Tr = 27.0 oC As exp巳cted , L + kA t + Tc)t ~ = Tr + (Tw - Tc) D L o (85.0 C - 27.0 oC) (0.220 m) 口7ττ刀 ,- - - - - - - ,,- -- - -- , = 145.8 OCI 0.680 m '-一一一」 this temperature is less than halfway betw巳en c. 27.0 oC and 85.0 o Related Homework: Problem 16 Virtually all homes contain in sul ation in the walls to reduce heat loss. Example 4 how to determine this loss with and without insulation. illustrat巳 s Inside (25.0 0 C) Figure 13.10 H巳at f1 0ws through the insulation and plywood from the warmer inside to the cool巳r outside. Example 4 Layered Insulation The physics of layered insulation. One wall of a house consists of 0.019-m-thick plywood backed by 0.076-m-thick insul ation , as Figure 13. 10 shows. Th巳 temperature at the inside surface is 25.0 oC , while the temp巳 rature at the outside surface is 4.0 oC , both being constan t. The thermal conductivities of the insulation and th巳 plywood ar毡 , r毡 spectively, 0.030 and 0.080 1/(s . m . CO ) , and the area of th 巳 waIl is 35 m2 . Find the heat conduct巳 d through th巳 wall in on巳 hour (a) with the insulation and (b) without the insulation. o ".", c u -tr a c k C Modeling the Problem c o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W ! PD CHAPTER 13 THE TRANSFER OF HEAT er 398 ! h a n g e Vi ew O W XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c XC h a n g e Vi e w N y bu to Th巳 temp巳rature T at th巳 insulation-plywood interface (se巳 Figure 13.10) must b巳 before th巳 h巳at conducted through th巳 wall can be obtained. 1n calculating this temc u -tr perature , we use th巳 fact that no heat is accumulating in th巳 wall because the inner and outer t巳mp巳ratures are constan t. Therefore , th巳 h巳 at conducted through the insulation must 巳qual the Qplywood' Each heat conduct巳d through th巳 plywood during th巳 same time; that is , Qin s山山 011 ofth巳 Q values can be expressed as Q = (kA è!. T)t/L , according to Equation 13 .1, leading to an expression that can be solved for the int巳rfac巳 t巳mperature. Once a value for T is available , Equation 13.1 can be used to obtain th巳 heat conducted tlu-ough the wall. w ack .d o o m det巳rmined .c m C lic k Reasoning o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N 399 ! F- CONDUCTION O W 13.2 er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k Problerr卜 solving insigh t: When heat is conducted through a multi-Iayered material and the high and low temperatures are constant , the heat conducted through each layer is the same Solution (a) Using Equation 13 .1 and the fact that Q川slllation Qplywood, we find that [旦旦1l 1 slI latiol'n 1 [旦旦1v L Le. L L" oI .., ., = [0.030 J/(s'm'C O )]A(25.0 oc - T) t [0 .080J/(s'm. C" )]A(T - 4.0 oC) t 0.076 m 0.019 m Note that on each side of th巳 equals sign we have written è!. T as the higher temperature minus the lower temp巳rature . Eliminating th巳 area A and time t algebraically and solving this equation for Treveals that the temperature at the insulation-plywood interface is T = 5.8 oc . Th巳 heat conducted through th巳 wall is either Qi川 latiol1 or Qplywood, since the' two quantities ar毡巳qual. Choosing Qinsulatio l1 and using T = 5.8 oc in Equation 13.1 , w巳自 nd that Q Însulation0.030 J/(s ' m . C )](35 的(25.0 C - 5.8 oC) (3600 s 0.076 m O 0 L=I 9.5 X 10 5 J I (b) It is straightforward to use Equation 13.1 to calculat巳 the amount of heat that would f1 0w through the plywood in on巳 hour if the insulation w巳r巳 a bsen t: Qplywood 川OJ巾 mm5ZZY 。c-40 。C)(36005L=I 110 x 的| Figure 13.11 During the night of 25 , 2005 , temperatures in some areas of F1 0rida dipped below freezing. Farmers sprayed strawbe盯y plants with water to put a coat of ice on them and illsulate 出巳m against the subfreezing t巳 mpera阳 res. (Chris O ' Meara!@AP.刑ide World Photos) Janu缸 Y Tubular space contalning refrigerant fluid Without insulation , the heat loss is increased by a factor of about 12. The physics of protecting fruit plants from freezing. Fruit growers som巳 times protect their crops by spraying th巳m with water wh巳n overnight temperatur巳 s ar巳 exp巳cted to drop below fr巳ezing. Som巳 fruit crops , like th巳 strawberries in Figure 13.11 , can withstand temp巳ratures down to fre巳zing (0 oc), but not below freezing . When water is sprayed on the plants , it can fre巳Z巳 and release h巳 at (see Section 12. 时 , som巳 of which go巳s into warming th巳 plan t. 1n addition , both water and ic巳 hav巳 r巳lativ巳 Iy small thermal conductivities , as Table 13 .1 indicates. Thus , they also protect th巳 crop by acting as thermal insulators that reduce heat loss from the plants . Although a layer of ice may be b巳 neficial to strawberri 白 , it is not so desirable inside ar巳frigerator, as Conceptual Example 5 discusses. Conceptual Example 5 An Iced-up Refrigerator 1n a refrigerator, heat is removed by a cold refrig巳rant f1 uid that circulates within a tubular space embedded inside a metal plate , as Figure 13.12 illustrates. A good refrig巳rator cools food as quickly as possible. Which arrangement works b巳 s t: (a) an aluminum plate coated with ic巳, (b) an aluminum plate without ice , (c) a stainless steel plat巳 coat巳 d with ice , or (d) a stainless steel plate without ic巳? Reasoning Figure 13.12 (see the blow-ups) shows the metal coobng plate with and without a layer of ice. Without ice , heat passes by conduction through the metal plate to the refrigerant f1 uid within. For a given temperature difference across the thickness of the metal , the rat巳 of heat transfer depends on the thermal conductivity of th巳 meta l. When th巳 plate becom巳 s coated with ice , any heat that is remov巳 d by 出巳 refrig巳rant fluid must first b巳 transferred by conduction through th巳 ice before it encounters the metal plate. Refrigerant fluid Heat Metal Ice Figure 13.12 In a 1 巳frigerator, cooling is accomplished by a cold refrigerant ftuid that circulates through a tubular spac巳巳 mbedded within a metal plate Sometimes the plate becomes coated with a layer of ice. .c F- XC h a n g e Vi ew N y bu to (kA t1T) t and (d) are incorrect. For answers (a) and (c) , the re lation Q = 一一τ一一 w .d o (Equation 13. 1) indicates that the heat conducted per unit time (Q/t) is inversely proportional to the thickness L of the ice. As ice builds up , th巳 heat removed per unit tim巳 b y th巳 cooli n g plate decreases. Thus, when covered with ice, the cooling pJate- regardless of whether it's mad巳 from alurninum or stai nless steel-d oes not work as well as a plate that is ice-fTee . An sw巳r (d)-the stai nless steel pl at巳 w ith o ut ice- is incorrect, because heat is transferred more readily through a plate that has a greater thermal conductivity, and s tainl 巳ss steeJ has a smaller th巳rm al conductivity than does aluminum (s巳巳 Tabl e 13. 1). Th 巳 re l ati o n (kA t1T) t 13.1) shows that th巳 h eat L conducted per unit time (Q/t) is directly proportional to 出巳 therrnal conductivity k of the metal pJate. Sinc巳 the therrnal conductivity of alurninum is more than 17 也nes greater th an 由巳 thermal conductivity of stainless steel (see Table 13. 1), alurninum is the preferred pJate. The alurninum plate arrangement works best without an ice buildup. Wh en ic巳 builds up , th巳 heat removed p巳r unit time decreases b巳c au s巳 of the increased thickness of material through which 出e heat must pass. Answer (b) is correct. Q = 一一一一一一 (Equ atio n 。 ~ CHECK VOUR UNDERSτANDING (The answers are given at the end ofthe book.) 2. A poker used in a fireplace is held at one end , while the other end is in the fire. In terms of being cooler to the touch , should a poker be made from (a) a high-thermal-conductivity material , (b) a low-thermal-conductivity material , or (c) can either type be used? 3. Several days after a snowstorm , the outdoor temperature remains below freezing . The roof on one house is uniformly covered with snow. On a neighboring house , however, the snow on the roof has completely melted. Which house is be忧er insulated? 4. Concrete walls often contain steel re inforcement bars. Does the steel (a) enhance , (b) degrade , or (c) have no effect on the insulating value of the concrete wall? (Consult Table 13.1.) 5. To keep your hands as warm as possible during skiing , should you wear mittens or gloves? (Mittens , except for the thumb , do not have individual finger compartments.) Assume that the mittens and gloves are the same size and are made of the same materia l. You should wear: (a) gloves , because the individual finger compartments mean that th e gloves have a smaller therma l conductivity; (b) gloves , because the individual finger compartments mean that the gloves have a larger thermal conductivity; (c) mitte ns , because they have less surface area exposed to the cold air. 6. A water pipe is buried slightly beneath the ground. The ground is covered with a thick layer of snow, which contains a lot of small dead-air spaces within it. The air temperature suddenly drops to well below freezing. The accumulation of snow (a) has no effect on whethe r the water in the pipe freezes , (b) ca uses the water in the pipe to freeze more quickly than if the snow were not there , (c) helps prevent the water in the pipe from freezing . 在 Some an imals have ha ir strands that a re hollow, air-filled tubes. Othe rs have hair strands that are solid. Which kind , if e ithe r, wou ld be more likely to give an animal an advantage for surviving in very cold climates? 8. Two ba rs are placed betwee n plates whose temperatures are Thot and 兀 old (see the drawing). The thermal conductivity of bar 1 is six times that of bar 2 (k, = 6k2 ) , but bar 1 has only one-third the crosssectional area (A , = ~ A2 )' Ignore any heat loss through the sides of the bars. What can you conclude about the amounts of heat 0 , and O2 , respectively, that bar 1 and ba r 2 conduct in a given amou 川 oftir阿 me (怡 c) 0 , = 20 2 (d) 0 , = 40 2 (e) 0 , = O2 9. A piece of Styrofoam and a p m (剑, (C) , c o Answers lic k c u -tr . ack C m o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W ! PD CHAPTER 13 THE TRANSFER OF HEAT er 400 ! h a n g e Vi ew O W XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c N y c u -tr a c k k lic .d o o .c m C w o m to bu y bu to k lic C RADIATION w w .d o w w w ! h a n g e Vi ew O W XC N O W F- RADIATION 401 er 13.3 PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k Energy from the sun is brought to earth by large amounts of visible light waves , as well as by substantial amounts of infrared and ultraviolet waves. These wav巳 s are known as electromagnetic waves , a class that also includes th巳 microwaves used for cooking and the radio wav巳 s used for AM and FM broadcasts. Th巳 sunbather in Figure 13.13 f,巴巴ls hot b巳cause her body absorbs 巳 nergy from the sun's electromagnetic waves. Anyone who has stood by a roaring fire or put a hand near an incand巳 scent light bulb has 巳 xperienced a similar eff,巳c t. Thus , fir巳s and light bulbs also 巳mit el巳ctromagn巳 tic waves , and when the energy of such waves is absorb巳 d , it can hav巳由e same eff,巳ct as heat Th e process of transferring 巳nergy viael巳ctromagnetic waves is called radiation, and , unlike conv巳ction or conduction , it do巳s not requ让e a material medium. Electromagnetic waves from the sun , for exampl巳, travel through 由e void of space during their joumey to 阳th RADIATION Radiation is th巳 process in which energy is transferred by means of electromagnetic wav巳 s. All bodies continuously radiate energy in the form of electromagnetic waves. Even an ice cube radiates energy, although so little of it is in th巳 form of visible light that an ice cube cannot be seen in th巳 dark. Likewise , th巳 human body emits insufficient visible light to be seen in the dark. However, as Figures 12.6 and 12.7 illu stra饵, the infrar巳d waves radiating from th巳 body can be det巳cted in the dark by electronic cameras. Generally, an obj 巳ct do巳 s not emit much visible light until th巳 temperatur巳 of th巳 obj 巳ct 巳xceeds about 1000K. Then a characteristic red glow appears , like that of a heating coil on an electric stove. When its temp巳rature reaches about 1700K, an obj 巳 ct begins to glow whit巳 -hot, like the tungsten filam巳 nt in an incandescent light bulb. 1n th巳 transfer of 巳nergy by radiation , the absorption of electromagnetic waves is just as important as 出巳ir emission. The surface of an obj 巳ct pl ays a significant role in determining how much radiant energy the object will absorb or emi t. The two blocks in sunlight in Figure 13.14, for example , are identical , except that on巳 has a rough surface coated with lampblack (a fine black soot) , while the other has a highly polished silver surface. As th巳 thermometers indicat巳, the temperature of the black block rises at a much faster rat巳 than that of th巳 silvery block. This is because lampblack absorbs about 97% of the incident radiant energy, while the si lv巳ry surface absorbs only about 10%. Th巳 remaining part ofth巳 incident energy is reflected in 巳 ach case. We s巳e the lampblack as black in color because it reflects so little of th巳 light falling on it, while th巳 silv巳ry surface looks like a mirrorb巳caus巳 it reflects so much ligh t. Since the color black is associat巳d with nearly complet巳 absorption of visible light , the term pe矿ect blackbody or, simply, blackbody is us巳d when referring to an 。同巳ct that absorbs all the electromagnetic waves falling on i t. Allobjects 巳mit and absorb elec位omagnetic waves simultan巳ously. VI厅len a body has the same constant t巳mp巳rature as its sUlToundings , the amount of radiant energy being absorbed must balance the amount being emitted in a given int巳rval of time. The block coated with lampblack absorbs and emits th巳 same amount of radiant ener町, and the silvery block does too. In either case , if absorption were greater than emission , the block would experience a net gain in energy. As a result, the temperature of the block would ris巳 and not be constan t. Simila Figure 13.13 Suntans ar巳 produced by ultraviolet rays. (Ron Chapple厅hinkstockl Alamy lmages) sZ; • 111 Lampblack-coated Silver-coated block block Figure 13.14 The temperature of the block coated with lampblack rises faster than the temperature of the block coated with silver becaus巳 the black surface absorbs radiant en巳rgy from the sun at the greater rate. The physics of summer clothing. .c h a n g e Vi ew y bu to to bu y N O W ! XC o k Q=σT 4At The relationship above holds only for a pe出ct emitter. Most obj ects are not p巳rfect however. Suppose that an 0均巳ct radiates only about 80% of the visible light energy that a perf,巳ct emitter would radiate , so Q (for th巳 object) = (0.80)σT 4At. The factor such as the 0.80 in thi s eq uation is called the emissivity e and is a dim 巳 n s ionJess numb巳r betwe巳 n zero and on 巳. The ernissivity is the ratio of the en 巳 rgy an obj 巳ct actually radiates to the 巳 valu巳 of e foαr 由 t h巳 humηlan body , for instance , varies between about 0.65 and 0.80 , the small巳r values pertaining to ]j ghter skin colors. For infrared radiation , e is n 巳 ar忖 on巳 fo r all skin colors. For a perfect bl ackbody emitter, e = 1. lncluding th巳 factor e on th 巳 right si d巳 of the expression Q =σT切 leads to the Stefan- Boltzmann law of radiation. ernitte邸 , (b) Figure 13.15 (α) Most lemurs , like this one , are noctu ll1 al and have dark fur. (Wolfgang Kaehler/Corbis-lmages) (b) The species of lemur called th巳 wh ite sifaka, h ow巳V缸 , is activ巳 during the day and has white fur. (Nigel Dennis/ Wildlife Pictures/Peter Arnold , Inc.) THE STEFAN-BOLTZMANN LAW OF RADIATION The radi ant 巳nergy Q, ernitted in a time t by an object that has a Kelvin a surface area A , and an emissivity e, is given by temp eraωre Q=eσT 4At T, (13.2) where σ= 5.67 X 10- 8 1/(s' m2 . K4) is the Stefan-Boltzmann constant. In Equation 13.2 , the St巳fan-Bo ltzmann constant σis a uni versal constant in the sense that its value is the same for alI bodies , regardless of the nature of their surfaces . The ernissivity e , how巳ver, d ep巳 nd s on the condition of the surface. Example 6 shows how th巳 Stefa n-Boltzmann law can be used to deterrnine th巳 siz巳 of a star. Example 6 A Supergiant Star The supergiant star Bete l g巳 u s e has a surface temperature of about 2900 K (about one-half that of our sun) and emits a radia nt power (in joules per second , or watts) of approximately 4 X 10 30 W (about 10 000 times as great as that of our sun). Assuming that Betelgeus巳 IS a perfect emÜter (emissivity e = 1) and sp h巳ri cal , fìnd üs radius. Reasoning According to 由巳 Stefan - Boltzmann law, 由巳 power emitted is Q/t = eσT 4A . A star with a relativ巳ly smaU temperatllre T can hav巳 a relatively large radiant power Q/t only if the area A is large. As we will 优 s E巳吼, B巳创t优巳 e时l g巳 lI S巳 has a v巳I叩 y large 凯 川 S ur臼c巳 a 缸r巳a , so its radius is enormolls. m lic C m k lic C w (lI) The u s巳 of light colors for comfort also occurs in n at ur巳. Most I巳murs , for instance , w .c .d o are nocturnal and have dark fur like th 巳 lemur shown in Figure 13.15a. Since they are acc u -tr a c k tiv巳 at night , th巳 dark fur poses 0 0 disadvantag巳 in absorbing excessive sunlight. Figure 13 .15b shows a species of lemur call巳d the white sifaka , which lives in serniarid regions where th巳re is Ii ttle shade. Th巳 whi 讪it臼巳 coloωr of the fur ma 叮 yh巳 elp in 由 t h巳创rm n巳cting sunlight , but during the cool mornings , reflection of su nIi ght would hinder warming up. However, th 巳 se I 巳 murs have black skin and only s p 创 S 巳 fur on their be Il ies , and to warm up in the morning , they turn their dark bellies toward th 巳 sun . The dark color enhances the absorption of su nlight. Th巳 amount of radiant energy Q ernitt巳d by a perfect blackbody is proportional to the radiation time interval t (Q α t) . The longer the time , th巳 gr巳 ater is the amount of 巳 n巳rgy radiated . Exp巳 rim巳 nt shows that Q is also proportional to the surface area A (Qα A). An object with a larg巳 s urfac巳创'ea radiates more 巳nergy than one with a small surface area , other things being equa l. FinalI y, experiment reveals that Q is proportional to the fourth power ofthe Kelvi n. tern.perature T (Q cx T句 , so the emitted energy increases markedly with increasing temperature. If, for example , the Kelvin temperature of an o bj 巳c t doubles , th巳 object ernits 2 4 or 16 times more 巳n巳rgy. Combining these factors into a single prop Oltiona Ii ty, w巳 see that Q cx T 4 At. This proportiona]j ty is convert巳d into an eq uation by inserting a proportionality constantσ" known as the Stefa n. -Boltzrn. a n.n. constant. It has been fo und experimenta lI y thatσ= 5.67 X 10- 8 1/(s . m2 . K4): w The physics of c k . sifaka lemur warming up. ac uwhite -tr a c .d o w w w o O W F- N THE TRANSFER OF HEAT er CHAPTER 唱 3 PD h a n g e Vi ew 402 ! XC er PD F- PD N to bu y N y bu lic k th巳 ar巳 a , w巳自 nd c A = - Q/t EσT 4 .d o m o m w o c u -tr . ack C to k lic C Solution SoIving the Stefan-Bo ltzmann Iaw for w w .d o w w w ! C h a n g e Vie w er O W -X 13.3 RADIATION F 403 O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c But the s Ulfac巳缸巳a of a sphere is A = 4 7Tr 2, so r = VA瓦石. Therefore, we have 4 飞川。飞 A A 4 7T (1)[5 .67 X lO- ð J/(s. m L • K4)](2900 K)' For comparison , Mars orbits the sun at a distanc巳 of 2.28 X 10 "supergian t." 11 m. Betelgeuse is certain ly a o The next 巳xampl巳 explain s how to apply the St巳fan-Boltzmann law when an such as a wood stove , simultaneously emits and absorbs radiant 巳 nergy. 0 Problem-solving insight == | 3 X 10 11 m 1 First solve an equation for the unknown in terms of the known variables. Then substitute numbers for the known variables, as this example shows 0时 ect , 阳 E xam 叩 p盯 A 阳n Un川edW 帕阳 ∞ O 叫 O d stove has a constant 忧 t emp巳 ra 曰tωur陀它 of 18 oc (ρ291 K) , whi比 ch iβs aIso 由 t h巳 of 由 t h巳 room in whiωch 由 th巳 s剑tov巳 stands. Th巳 stove has an emissivity of 0.900 and a sllrface area of 3.50 m 2 . What is the net radiant power generated by the stove? An unu s巳d woodι-b 趴 bu川 rning t忧阳巳创m 引1p巳ratωur陀!它巳 Reasoning Power is th巳 change in 巳n 巳rgy p巳 r unit time (Equation 6.10b) , or Q/t, which , according to the Stefan-Boltzmann law, is Q/t = eσT4A (Equation 13.2). In this problem , however, we ne巳d to find the net power produced by th巳 stov巳. Th 巳 net power is the power the stove emits minll s 由巳 power th巳 stove absorbs. The pow巳r th巳 stove absorbs comes from the waI1 s , ceiling , and floor of the room , all of which emit radiation. Solution Rem 巳 mb巳ring that temperature must Stefan-Boltzmann law, we 白 nd that b巳 express巳d in kelvi ns wh 巳 n using the Power emitt巳d by u巾巳ated 丰 = euT 4 A stove at 18 ocι = (1 3.2) (0.900)[5.67 X 10- 8 J/(s . m2 • K 4)](29 1 K)4(3.50 m2) = Problem-solving insight In the Stefan-Boltzmann law of radiation , the temperature Tmust be expressed in kelvins , not in degrees Celsius or degrees Fahrenhei t. 1280 W The fact that the unheated stove emits 1280 W of power and yet maintains a constant t巳mp巳r atllre means that 由巳 stov巳 also absorbs 1280 W of radiant power from its surrollndings. Thus , the nel power generated by the lI nheated s tov巳 is zero Net power by stove at 18 oc g巳nerated 1280W Example 8 A 1280W 、~ Power emitted by stove at 18 C Power 巳 mitted by room at 18 oC and absorb巳d by stove 0 A [~Ð.'..~. - 、~ M LT I P L E Heated Wood-Burning Stove = 10wI 嗣 [11:tR.. :I:a _:JI illl :.1 :1 \'J] 一 ~ The physics of a wood - burning stove. The wood-buming stove in Example 7 (emissivity = 0.900 and surfac巳缸巳a = 3.50 m 2) is being us巳d to heat a room. The fìre keeps th巳 stove surface at a constant 198 oC (471 K) and 由巳 room at a constant 29 oC (302 K). Determine the net radiant power g巳 nerated by th巳 stov巳 . Reasoning Power is th巳 change in en巳rgy per unit tim巴, and according to th巳 Stefan-Boltzmann law, it is Q/t = εσ-y 4A (Equation 13.2). As in Example 7 , however, w巳 seek the net powe几 which is the power the stove emits minus the power the stov巳 absorbs from its 巳nvironmen t. Since 由e stove has a higher temperature than its environment, the stove ernits more power than it absorbs. Thus , we wiU fìnd 由 at the net radiant pow巳r effil 忧.ed by th巳 stove is no longer zero , as it is in Example 7. ln fact , it is th巳 net power 由 at the stove radiat巳 s that has warmed th巳 room to its temperature of 29 oC and sustains that temperature. Continued F- XC h a n g e Vi ew N y bu to k lic Emissivity of stove Surface area of stove Temp巳rature of stove surfac巳 Temperature of room Value e A T 0.900 3.50 m2 198 oC (471 K) 29 oC (302 K) To Unknown Variable Net power generated by stove m .d o Comment Symbol T巳mp巳ratur巳 in kelvins must be us巳d . Temp巳rature in kelvins must be used. ? P net Modeling the Problem J . P._;".., - P .ho"巾,、A 、、 Pn.' 嘈 BA d that the stove ernits minus the power Pabsorbed that 由e stov巳 absorbs from its environment, as expressed in Equation 1 at the righ t. In St巳ps 2 and 3 we eva1 uat巳 the emitted and absorbed powers. r ·、 … 回罩I Net Power The net 阳时net generated by the stove is the power P, 占 4 E固I Emi削 P 阳 0仰 we盯r Acc ∞C叫n吨gμ 刊 叩叭 川 tω O ωt阳一』扣缸拍 阮础 B Bolt 刷1让tzm 删 盯m n 由 t ha 刽t iβ s ''A 、 stove (temperature T) ernits a powe町r f t白 h巳 heated J , ,、、 几旦旦l竖立二 EσT 4 A 毡, 川 This expression can be substituted into Equation 1, as indicated at the righ t. In Step 3, we discuss the absorbed power. E固!l 蝴 A bs阳 0呐 r巾bed 巾 Pow 阳 e创町r The 时圳 radian 川 削 m a创 川 nlt 阳川1川叫ove 抽 a bsor 翩 巾bs fr刀 .om 川 n i沁s iden tical tωO 由巳 power 白 t ha 剖t 由 t h 巳 stove would 巳盯1山 i扰t 创 at 由 th巳 constant room 怡 tβmpe 缸ra 创tu 旧 1江n毡~ of 29 oC (302 K). The reasoning here is exactly like that in Example 7. With To representing th巳 temperature (in Kelvins) of 出e room , the Stefan-Boltzmann law indicates that p汕sorbed ? result into Equation 1, as shown in the right column. Solution The results of each step can be akus AM - A T A 、υ P A甸 A ρL V aLOS algebraically to show that σ DZ combin巳d AU哼 --t ed, 吧 substitute 由 is ~" 4 吧 We can also 飞~ab町、 rbed ---一 =eσT0 A Thus , the net radiant power the stove produces from the fuel it burns is P net = eσ A(T 4 - = 0.900[5.67 T04 ) X 10- 8 J/(s . m2 . K4)](3.50 m2 )[(471 K)4 一 (302 K)4] = I7.30 X 10 3 wl Related Homework: Problems 25, 27, 30, 38 Exampl巳 8 illustrates that when an object has a higher temperature than its surroundings , the object 巳mits a net radiant power P net = (Q/t) net. The net power is the power the object ernits minus the power it absorbs. Applying the Stefan-Boltzmann law as in Ex缸nple 8 leads to th巳 following expression for P net when the temperature of the object is Tand th巳 temperature of the environment is To: P ne, = e σA(T 4 - T 04 ) (1 3.3) o m w c u -tr a c k Description C Knowns and Unknowns The following data are available: .c o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W ! PD CH A PTER 13 THE T RANSFER O F HEAT er 404 ! h a n g e Vi ew O W XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c h a n g e Vi ew PD XC h a n g e Vi ew ! O W k U 酌NDERSTA 川 ND 山 剧川 D E川N 川唱4 lic T One way that heat is transferred from place to place inside the human body is by the flow of blood . Which one of the following heat transfer processes-forced convection , conduction , or radiation-best describes this action of the blood? 11. Two strips of material , A and B, are identical, except that they have emissivities of 0 .4 and 0.7, respectively. The strips are heated to the same temperature and have a red glow. A brighter glow signifies that more energy per second is being radiated. Which strip has the brighter glow? 12. One day during t he winter the sun has been shining all day. Toward sunset a light snow begins to fal l. It collects without melting on a cement playground , but melts instantly on contact with a black asphalt road adjacent to the playground. Why the difference? (a) Being black , asphalt has a higher emissivity than cement, so the asphalt absorbs more radiant energy from the sun during the day and , consequently, warms above the freezing point. (b) Being black , asphalt has a lower emissivity than cement , so it absorbs more radiant energy from the sun during the day and , consequently, warms above the freezing pomt. 10. ~ 13. If you were stranded in the mountains in cold weather, it would help to minimize losses from your body if you curled up into the tightest ball possible. Which factor in the relation 0 = e σ严At (Equation 13.2) are you using to the best advantage by curling into a ball? (a) e (b)σ(c) T (d) A (e) t ~'" ¥ energy 14. Two identical cubes have the same temperature. One of them , however, is cut in two and the pieces are separated (see the drawing). The radiant energy emitted by the cube cut into two pieces is Otwo pieces and that emitted by the uncut cube is Ocube ' What is true about the radiant energy emitted in a given time? (a) Otwo pieces = 20cube (b) Otwo 阳es = ~ Ocube (c) Otwo 阳臼= Ocube (d) Otwo pieces = ~ Ocube (e) Otwo pieces = ~ Ocube Cube cut into two pieces Uncut cube 15. Two objects have the same size and shape. Object A has an emissivity of 0.3, and object B has an emissivity of 0.6. Each radiates the same power. How is the Kelvin temperature TA of A related to the Kelvin temperature 马 of B? (a) 瓦 = 兀 (b) 瓦 = 2TB (c) TA = ~ TB (d) 瓦 = fi TB (e) TA = 恒 TB APP Ll CATIONS To ke巳p heating and air conditioning bills to a minimum , it pays to use good thermal insulation in your ho me . l nsulation inhibits convection between inner and outer walls and minimizes heat transfer by conduction. With respect to conduction , the logic behind hom巳 in s ulati on ratings comes directly from Equation 13. l. According to this equation , the heat p巳r unit time Q/t ftowing through a thickness of material is Q/t = kA !:::..T/L. Keeping the value for Q/t to a minimum means using m aterials that have small thermal conductivities k and large thicknesses L. Construction e n g in巳巳 rs , how巳ver, prefer to use Equation 13. 1 in the slightly di ff,巳re nt form shown below: Q A!:::..T L/ k The term Llk in th巳 denomin ator is called the R value. An R value expresses in a single number the combined effects of thermal conductivity and thickness. Larger R values r巳duce the heat per unit time ftowing through the material and , therefore , mean better insulation. It is also convenient to use R values to describe l ayer巳d slabs formed by sandwiching together a number of m aterials with diffl巳rent thermal conductivities and different thicknesses. The R values fo r th巳 individual layers can be added to give a single R value for the entir巳 slab. It should be noted , how巳ver, that R values are expressed using units of feet, hours, F", and BTU for thickness, time, temperature, and heat, respectively. When it is in the 巳arth ' s shadow, an orbiting satellite is shielded from the intense electromagnetic waves emitted by the sun. But when it moves out of the earth's shadow, the satellite experienc巳S 由巳 full e旺巳ct of these wav巳s . As a result , the temperature within a The physics of rating thermal insulation by R values. The physics of regulating the temperature of an orbiting satellite. .d o m w .c (The answers are given at the end of the book.) o V 。 ωUR to bu y c u -tr a c k C m ,/ CHECK o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W F- APP Ll CATIONS 405 N 13.4 er ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c ! O W bu lic k to bu to k o .c Figure 13.16 Highly reflective metal foil covering this satellite (the Hubble Space Tel巳sco pe) minimizes temperature changes. (Courtesy NASA) Stopper Gasket Silvered surfaces 时I GONGEPTS & GAlGUlATIONS -('1) 四 Heat transfer by conduction is gov巳rn 巳d by Equation 13.1 , as w巳 have seen. The next example il\ ustrates a familiar application of this relation in the kitchen. It also gives us the opportunity to review the idea of latent heat of vaporization , which Section 12.8 discuss巳s. Hot or cold liquid Gasket Glass Figure 13.17 A thermos bottle minimizes energy transfer due to convection , conduction , and radiation. Concepts & Calculations Example 9 Boi li ng W ater Two pots are identical ,巳xc巳pt that in one case th 巳 flat bottom is aluminum and in th 巳 other it is coppe r. Each pot contains th巳 sam巳 amount of boiling wat巳r and sits on a h巳atin g el 巳m巳nt that has a t巳mp巳rature of 155 oC. 1n th巳 aluminum-bottom pot, th巳 water boils away compl巳tely in 360 s. How long does it take th巳 wat巳r in the copper-bottom pot to boil away completely? Concept Questions and Answers Is th巳 h 巳 at n巳巳 ded to boil away the water in the aluminumbottom pot less than , greater than , or the same as the h巳at needed in th巳 copper-bottom pot? Answer Th巳 heat Q n 巳ed ed is th巳 same in 巳 ach cas巳 When water boils , it changes from the liquid phase to the vapor phase. Th巳 heat that is required to mak巳 th e water boil away is Q = mLv , according to Equation 12.5 , where m is the mass of th 巳 water and Lv is the latent h巳 at of vaporization for wate r. Since the amount of water in each pot is the same , th 巳 mass of water is the sam巳 in each case. Moreov巳r, th巳 latent h巳 at is a characteristic of water and , th 巳refor巳, is also the same in 巳 ach cas巳. One of the factors in Equation 13 .1 that influences the amount of heat conducted through the bottom of each pot is the temp巳 ra ture differenc巳 ðTb巳 tween the upper and lower s urfac巳 s of the pot's bottom. Is this temperature di仔巳renc巳 for the aluminum-bottom pot less than , greatel than , or the sam巳 as that for the copper-bottom pot? Answer For each pot th巳 t巳mp巳rature di 仔巳rence is the same. At th巳 upper surface of each pot bottom 由巳 t巳 mperature is 100.0 oC , becau s巳 water boils at 100.0 oC under normal conditions of atmosph巳ric pressure. The t巳 mp巳ratlll 巳 remain s at 100.0 oC until all 出巳 water is gone. For each pot th巳 temp巳rature at th巳 lower s urfac巳 of the pot bottom is 155 oC , the temp巳rature of the h巳ating elemen t. Therefore , ðT = 155 oc - 100.0 oC = 55 C O for each pot Figu re 13.18 In a halogen cooktop , emit a large amount of 巳l巳ctromagnetic energy that is absorb巳d dir巳ctly by a pot or pan. qu创 tz-iodin巳 lar口ps Is the time required to boil away the water completely in th巳 copper-bottom pot greater than , or the same as that required for the alu l1l1num-botto l1l pot? 1 巳 ss than , Answer The time is less for the copper-botto l1l po t. The factors that influence th巳 amount of heat conducted in a given tim巳创 e th巳 therl1l a l conductivity, the ar巳a of the bottom ,由巳 tem perature differ巳nc巳 across the bottom , and the thickness of the botto l1l . All of these factors ar巳 m o m C lic C c u -tr a c k satellite would d巳cr 巳as巳 a nd increase sharply during an orbital period and s巳 nSl lLve 巳 lec w .c . tronic circuitry would s u旺町, unl 巳 ss precautions are taken. To I1l jnimjze t巳 mperature ftuc-d o c u - t r a c k tuations , satellites are often covered with a highly reft 巳cting and , hence , poorly absorbing metal foil , as Figure 13.16 shows. By reflecting much of th 巳 sunlight , th 巳 foil minimi zes te l1l peratur巳 rises. Being a poor absorber, th 巳 foil is also a poor e l1l itter and reduces radiant 巳 nergy losses. Reducing these losses keeps th巳 t巳mp巳ratur巳 from falling 巳xc巳 ssively The physics of a the rm os bottle. A ther l1l os bottle , sometimes referred to as a Dew 盯 ftask , reduc巳 s the rat巳 at which hot liquids cool down or cold liquids warm up. A th 巳 rmos usually consists of a doubl巳 - wall巳d glass v巳 ssel with silvered inner walls (s巳巳 Figure 13.17) and minimizes heat transfer via conv巳ction , conduction , and radiation . The s pac巳 betw巳en th巳 walls is 巳vacuat巳 d to reduc巳巳 nergy loss 巳 s due to conduction and conv巳ction The silv巳red surfac巳 s r巳ftect most of the radiant energy that would oth 巳rWlse 巳 nt巳r or leav巳 the liquid in the thermos. Finally , ljttle heat is lost through the glass or th巳 rubberlik巳 gas kets and stopper, becau s巳 the s巳 materials have relatively small thermal conductiviti 巳 s. The physics of a hal ogen cooktop stove . Halogen cooktops use radiant energy to h 巳 at pots and pans. A halog巳n cooktop us巳s sev巳ral quartz-iodine lamps , like the ones in ultrabright automobile headlights. Th巳s巳 lamps 缸·巳 el 巳 ctrically power巳d and mounted below a ceramic top. (See Figure 13 .1 8.) Th 巳巳 lectromagnetic en 巳rgy they radiate pass巳 s through the c巳ramic top and is absorbed directly by the bottom of the po t. Cons巳qu 巳 ntly, th巳 pot heats up very quic k1 y, rivaling the time of a pot on an open gas burner w w .d o w w w w N THE TRANSFER OF HEAT h a n g e Vi e y O W N 13 XC y CH APTER F- er 406 w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi ew N y Solution Applying Eqllation 13.1 to th巳 Cοnduction of heat into both pots and lI sing Equation 12.5 to express 由巳 heat need巳d to boil away the water, we hav巳 Q AI AI = QCC lIlI = J队 IA D. T)队l mL , JkcuA D.T) tcu mL In 由巳S巳 two 巳qllations the area A , 由e temperatllre di旺。 enc巳 D. T, the thickness L of th巳 pot bottom , the mass m of the water, and the latent heat of vaporization of watel ιhave the sam巳 vaJ lIes . Ther巳fore, w巳 can set the two heats eq l1 al and obtain (kA1A D. T)t A1 L (k c lI A D.T) t c \"-\..lI" -~ ' ''\..u L or kr"t户H k^ ,t^ , Solving for tC lI and taking vallles for the thermal cond l1 ctivities from Table 13.1 , we fìnd I As expected , th巳 一主血I ωk ClI boil-away 日五百 s1 巳二三二」 O [240 J/(s ' m. C )](360 s) 390 J/(s' m . CO ) =口 20 time is Jess for the copper-bottom po t. Heat transfer by conduction is only one way in which heat gets from place to place Heat transfer by radiation is anoth 巳r way, and it is gov巳 rned by th巳 Stefan-Boltzmann law of radiation , as Section 13.3 discuss巳 s. Exampl巳 10 deals with a case in which heat loss by radiation leads to freezing of wat巳r. It stresses th巳 importance of the 创'ea from which th巳 radiation occllrs and also provides a [巳vi巳w of the id巳 a of lat巳 nt heat of fllsion , which Section 12.8 discusses . Concepts & Calculations Example 10 Freezing Water One half of a kilogranl of liquid water at 273 K (0 OC) is placed outside on a day when 由巳 temper is 261 K (一 12 oc). Ass l1 me that heat is lost 仕om the water only by means of radiation and that the emissivity of the radiating sLllface is 0.60. How long does it take for the water to fr巳 eze II1 tO ice at 0 oC when the surface area from which the radiation occurs is (a) 0.035 m2 (as it could be in a cup) and (b) 1. 5 m2 (as it could be if 由e water were sp山ed out ωform a thin sheet)? aωre Concept Questions and Answers In case (a) is th巳 heat that must be removed to water less than , greater than , or the same as in cas巳 (b)? freez巳 th巳 Answer The heat that must b巳 removed is the same in both cases. Wh巳 n water freezes , it changes from the liquid phase to the solid phase. The heat that mllst be removed to m 创e the water freeze is Q = mL f , according to Eq l1 ation 12.5 , wh巳 re 111 is the mass of the water and Lf is the latent heat of fusion for water. The mass is the same in both cases and so is L f , since it is a characteristic of the water The loss of heat by radiation depends on the temperatur巳 perature of the water change as the water freezes? of the radiating obj 巳c t. Do巳 s the tem- Answer No. The temperature of the water does not change as the fl古巴zing process t对<es place. The heat removed serves only to change th巳 water from the liqllid to the solid phase , as S 巳ction 12.8 discusses. OnJy after all the water has frozen does the temperatllre of the lC巳 begin to fall beJow 0 o c. The water both Joses and gains to freezing of the water? h巳 at by radiation. How, then , can h巳 at transfer by radiation lead Answer The water freezes because it loses more heat by radiation than it gains. The gain occurs becallse the environment radiates heat and 出巳 water absorbs it. However, the temperature k lic .d o m w o the same for each pot except for the thenn aI conductivity, which is greater for copper (Cu) than for aluminllm (Al) (see Table 13.1). The greater the 出巳rmal condllctivity, the greater the heat that is conduct巳d in a given tim巴, oth巳r things being equal. Therefore, less tim巳 is 1 巳qllired to boil away th巳 water lI sing 由巳 copper-bottom po t. to bu c u -tr a c c k. C m o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N 407 ! PD XC er O W F- 13.5 CONCEPTS & CALCULATIONS O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c XC h a n g e Vi ew y WiU it 时也 longer for the water to the area is larger? freez巳 in of 由巳 water. case (a) when the aJ巳a is As a result, the env ironwater.w . d o radiation 丘om 由 e small 巳 r or in case (b) when It wiU take longer when the area is sma ll 巳r. This is becaus巳 th巳 amount of energy radiated in a given time is proportional to th巳 area from which the radiation occurs A smaller 缸 ea means that less en 巳rgy is radiated per second , so more time will be required to freez巳 the water by removing heat via radiation. Answer Solution We use Eq uation 13.3 to 时也 into account that th巳 water both gains and loses heat via radiation . This expression gives 由 e net power lost, the net power being the net heat divided by the time. Thus , we have 主 = eoA(俨 - 1ò4 ) V or t = / e σA(T 4 - 1♂) Using Eq uation 12.5 to 巳xpress the heat Q as Q = mLf and taking the latent heat of fusion for water from Table 12.3 (Lf = 33.5 x 104 J/kg) , w巳自 nd (a) Smaller area mL , t =eσA(T 4 二 T0 4 ) 4 (0.50 kg)(33.5 X 10 J/kgI ,~ . .,~<5 u ~ ,, 1 =1 1.5 X 10 s (42h)1 2 4 8 0.60[5.67 X 10- J/(S' m . K )](0.035 m 2)[(273 K)4 - (261 K ) 4 ] | (b) t La贝ger area m L, =eσA(T 4 二 T04 ) 4 (0.50 kg)(33.5 X 10 J/kg) I " r " ", , _" " u I = 13.6 X 10 3 s (1 .0 h)1 0 .60[5.67 X 10- 8 J/(S' m 2 . K 4)]( 1. 5 m 2)[(273 K)4 一 (26 1 K)4] | As expected , th巳 fre巳zing time is longer when the area is smaller. CONCEPT SUMMARV If you need more help with a concept, use the Learning Ai ds n ot巳dn巳xt to the discussion or equation. Examples (Ex.) are in the tex t of this chapter. Go to www.wiley.com/college/cutnell for 由e following Learning Aids: Interactive LearningWare (ILW) - Interactive Solutions (l S) - Additional examples solved in a fìve-step interactive forma t. An imated text figures or animations of important concepts Concept Simulations (CS) - Models for certain types of problems in the chapter homework. The calcul ations are carried out interactively. 。 iscussion Topic Learning Aids 13.1 CONVECTJON Convection is the process in which the bulk movement of a fiuid h巳at is carried from place to place by Nalural conveclion During natural convection , the warmer, less dense part of a fiuid is pushed upward by the buoyant Ex. 1 force provided by the surrounding cooler and d巳 nser part. Forced conveclion Forced convection occurs when an external device , such as a fan or a pllmp, causes 由巳 fi llid to move 13.2 CONDUCTJON Condllction is the process whereby heat is transferred directly throllgh a material , with any bulk motion of the material playing no role in the transfer Thermal conduclors and Ihermal insulalors Materials 由 at 由 at conduct heat well, such as most metals, are known as thermal condllctors. Materials conduct heat poorly, such as wood , glass , and most plastics , are referred to as thermal insulators. Th巳 heat Conduclion 01 heal lhrough a malerial Q conducted during a time t throllgh a bar of length L and cross-sectional area A is Q=J坠主旦L L where !l T is the t巳mperature difference between tivity of the material. th巳 end s of th巳 bar m T of heat due to Ex.2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 9 (13.1) CS 13.1 ILW 13.1 and k is the thermal conduc- IS 13.9, 13.17 o th巳 loss k th巳 t巳 mp巳rature radiation cannot offset completely to bu m o m巳ntal c lic k To of the environment is less than lic C c u -tr . ack w w .d o w w w C to bu y N O W ! F- N O W CHAPTER 13 THE TRANSFER OF HEAT er 408 PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c h a n g e Vi ew XC h a n g e Vi ew ! k learning Aids lic c 13.3 RADIATION mag netlc waves Rad iation is the process in which en巳rgy is transferred by means of electro- Absorbers and emitters AlI objects , regardless of their temp巳 rature , simultaneously absorb and emit electromagnetic waves. Objects that ar巳 good absorbers of radiant energy are also good emitters , and objects that are poor absorbers are also poor emitt巳 rs. Ape叫ecl blackbody An object th at absorbs all the radiation incident lI pon it is ca ll巳dap巳rfect blackbody. A perfect blackbody, being a perfect absorber, is also a perfect e mitt巳r. .d o m m w o c u -tr . ack o k lic C to bu y N O W PD Di scussion Topic w w .d o w w w C to bu y N O W F- FOCUS ON CONCEPTS 409 er ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k The radiant energy Q 巳mitted during a time t by an object whose surface area is A and whose Kel vin te mperature is T is given by the Stefan-Boltzmann law of radiation : Slelan-Bollzmann law 01 radialion Emssv Q =eσT 4 At "' (1 3.2) EX. 6 . m2 . w hereσ = 5.67 J/(s K4) is the Stefan-Boltzmann constant and e is the emissivity, a dimensionless nllmber characterizing the surface of the 。同巳ct. The emissivity lies between 0 and 1, being zero for a nonemitting surface and one fo l' a perfect blackbody. X 10- 8 The n巳 t radi ant power is the power an object emits minus the power it absorbs. The net radiant Ex. 7, 8, 10 power P Il C1 emitted by an object of temperature T located in an environment of temp巳rature To is Nel radianl power PIl C1 eσA(T 4 - 1♂(1 3 . 3) ILW 13.2 FOCUS ON CONCEPTS Note ω Instructors: The numbering of Ih e queslions shown here reflecls Ih e βlCI Ihal Ihey a陀 only a rep resenlα tive subsel of Ihe tolalnumber Ihm are available online. Howeve r, all of Ihe questions are available for assignmenl viα an online homework management program sllch as Wil巳yPLUS or "告bA ssign Section 13.2 6. The long single bar on the left in the drawing has a th巳rma1 conduc- Conduction 1. Th e heat condllcted through a bar depends on which of the foUowing ? A. The co巳fficient c. of linear expansion B. The thermal conductivity C. The specitìc heat capacity D. The length of the bar E. The cross-sectional area of the bar (a) A, B , and D (b) A , C , and D and E (e) C , D , and E tivity of 240 J/(s' m ' C O ) . The ends of the bar are at temperatures of 400 and 200 oc , and the temperaωre of its midpoint is halfway between these two temperatures , or 300 o The two bars on the right are half as long as the bar on the left , and the thermal conductivities of these bars are different (see the drawing). All of 由巳 bars have the same cross-sectional area. What can be said about the temperature at the point where the two bars on the right are joined together? (a) The temperature at 由e point wh巳re the two bars are joined together is 300 o C. (b) The temperature at the point where th巳 two bars are joined together is greater than 300 oc. (c) The temperature at the point where the two bars are joined together is less than 300 o (c) B , C , D , and E (d) B , D , 2. Two bars are condllcting heat from a region of higher temperature to a region of lower temperature. The bars have identical lengths and cross-sectional are筒, but are made from different materials. 1n the drawing they are placed "in parallel" between the two temperature reg lO ns 111 arrang巳ment A , whereas they are placed end to end in arrangement B. 1n which arrangement is the heat that is conducted the greatest? (a) The heat conducted is the same in both arrangements. (b) Arr angement A (c) Arr angement B (d) It is not possible to determine which arrangement conducts more hea t. o OC 100 0 C c. 400 C 200 C 0 0 400 C 200 C 0 0 kj = 240 J/(s . m . CO) k2 = 120 J/(s . m . CO) Section 13.3 Radiation 8. Three cube s 缸e made from the same mat巳rial. As th巳 drawing indicates , they have diff,巳rent sizes and temperatures. Rank the cubes according to the radiant 巳nergy they emit per second , l argest 自 rs t. (a) A , B , C (b) A , C , B (c) B , A , C (d) B , C , A (e) C , B , A A 4. The drawing shows a composite slab consisting of three mat巳rial s through which heat is conducted from left to righ t. The materials have identical thicknesses and cross-sectional areas Rank the materials according to their thermal conductivities , largest first. (a) k\ , 也, k3 (b) k\ , 也, k 2 (c) 屿, k\ , k3 (d) 仇,句 , k\ (e) 屿, 仇 , k\ B B C .c h a n g e Vi e y c u -tr a c k 11. Th巳巳 missivity e of object B is 古 that of 0均 ect A , although both objects 副 e identical in size and s hap巳. If the objects radiate the same energy per second , what is the ratio Tß/TA of their Kelvin temp巳ra tures? (a) 古 (b) (c) ~ (d) 2 (e) 4 i PROBlEMS Note 10 Illstructors: Most of the hOl11 ework proble l11 s in this chapter are 归仰叫 'e叫 e pl 川F削 E町川 叫 ω se 阳e凹叫 n1 asWil 帆 US or WebA 叫 11 , and 阳 e l11 arked with tl川on 川 Iυ nte ωra 曰 ctμt川 ν川lt职μy y. 弘'. See in this set, 时 e 唱害,. l11 anagement program sllch the valuesfor therl11 al CO l1 d u. ctivities given in Table 13.1 unless stated otherwise ssm Solution is in the Student Solutions Manua l. www Solution is available online at www.wiley.comlcollege/cutnell 1. assignment via an online homework S 川 P re, φf'a ce fo ωradd 仇1IμIOnα 1 det阳 ails Note : For problel旧 Section 13.2 α vailable for (iþ 唱贺' ~ This ~ icon rep l'esents a biomedical application. Conduction The amollnt of heat per second condllcted from the blood LO U capillaries ben巳ath the skin to the surface is 240 J/s. The enm through a body whose ergy is transferred a distance of 2.0 x surface area is 1.6 m2 Assllming that the thermal condllctivity is that of body fat , det巳nrun巳 the temperature difference between the capillaries and the sllrface of the skin. 10- 3 3Lo c. 2. The temp巳rature in an electric oven is 160 o The t巳mperature at the ollter sllrfac巳 in the kitchen is 50 o The oven (s ll1face area = 1.6 m 2 ) is inslllated with mat巳rial that has a thickness of 0.020 m and a thermal conductivity of 0.045 J/(s' m . CO ). (a) How much energy is used to operate the oven for six hOllrs? (b) At a price of $0.10 per kilowatt . hour for electrical energy, what is th巳 cost of op巳rating the c. A B ov巳 n? 3. ssm Concept Simulation 13.1 at www.λ再riJ ey.comlcollege/cutnell illustrates the concepts pertinent to this problem. A person's body is covered with 1.6 m2 of wool cI othing. The thickness of the wool is 2.0 X 10- 3 m. The temperature at the olltsid巳 surface of the wool is 11 oc , and the skin t巳mperature is 36 o How much heat per second does the person lose dlle to condllction? c. T'woo州均巳圳 cαωtωs are 陀毛 ma 阳 11a 4. (iþ 刊 and one cold. Two id巳 ntical bars can be attached end to end , as in part a of the drawing , or one on top of the other, as in part b. When either of these anang巳m巳 nts is placed between the hot and the cold objects for the same amollnt of time, heat Q f1 0ws from left to right. Find th巳 ratio Q/Qb (a) (b) 5. ssm Dll巳 to a temperature difference t1 T , heat is condllcted through an alllminllm plate that is 0.035 m thick. The plate is then replaced by a stainless steel plate that has th巳 same temperature difference and cross-sectional area. How thick shollld the steel plate b巳 so that the same amollnt of heat per second is conducted through it? 川 aw 呐111吨g 阳 dirr 盯阳 T 6. ③ The block in 阳 dωra wh 巳re 巳 Lo = 0.30 mη. The block has a thermal conductivity of 250 J/(s ' m' CO ). ln drawings A, B , and C , heat is condllcted throllgh the block in three different directions; in each case the temperatllre of the warmer sllrface is 35 oc and that of the cooler sllrface is 19 oc Determine the heat that f1 0ws in 5.0 s for 巳 ach case Problem 6 C www In the condllction eqllation Q = (kA t1 T)此, the combination of factors kA /L is called the conductance. The hllman body has the ability to vary the condllctance of the tisslle beneath the skin by means of vasoconstriction and vasodilation , in which the f1 0w of blood to the veins and capillaries llnd巳rlying the skin is decreased and incr巳ased , respectively. The condllctanc巳 can be adjllsted over a range sllch that the tissu巳 beneath the skin is 巳qlliva lent to a thickness of 0.080 mm of Styrofoam 0 1' 3.5 mm of air. By what factor can the body adjllst the conductance? 7. 唱铲 ssm Ií 8. A copper pipe with an ollter radills of 0.013 m runs from an out door wall faucet into the int巳rior of a hOllse. The temperature of the faucet is 4.0 oc , and the temp巳rature of the pipe , at 3.0 m from the fallcet , is 25 o ln fifteen minutes , the pip巳 condllcts a total of 270 J of heat to the olltdoor fallcet from the hOll S巳 interior. Find the inner radills of the pip巳. Ignor巳 any wat巳r insid巳 the pip巳 c. 9. Conslllt Interactive Solution 13.9 at www. wiJ ey.comlcollege/cutneU to explore a model for solving this problem. One end of a brass bar is maintained at 306 oc , while the other 巳nd is kept at a constant, bllt lower, temperature. The cross-sectional area of the b缸 is 2.6 X 10- 4 m2 Becallse of inslllation , th巳re is negligible heat loss through the sides of the bar. Heat f1 0ws throllgh the bar, however, at the rate of 3.6 J/s . Whatis th巳 temperature of the bar at a point 0.15 m from the hot end? 10. ( A wall in a hOllse contains a single window. The window consists of a single pane of glass whose area is 0 .l 6 m2 and whose thickness is 2.0 rrun. Treat the wall as a slab of the inslllating material o m lic k same rate. (d) It is not possible to determine which object cools w down at the faster rate .d o C m o to bu y bu to k lic C 10. An astronaut in the space shuttle has two objects that 缸巳 identi cal cin . c all respects , except that one is painted black and the 0出 er IS c u -tr a k painted silver. Initially, they are at the same temperature. When taken from inside the space shuttle and placed in outer space , which object , if either, cools down at a faster rate? (a) The obj 巳ct P创 nted black (b) The object painted silver (c) Both objects cool down at the w w .d o w w w w N O W ! XC N O W CHAPTER 13 THE TRANSFER O F HEAT F- er 410 w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- .c XC h a n g e Vi ew O W ! 411 y Iron to bu k 不 ι 18 . T he draw ing shows a solid cy lindrical rod made from a center cylinder of lead and an o ut巳 r co ncentric j acket of coppe r. Except for its ends , th巳 ro d is insul ated (not show n) , so th at the loss of heat from the curved surface is negligible. Cop per Lead When a temperatu re d i 仔"ere n ce is m a inta in巳d between its e nds , thi s rod conducts one-half the amount of heat h that it would condll ct if it were solid r2 coppe r. Determine the rati o of the radii rl/r2' 半 1' 19. 1'12. A cubi cal piece of heat-shie1d til e from the space shuttle measures 0.10 m on a side and has a thermal conductivity of 0.065 J/(s . m . CO). Th巳 o uter surface of th巳 til e is heated to a t巳 mp巳rature of 1150 oc , while the inner surface is maintained at a temperature of 20.0 oc. (a) How much heat f1 0ws from the outer to the inn巳 r s u rfac巳 of the tile m 自 ve minutes? (b) If this amount of heat were transferred to two liters (2.0 kg) of liquid water, by how many Celsius degrees w0 1l1d the te mp巳ratllre of the wat巳r rise? O 也 13. ssm Three buiJding materi als, plasterboard [k = 0.30 J/(s . m . C )] , O brick [k = 0.60 J/(s . m . C )], and Plaster- 8rick wood [k = 0.10 J/(s ' m' C O)] , are sandwi ched together as the drawing illustrates. The temperatu res at 由巳 in s id e and outside surfaces are 27 oc and 0 oc , respectively. Each Inside Outside material h as 由 e same thickness (27 OC) (O OC) and cross-secti onal area. Find the te mpera tur巳 (a) at the plasterboard-bri ck interface and (b) at th巳 bri ck-wood interface 出盹 ③ Acop阳 rod has a 1巳ngth of 1.5 m and a cross-section山ea of 4.0 X 10- 4 m2. On巳 end of the rod is in contact with boiling water and the other with a mi xtllre of ice and wate r. What is the mass of ice per second that melts? Ass ume that no heat is lost through the side surface of the rod. 咀 *叫 1臼5. ~ Ap阳 O创t 们盹 阳r is boiling 1I川川 时 n1叫d巳 毗町r on盯t盯m 叫 o h阳巳町 ere 忧 陀巳 O向 f印p附 ure A岱 s s饥 创 u川 m 巳 t由 I口 h创 a t heat enters 由 th巳 po 创t on1 y 由 t hro u g h its bottom , which is copper and rests on a h巳 ating ele ment. In two minlltes , the mass of water boiled away is m = 0.45 kg. Th巳 radiu s of the pot bottom is R = 6.5 cm, and the thickness is L = 2.0 mm . W hat is 由e temperature TE of the heating element in contact with the pot? *16. Multiple-Concept Example 3 discusses an approach to problems such as thi s. The ends of a thin bar are maintained at diffe rent t巳 m peratures. T he temperature of the coo l 巳r end is 11 oc , while the temperature at a point 0.13 m from the cooler end is 23 oc and the temp巳 ratu re of the warmer end is 48 oc. Assuming that heat f1 0ws only aJ ong the length of the b创(由 e sides are in s ul ated ) ,自 n d 出巳 length of the bar 地 17. Refer to Interactive Solution 13.17 at www.wiley.comJcollege/ cutnell fo r help in solving this problem. In an aluminum pot, 0.15 kg of water at 100 oc boils away in fo ur minlltes. T he bottom of the pot is 3 .1 X 10 m thick and has a surface area of 0.01 5 m2 • To prevent 由e water fro m boiling too rapidly, a stai nless steel pl at巳 h as been placed b巳tween the pot and the heating element. The plate is 1.4 X 10 m • • ssm www Two cy1indrical rods have the same mass. One is made of sil ver (density = 10 500 kg/m巧, and one is made of iron (density = 7860 kg/m 3) . Both rod s condu ct th巳 same amount of heat per seco nd when the same temperature difference is maintained across their ends. What is th巳 ra ti o (silver-to-iron) of (a) the lengths and (b) the radii of these rod s? Section 13.3 Radiation 矶 ~ L厄 胁阳 h1t bl巾 1 叩 0 p阳 at巳s 飞川h川 a川白 l阳 a创l阳 I wh巳reas light bulb 2 has a 白创l a m巳 创n刊tt怡巳 mηperatur巳 of 2100 K. Both filaments h av巳 the sa m巳 e mi ss i v ity, and both bulbs radiate the same power. Find th巳 rati o A /A 2 of the fil ament areas of the bulbs. 21. ssm www How many days does it take fo r a perfect blackbody cube (0.0100 m on a side , 30.0 oc) to radi ate the same amount of e n巳rgy th at a one-hundred-watt light blllb lI ses in one hour? 22. In an old house , the heating system uses radiators , w hich 缸e hollow meta1 devices through whi ch hot water or steam circul ates. In one room the radi ator has a dark color (emissivity = 0.75). It has a temperature of 62 oc. The new owner of the house paints the radi ator a lighter color (巳 mi ss i v ity 0.50). Assuming that it emits the s am巳 radi ant power as it did before being painted , what is the temperature (in degrees Celsius) of the newly painted radiator? 23. A person is standing outdoors in the shade where the temperature is 28 oc. (a) What i s 由e radiant energy absorbed per second by his head when it is covered with hair? The surface area of the hair (assllmed to be fl at) is 160 cm2 and its emi ssivity is 0.85. (b) What would be the radi ant energy absorbed per second by the same person if he w e l 巳 b a l d and the emissivity of his head were 0.65? 24. A baking dish is removed from a hot oven and placed on a cooling rack. As the dish cools down to 35 oc from 175 oc , its net radiant power decreases to 12.0 W. What was the net radiant power of the baking dish when it was fi rst re moved fro m the oven? Assume that th巳 temperature in th巳 kitc h e n remains at 22 oc as the dish cools down 唱铲 Multiple - Co n ce pt Example 8 reviews the approach that is used in proble ms sllch as this. A person eats a dess巳口 that contains 260 Calories. (This "C aJ orie" uni t, with a capital C , is the o n巳 u s巳d by nutritionists; 1 Calori e = 4 186 J. See Section 12.7.) The ski n tem peraωre of this individu aJ is 36 oc and that of her environment is 21 oc. The emissivity of her skin is 0.75 and its surfac后 area is 1.3 m2 How mllch time would it t冰e for her to emit a net radiant energy 仕'Om her body that is equal to the ener 25. 11 m o m o one. A compos创It忧E w w 由 t hi凶s lic k lic C w 1叫巾阳 ingWar. 陀 e 13.1 瓜 a twww. 11. Interactive Learn川 explores 白 th巳 app roach ta 挝k巳nmp 阴robl 巳 e m s such 岱 aS rod is made 仕 frO 盯 mI ηI 引 S ta 刽 lin 川 1甘i 巳ss steel and iron and has a length of 0.50 m. The cross secti on of this composite rod is shown in the drawing and consists of a s qu ar巳 w ithin a circ1 e. The square cross section of the steel is 1.0 cm on a side The temperature at one end of the rod is 78 oC , while it is 18 oC at the other end . Assuming that no heat exits through the cylindrical outer surface , find the total amount of heat conducted through the rod in two minutes thick, and its ar巳a matches that of the po t. Assuming that heat is conducted into the water onl y through th巳 b o tto m ofth巳 pot , find thew .tem.c do c u -tr a c k perature at (a) the aluminllm- steel interfac巳 and (b) the steel surface in contact with the heating e lement w Styrofoam whose area and thickness are 18 m2 and 0.10 m, respecw ti ve. cly. Heat is lost via conduction through th巳 wall and the window. .d o c u -tr a c k The temperature diffe rence between the inside and outs id巳 i s the same for the wa ll and the window. Of the total heat lost by the wa ll and the window, what is the percentage lost by the window? C to bu y N F- N O W PROBLEMS er PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- XC h a n g e Vi ew ! F- O W THE TRANSFER OF HEAT y bu 28. ( Sirius B is a whit巳阳阳t has a surface temperature (in kelvins) that is four times that of our sun. Sirius B radiates only 0.040 times the power radiated by the sun . Our sun has a radius of 6.96 X 108 m. Assurning that Sirius B has the same ernissivity as the sun , find the radius of Sirius B 29. ssm A car p缸ked in the sun absorbs energy at a rate of 560 watts per square met巳r of surface area. The car reaches a temperature at which it radiates energy at this same rate. Treating the car as a perfect radiator (e = 1) ,自 nd the temperature. Part (α) of the drawing shows a rectangular bar whose diw Lo X 2Lo X 3乌. The bar is at the same constant tem.c .d o c u -tr a c k perature as the room (not shown) in which it is located. The bar is then cut , lengthwis巳 , into two identical pieces, as shown in part (b) of the drawing. The temperature of each piece is the same as that of the original bar. (a) Wh at is the ratio of 由e power absorbed by 由etwo bars in part (b) ofthe drawing t。由 si ngle bar in part (α)? (b) Suppose that the temperature of the single bar in part (α) is 450.0 K. What would th巳 temperature (i n kelvins) of the room and the two bars in part (b) have to be so that the two bars absorb the same power as the single 恼 in part (a)? 4.2 K in a spherical container (r = 0.30 m). The container is a perfect blackbody radiator. The container is surrounded by a spherical shield whose temperature is 77 K. A vacuum exists in the space between the container and th巳 shield . The latent heat of vaporization for helium is 2.1 X 104 J/kg. What mass of 1i quid helium boils away through a venting valve in one hour? A~DD ! TIONAL to 3Lo LO ø 均 31. ② Liqωhelium is stored at its boili暗point temperature of k (a) (b) ssm A solid cylinder is radiating power. 1t has a length that is ten times its radius. 1t is cut into a number of smaller cylinders , each of which has the same length. Each small cylinder has the same temperature as th巳 original cylinder. The total radiant power emitted by the pieces is twice that emitted by the original cylinder. How many smaller cylinders are there? t. *34. One end of a 0.25-m copper rod with a cross-sectional area of 1.2 X 10- 4 m2 is driv巳 n into the center of a sphere of ice at 0 oC (radius = 0.15 m). The portion of the rod that is embedded in the ice is also at 0 oc. The rod is horizontal and its other end is fastened to a wall in a room. Th巳 rod and the room are kept at a constant temperature of 24 oc. The emissivity of the ice is 0.90. What is the ratio of the heat per second gained by the spher巳 through conduction to the net heat per second gained by the ice due to radiation? Neglect any heat gained through the sides of the rod. r. *33. PROBLEMS 35. ssm One end of an iron poker is placed in a fire where the temperature is 502 oC, and the oth巳r end is kept at a temperature of 26 oc. The poker is 1.2 m long and has a radius of 5.0 x 10- 3 m. 19noring the heat lost along the length of the poker, find the amount of heat conducted from one end of the poker to the other in 5.0 s. 36. Concept Simulation 13.1 at www.wiley.comlcollege/cutnell illustrates 由e concepts pertinent to this problem. A refrigerator has a surface area of 5.3 m2. 1t is lined with 0.075-m-thick insulation whose thermal conductivity is 0.030 J/(s . m . CO). The interior temperature is kept at 5 oC , while the temperature at the outside surface is 25 oc. How much heat per second is being removed from the unit? of 0.700. AIso suppose that metabolic processes are producing energy at a rate of 115 J/s. What is the temperature of the coldest room in which this person could stand and not experience a drop in body temperature? 39. The concrete wall of a building is 0.10 m thick. The temperature inside the building is 20.0 oC , while the temp巳rature outside is 0.0 oC Heat is conducted through the wal l. When the building is unheated , the inside temperature falls to 0.0 oC, and heat conduction ceases However, the wall do巳s emit radiant energy wh巳 n its temperature is 0.0 oc. The radiant energy ernitted per second per square meter is the same as the heat lost per second per sqllare meter due to condllction. What is the ernissivity of the wall? 37. The amount of radiant power produced by the sun is approximately 3.9 X 1026 W. Assuming the sun to be a perf巳ct blackbody sphere with a radius of 6.96 x 10 8 m , find its surface temperature (in kelvins). *40. A solid sphere has a temperature of 773 K. The sphere is melted down and recast into a cllbe that has the same ernissivity and emits the same radiant power as th巳 sphere. What is the cube's temperature? 38. 咽F' 培 4 1. Consult Multiple-Concept Example 8 to se巳 the concepts that are pertinent here. A person's body is producing energy internally due to metabo1i c processes. If the body loses more energy than metabolic processes are generating , its temperature will drop. 1f the drop is severe , it can be life-threatening. Suppose that a person is unclothed and energy is being lost via radiation from a body surface area of 1.40 m2, which has a temperature of 34 oC and an emissivity ~ 1n a hOllse 出巳 temp巳rature at the surface of a window is 25 oC. The t巳mperature outside at the window sllrface is 5.0 oc. Heat is lost through the window via condllction , and the heat lost per second has a certain vallle. The temperatllre olltside begins to fall , while the conditions inside th巳 hOllse remain the same. As a reslllt , 由 e heat lost per second increases. What is the temp巳rature at the olltside window Sllrfac巳 when the heat lost per second doubles? m o mens lO ns 缸e 30. 电P' Multiple-Concept Example 8 discusses the ideas on which this problem depends. Interactive LearningWare 13.2 at www.wiley.comlcollege/cutnell reviews the concepts that are involved in this problem . Suppose the skin temperature of a naked person is 34 oC when the person is standing inside a room whose temperature is 25 oc. The skin area of the individual is 1.5 m2 (a) Assurning the ernissivity is 0.80 , find the net loss of radiant power from the body. (b) Deterrnine the number of food Calories of energy (1 food Calorie = 4186 J) that are lost in one hour due to the net loss rate obtained in part (a). Metabolic conversion of food into energy replaces 出is loss ( lic *32. C m 27. ssm Revi巳w Multiple-Concept Example 8 before attempting this problem. Suppose the stove in 由 at example had a surface area of only .c c u -tr a c k 2.00 m2 . What would its temperature (in kelvins) have to be so that it still generated a net power of 7300 W? o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N 13 N O W CHAPTER er 412 PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi ew N y bu to k TrC T.、v Tw k2 w . Tcd o c u - t r a c k ( -hu) (a) Problem 43 司位 43. ssm www Two cy ]j ndrical rods are identical , except that one has a thermaJ condllctivity k l and the other has a thermaJ condllctivity k2 . As the drawing shows , they are pJaced between two waJJs that are maintained at different temperatllres Tw (warm巳r) and Tc (cooJer). When the rods are arranged as in part a of the drawing , a totaJ heat Q' ftow s from the warmer to the cooler wall , bllt when the rods are arrang巳d as in part b , the total h巳at ftow is Q. Assllming that the condllctivity k2 is twice as great as k l and that heat ftows only along the lengths of the rods , determine the ratio Q' IQ. A smaJJ sphere (emissivity = 0.90 , radillS = rl) is Jocated at the c巳n ter of a spherical asbestos sheJJ (thickness = 1.0 cm , ollter radillS = r2)' The thickness of the shell is small compared to the inner and outer radii of the sheJI. The temp巳ratllre of the small sphere is 800.0 oC, while the temperature of the inner sllrface of the shell is 600.0 oC, both temp巳ratures remaining constan t. Assllming that r21rl 10.0 and ignoring any 但r inside the sheJJ , find the temperature of the ollter sllrface of the shel l. 在 * 44. o kj m lic of 由 t h巳 other iβs ∞ c opp 巳町r. Water in these pots is boiling away at 100.0 oC at th巳 sam巳 rate. The temp巳rature of the heating element on which the aluminum bottom is sitting is 155.0 oC. Assllme that heat enters the water only throllgh the bottoms of the pots and find the temp巳ratllre of the heating element on which the copper bottom rests c u -tr a c k C m 仙 a lumin 阳 川 u 叽 m 叽 111飞, wh 忱 1e 巳I陀 ea 创S 由 t ha 创t .c o .d o 咱 *叫 4咀2. ③ Two 附O 川附sa盯 r陀巳 I阳 d仇伽阳 刷 m 巳町 n川tic w w w w w C lic k to bu y N 413 ! PD XC er O W F- ADD ITI ONAL PROBLEMS O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- .c h a n g e Vi e N y bu to lic .d o THE IDEAL GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY To the extent that the air in these hot-air balloons behaves like an ideal gas , its pressure , volume , and temperature are related by the ideal gas law, which is 0 门 e of the central topics of th is chapter. (<<d Christophe Karaba/Reuters/Corbis) MOlECUlAR MASS , THE MOlE , AND AVOGADRO'S NUMBER Often , we wish to compar巳 th e mass of on巳 atom w ith anothe r. To faciJitate th巳 com parison , a mass scaJe known as the atomic mass scα le has be巳n estabJi shed. To s巳t up this scale , a 1 巳f巳r巳 nce vaJue (aJong with a unit) is chosen fo 1' one of th巳巳l巳ments. Th巳 unit is call巳d th巳 atomic mass unit (symbol: u). By internationaJ agre巳m 巳nt, th 巳 refe 1'ence e Jement is chosen to b巳 th巳 most abundant type or isotop巳'" of carbon , which is call巳d carbon-12. Its atomic mass T is defìn巳d to b巳 exactJy tweJve atornic mass units , or 12 u. Th巳 reJation s h j p between th 巳 atomic mass unit and the kiJogram is 1 u = 1. 6605 Li 3 I Be 6 .941 4 I 9.01218 吧 982| 吧。:2 Figure 14.1 A portion of the periodic table showing the atomic I1 umb巳r and atomic mass of each e l em巳 n t. 1n the periodic table it is customary to omit the symbol "u" denoting the atomic mass U I1I t x 10… 27 kg The atornic masses of all the 巳Jements are listed in the periodic tabJe , part of which is shown in Fig ur巳 14. l. Th巳 complete periodic table is gi v巳 n on the in s id巳 of th巳 back cove r. 1n gen巳ral, the masses listed are averag巳 val ues and take into accollnt the variolls isotopes of an el巳 me nt that exist natllrally. For brevity, the unit " u" is often omitted from the table. FOI example , a magnesillm atom (Mg) has an average atomic mass of 24.305 u , while that for th巳 lithium ato m (Li) is 6.941 u; thus , atornic magn巳sium is mor巳 massive than atomic lithium by a factor of (24.305 u)/(6.941 u) = 3.502. 1n th巳 p巳riodic tabl巴 , th巳 atornic mass of carbon (C) is given as 12.011 u , rath巳r than 巳xactly 12 u , becaus巳 a small amollnt (abo ut 1 %) of th巳 n aturally occurring material is an isotop巳 called carbon-13. The value of 12.011 1I is an av巳rage that refl ects th巳 small contribution of carbon-13. f'Isotopes are disCllssed in Section 3 1.1. tln chemistry the expression "atomic weight" is freq u 巳ntly used in place of 飞 tomic mass." o w .c m C m c u -tr a c k 414 w k C HA P T E R 1 ~ o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W ! XC er O W F- w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c PD XC h a n g e Vi ew 415 O W N to bu y N y bu lic k mass of a molecule is the sum of th巳 atomic masses of its atoms. For the el巳ments hydrogen and oxygen hav巳 atomic mass巳s of 1. 007 94 u and 15.9994 u, resp巳ctively, so the molecular mass of a water molecule (H 20) is , therefOl飞 2( 1. 00794 u) + 15.9994 u = 18.0153 u. Macroscopic arnounts of materials contain large numbers of atoms or molecules. Even in a small volume of gas , 1 cm 3, for example,由巳 numb巳r is enormous. It is conveni巳nt to express such large numbers in t巳rms of a single unit, th巳 gram-mole, or simply the mole (symbol: mol). One gram-mole of a subsωnce contains as many particles (atoms or molecules) as there are atoms in 12 grams of the isotope carbon-12. Experiment shows that 12 grams of carbon-12 contain 6.022 X 10 23 atoms. Th巳 number of atoms per mole is known as Avogadro's number NA , after the Italian scientist Amed巳o Avogadro (1 77ι1856): NA = 6.022 X 10 23 mol - I 一一 n N一凡 Thus , the number of moles n contained in any sample is th 巳 numb巳 r of particles N in the sample divided by the number of particles per mole N A (Avogadro's numb巳 r): in terms of carbon atoms , th巳 conc巳 pt of a mole can be applied to of objects by noting that one mole contains Avogadro's nllmber of objects. Thus , on巳 mole of atornic slllfur contains 6.022 X 10 23 sulfur atoms , one mole of water contains 6.022 X 10 23 H2 0 mol 巳cllles , and one mol巳 of golf balls contains 6.022 X 10 23 golf balls. Th巳 mole is the SI base unit for expressing "the amount of a sllbstance." Th巳 number n of moles contained in a sample can also be found from its mass. To see how, multiply and divid巳 the right-hand side of th巳 previous equation by the mass mparlicle of a singl巳 particle , expressed in grams: Although any d 巳fined coll巳ction m 饥 1 n D 盯川t 一一一二一一一一一一 mparticleNA 一 Mass per mole The num巳rator m parti出 N is the mass of a particle times the number of particles in th巳 S缸nple , which is the mass m of 由e sampl巳 expressed in grams. The denorninator mparticleNAis the mass of a par甘c1 e times the number of particles per mole, which is 由巳 mass p巳r mole , expr巳ssed in grarns per mole. The mass per mole (in g/mol) of any substance has the same numerical value as the atomic or molecular mass ofthe substance (in atomic mass units). To under stand this fact , consid巳r the carbon-12 and sodium atoms as examples. The mass p巳r mole of carbon-12 is 12 g/mol , since , by definition , 12 grams of carbon-12 contain one mole of atoms. On th巳 other hand , the mass p巳 r mole of sodium (Na) is 22.9898 g/mol for the following reason: as indicated in Figur巳 14 .1, a sodillm atom is more massive than a c缸 bon-12 atom by th巳 ratio of their atornic masses , (22.9898 u)/ (1 2 u) = 1. 915 82. Therefore , the mass per mole of sodillm is 1. 915 82 tÏmes as great as that of carbon-12 , which m巳ans equivalently that (1. 915 82)(12 g/mol) = 22.9898 g/mo l. Thus , the nllmerical value of the mass per mole of sodium (22.9898) is 由巳 same as the numerical value of its atornic mass. Since one gram-mole of a substance contains Avogadro 's number of particles (atoms or molecules) , the mass mp川 cl e of a particle (i n grams) can be obtained by dividing the mass per mole (in g/mol) by Avogadro's number: Ex创ηple numb巳r to 一 m Problem-solving insight Mass per mole NA 1 il1 ustrates how to use the conc巳pts of the mole , atornic mass , and Avogadro's number of atoms and molecules pr巳sent in two famous g巳mstones. deterrnin巳 the Example 1 The Hope Oiamond and the Rosser Reeves Ruby Figure 14 . 2αshows th 巳 Hope diamond (44.5 carats) , which is almost pure carbon. Figure 14.2b shows th巳 Rosser Reeves ruby (1 38 c创'ats ) , which is primarily aluminum oxid巳 (AI 2 0 3 ). One carat is equivalent to a mass of 0.200 g. Deterrnine (a) the number of carbon atoms in the dia mond and (b) the numb巳 r of AI 2 0 3 molecules in th巳 ruby. The physics of gemstones. .d o m o m w o c u -tr C to k lic C Th巳 molecular .c Instanc巳, ack w w .d o w w w er O W F- 14.1 MOLECULAR MASS , THE MOLE , AND AVOGADRO'S NUMBER ! h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c y k n = 0.741 mol The number of carbon atoms in the Hope diamond is 。 ( ) m 8 90 g 一一一一一一----'='-12.011 g/mol Mass per mole N = nNA = (0.741 mol)(6.022 x 10 23 atoms/mol) = I4 .4 6 X 10 23 atom s I (b) The mass of the Rosser Re巳ves ruby is m = (1 38 carats)[(0.200 g)/ (1 carat)] = 27.6 g. The moleα11ar mass of an alurninum oxide molecule (A1 20 3 ) is the sum of the atornic masses of its atoms , which ar巳 26.9815 u for aluminum and 15.9994 u for oxygen (see the periodic table on the insid巳 of the back cover): Molecular mass = 2(26.9815 u) + 3(1 5.9994 u) = 10 1. 9612 u 、-一~一'-----v-一~ Mass of 2 aluminum atoms Thus , th巳 mass per mol 巳 of Al 20 3 Mass of 3 oxygen atoms is 10 1. 9612 g/m01. Calculations Ii ke those in part (a) reveal that the Rosser Reev巳s r向 contains 0.271 m们rl 1. 63 X 10 23 molecl阳 of AI 2 0 3 1 ~ CHECK Y 。 ωUR UNDER 附 STANDI川川 N唱 (The answers are given at the end of the book.) 1. Consider one mole of hydrogen (H 2 ) and one mole of oxygen (0 2 ) Which , if either, has the greater number of molecules and which , if either, has the greater mass? 2. The molecules of substances A and B are composed of different atoms. However, the two substances have the same mass densities. Consider the possibilities for the molecular masses of the two types of molecules and decide whether 1 m3 of substance A contains the same number of molecules as 1 m3 of substance B. 3. A gas mixture contains equal masses of the monatomic gases argon (atomic mass = 39.948 u) and neon (atomic mass = 20.179 u) . These two are the only gases present. Of the total number of atoms in the mixture , what percentage is neon? , (b) Figure 14.2 (α) The Hope diamond surrounded by 16 smaIIer diamonds. (Dane A. Penland/G巳 m & Mineral Collection/Smithsonian Institution) (b) The Ross巳r Reeves ruby. (Chip Clark/ Smithsonian Institution) Both gems ar巳 on display at th巳 Smithsonian lnstitution in Washington , D.C. 叫 11 -守 THE IDEAl GAS lAW An ideal gas is an idealized model for r巳 al gases that have suffìciently low densities. The condition of low density m巳 ans that the molecules of the gas are so far apart that they do not interact (exc巳pt during collisions that are effectively 巳 lastic). The ideal gas law 巳xpresses the relationship between the absolute pressur巳, th巳 Kelvin temperature , the volum巳, and the number of moles of the gas In discussing the constant-volume gas thermometer, S 巳ction 12.2 has alr巳 ady explained th 巳 relationship betw巳巳n the absolute pressur巳 and Kelvin t巳 mperature of a lowdensity gas . This th巳rmometer utilizes a small amount of gas (e.g., hydrogen or helium) placed inside a bulb and kept at a constant volume. Since the density is low, the gas behaves as an id巳 al gas. Exp巳rim巳 nt reveals that a plot of gas pressure v巳 rsus temperature IS a straight line , as in Figure 12 .4. This plot is redrawn in Figur巳 14.3 , with th巳 chang巳 that the temperature axis is now labeled in kelvins rather than in d巳grees Celsius. The graph indicates that the absolut巳 pr巳 ssure P is directly proportional to the Kelvin temperature T(P α T) , for a 自 xed volum巳 and a fìxed number of molecules. The relation b巳tw巳en absolute pressure and the number of molecules of an id巳 al gas is simple. Experienc巳 indicates that it is possible to increase the pr巳 ssure of a gas by adding mor巳 molecules ; this is exactly what happens when a tire is pumped up. When the volume and t巳 mp巳rature of a low-density gas are kept constant, doubling the number of molecules m lic Solution (a) Th巳 Hope diamond 's mass is m = (44.5 carats)[(0.200 g)/ (1 carat)] = 8.90 g Since the average atomic mass of naturally occurring carbon is 12.011 u (see the p巳 riodic table on the inside of the back cov巳 r) , the mass per mole of this substanc巳 is 12.011 g/mol. The number of moles of carbon in th巳 Hop巳 diamond is o m o th巳 number c C k lic C c u -tr to bu y bu to Th巳 number N of atoms (or mol巳cules) in a sample is the number of moles n times w of atoms per mole N A (Avogadro 's number); N = nNA . We can det巳 rrnine the num.c .d o c u -tr a c k ber of moles by dividing the mass of th巳 sample m by the mass per mole of the substance. Reasoning . ack w w .d o w w w w N O W ! h a n g e Vi e N O W CHAPTER 14 THE IDEAL GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY XC er 416 F- w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi e THE IDEAL GAS LAW 417 w N o The absolute pressure P of an ideal gas is d让巳ctly proportional to the Kelvin tempera ture T and the numb巳r of moles n of the gas and is inversely proportional to the volume V of the gas: P = R(nT/V). In other words , O PV= nRT where R is the universal gas constant and has th巳 value (1 4.1) of 8.31 J/(mol . K) . Sometimes , it is convenient to express the id巳al gas law in terms of the total number of parti c1es N , instead of the number of moles n. To obtain such an expression , we multiply and divide by Avogadro's number NA 二 6.022 X 10 23 particles/mol* on 优 right in Equation 14.1 and recognize that 由巳 product nNA is equal to theωtal number N of particles: PV = .d o m o m w c u -tr a c k ω』3的的ω」且ωH3口 -的且〈 IDEAL GAS LAW C lic k to bu y N y bu to k lic C doubles the pressure. Thus , the absolute pressure of an ideal gas at constant temperature .c and constant volume is proportional to the number of mol 巳cules or, equivalently, to th巳 c u -tr a c k number of moles n of the gas (P α n). To see how the absolute pressure of a gas depends on the volume of the gas , look at the partially filled balloon in Figure 14 .4a. This balloon is "soft," because the pressur巳 of the air is low. However, if all the air in the balloon is squeezed into a small巳r "bubble ," as in p缸t b of the figure , the "bubble" has a tighter fee l. This tightness indicates that the pressure in the smaller volume is high enough to stretch the rubb巳 r substantially. Thus , it is possible to increase the pressure of a gas by reducing its volume , and if the number of molecules and the t巳 mp巳rature are kept constant , the absolute pressure of an ideal gas is in versely proportional to its volume V (P oc lI V). The thr巳巳 relations just discussed for the absolute pressure of an ideal gas can be ex pressed as a single proportionality, P α n Tl V. This proportionality can be written as an equation by inserting a proportionality constant R , call巳d th巳 universal gas constant. Experiments have shown that R = 8.3 1 J/(mol' K) for any real gas with a density suffi ci巳ntly low to ensure ideal gas b巳havior. The r巳 sulting equation is call巳d the ideal gas law. w w .d o w w w ! XC O W 14.2 F- er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- " 100 200 300 Temperature , K Figure 14.3 The pressure inside a constant-volume gas thermometer is directly proportional to the Kelvin temp巳rature , a proportionality that is charact巳ristic of an ideal gas nRT 二 nN. 1 主 I T= NI 主一 IT 川\ NA / \ NA / The constant term R/NA is refe町巳d to as Boltzmann 云 constant, in honor of the Austrian physicist Ludwig Boltzmann (1 84 4- 1906) , and is represented by th巳 symbol k: R k= 一一= NA 831 J/(mol' K) = 1.3 8 X 10- 23 J/K 6.022 X 10 23 mol - 1 (α) *"Particles" is not an SI unit and is often omitted. Then , particles/mol (b) = IImol = mol - I Figure 14.4 (α) The air pr巳 ssure in the partially filled balloon can be increased by decreasing 由e volume of 出巳 balloon, as illustrated in (b). (Andy Washnik) .c F- w h a n g e Vi e O W N y to bu y bu k lic o c u -tr . ack c E倒The physics 霄 oxygen 0' in the lungs. Exampl巳 2 pr巳 se nts an application of the 0 E 白 xamp盯 帕 O X均y归 明g 川阳 Lun 川川』汀川n id巳 al .d (1 4.2) o c u - t r a c PV = NkT gas law. In 由 t h 巳 lungs , a thin respiratory membrane s巳parate s tiny sacs of air (absolute pr巳 ssure 5 1. 00 X 10 Pa) from the blood in the capillaries. Th巳se sacs are ca11ed alveoli , and it is from them that oxygen enters 出巳 blood. Th巳 averag巳 radius of the alveoli is 0.125 mm , and the aiI inside contains 14% oxygen. Assuming that the air b巳 have s as an ideaJ gas at body temp巳 raωm (310 K) , fìnd th巳 number of oxygen mol 巳 cules in on 巳 of th 巳 sacs. Reasoning Th巳 pr巳 ss ur巳 and temperature of th巳 air inside an alveolus are known , and its volume can b巳 determined since we know the radius. Thus , the ideal gas law in the form PV = NkTcan b巳 used directly to find the number N of air particles insid巳 on 巳 of the sacs. Th 巳 number of oxyg巳 n molecules is 14% of the numb巳 r of air particles. Solution Th巳 volur盯阳 T of 创 a ir par川tJ比 cle 巳 s队, w巳 hav巳 Problem -solving insight In the ideal 日 as law , the temperature T must be expressed on the Kelvin scale. The Celsius and Fahrenheit scales cannot be used. PV 一(l. 00 X 10 5 Pa)[ ~计(0 . 125 X 10 - 3 m)3 kT (l.3 8 x 10- 23 J/K)(310 K) N= 一一一 . 1. n.. .. ~ .. r\ 1L1 9 X 10 '4 Th巳川ηber of oxygen mol巳cules is 14% of tt山 va l 盹 oro.14N=12 .7 x 10 13 1 With the aid of the id巳 al gas law, it can be shown that on 巳 mole of an id巳 al gas occupies a volume of 22 .4 liters at a temperature of 273 K (0 o c) and a pressure of one atmospher巳(1. 013 X 10) Pa). Th巳 se conditions of temp巳 rature and pressure are known as standard temperature and pressure (STP). Conceptual Exampl 巳 3 discus s巳 s anoth巳r 10teresting application of the ideal gas law. 0' The physics rising beer bubbles. Conceptual Example 3 Beer Bubbles on the Rise If you look carefully at 由e bubbles rising in a glass of beer (see Figure 14. 匀 , you'lls巳巳 them grow in size as they mov巳 upward , often doubling in volum 巳 by the time th巳y reach the s u rfac巳 .B 巴巴r bubbles contain mostly carbon dioxide (C0 2) , a gas that is dissolved in the b巳巳r becaus巳 of the fermentation process. Whi ch variable describing 由 e gas is responsible for the growth of the tising bubbles? (a) Th巳 Kelvin t巳 mp巳raωre T (b) The absolute PI它 ssure P (c) The numb巳r of moles n Reasoning Th巳 variables T, P, and n are relat巳d to th巳 volum 巳 V of a bubble by the ideal gas law (V = nR T.俨). We assume that this law applies and us巳 it to guide our thinking. According to this law, an increas巳 in t巳 mp巳rature , a d巳 crea s巳 in PI 巳 ss ure , or an increase in th 巳 number of moles could account for the growth in siz巳 of the upwa时 -moving bubbles. Answers (a) and (b) are incorrect. Temp巳 rature can be eliminated immediately, sinc巳 It IS constant throughout the be巳1'. Pressure cannot be dismissed so easily. As a bubble ris巳 s , its depth decreases , and so does the f1 uid pressure tllat a bubble experiences. Since volum巳 is invers巳 Iy proportional to pr 巳ssure accor吐 ing to the ideal gas law, at least part of the bubble growth is du 巳 to the decreasing press lII巳 of the surrounding beer. How巳ver, som巳 bubbles double in volume on th巳 way up. To account for the doub 1i ng , there wou ld need to be two atmosph 巳 res of pressure at the bottom of the glass , comp缸 ed to the one atmosph巳re at th 巳 top . The pressure increment due to d巳pth is pgh (see Equation 1 1. 4) , so an extra pressure of on 巳 atmosph巳re at th巳 bottom would mean 1.01 X 10 5 Pa = pgh. Solving for h with p equal to th巳 d巳nsity of water reveals that h = 10.3 m. Since most beer glasses ar它 only about 0.2 m ta11 , we can rule out a change in pressl町巳 as the major cause of the change in volume. Figure 14.5 The bubbles in a glass of beer grow larger as (阶 Cωour川 叫 I th巳y move upward. Answer (c) is correct. The process of elimination brings us to the conclusion that the number of moles of CO 2 in a bubble must som巳 how be incr巳 a s ing on the way up. This is , in fact , the case. Each bubble acts as a nucleation site for CO 2 molecules dissolved in the s lIITounding b巴。1 so as a bubble moves upward , it accumulates carbon dioxid巳 and grows large r. Related Homework: Problem 28 m C m w w w .d o o to C lic k With this substitution , th巳 id巳 al gas law becomes w w w w ! XC N O W CHAPTER 14 THE IDEAL GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY er PD h a n g e Vi e 418 ! XC er PD F- k. c PD XC h a n g e Vi ew 419 O W N T, (14.3) PiVi = PfVr COllstallt 11 Figure 14.6 illustrates how pressure and volume change accordi ng to Boyle's law for a fìxed nllmber of moles of an ideal gas at a constant t巳 mperature of 100 K. The gas begins with an initial pressur巳 and vo lum巳 of P i and Vi and is compressed. Th巳 pressur巳 111creases as the volume decr巳 ases , accordi ng to P = nRTIV, lI ntil the fìnal pressur巳 and volllm 巳 of Pr and Vf are reached. The curve that pass 巳 s through the initial and fìnal points is called an isotherm, meaning "sa m 巳 temp 巳 rature." If the t巳 mperatur 巳 had b 巳巳 n 300 K, rather than 100 K, th 巳 compression wOllld have occurred along the 300-K isotherm. Different isotherms do not intersec t. Example 4 deals with an appli cation of Boyle's law to sCllba diving to k lic 、 、 m w .d o o m o COllstallt 、 1 c u -tr a c k .c 、 ‘‘ ‘.. 、 、 、 、 Pd----- ω isolherm γ 300-K C k lic C w iE bu y N y bu to lt1 w Historically, the work of sev巳ral inv巳stigators led to th 巳 formulation of the ideal gas .c .d o The Irish scientist Rob巳rt Boyl巳(1 627 -1691) discovered that at a constant temp巳ra law. k c u -tr a c tur飞 the absolute pressure of a fìx巳d mass (fixed number of moles) of a low-density gas is inversely proportional to its vo lum 巳 (P α1 / 盯 Thi s fact is often ca ll 巳d Boyle's law and can b巳 derived from the ideal gas law by noting that P = nRT/V = constantlV when n and T are constants. Alt忧巳rn川 l u川 1口 mm η1巳 (P i , 川 Vi) tωo a fina 叫 创 a tl pr巳sSllr巳 and volll川 1mηme (P f , V山 l此t 比 川 11 i s possible tωo WI川it怡巳 PiV 川li = Fn1RT i and P f Vr = nR T. Since the right sides of these eq u ationsω·巳 eq u a l , we may eqllate th 巳 left sides to give the following conc ise way of expressing Boyle's law: w w w er O W F- 14.2 THE IDEAL GAS L AW ! h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- 、 、 、. 、 、 E Pi 卡 -----←-- -- --一---一 Vi Vf Volume Figure 14.6 A pr巳 ssure-versus-volume plot for a gas at a constant temperature is called an isotherm. For an ideal gas , each isotherm is a plot of th 巳 equatlO n P = nRT/V = constant/V 卢寸盯古古有ττ古节盯τ百币τπ7百古司了 ……………· Example 4 Scuba* Diving The physics of scuba diving. When a sCllba diver descends to greater depths , the water pressure increases. The air pressure inside th巳 body cavities (e.g. , lungs , sinuses) must be maintained at the same pressure as that of the surrollnding water; otherwise th巳 cavities wOllld collaps巳 . A special valve automatically adj usts th巳 pressure of the air corning from the scuba tank to ensure that the air pressure 巳 qllals th 巳 water pressure at all times. The scuba gear in Figure 14.7αcon sists of a 0.0150-m 3 tank fi lled with compr巳ssed air at an absolute pressllre of 2.02 x 107 Pa. Assume that th巳 diver consumes air at the rate of 0.0300 m3 per rninute and that th巳 t巳mp巳rature of th巳 air does not change as the div巳r goes deeper into the water. How long (in mjnutes) can a diver stay lI nd 巳 r water at a d 巳pth of 10.0 m? Take the density of sea water to be 1025 kg/m 3 . 厂 Pl 广 f =但zrrlC η= Pres (a) 陀 depth h (b) Figure 14.7 (α) The air pressure inside the body cavities of a scuba diver must be maintained at the sam巳 l 巳V巳 1 as the pressure of the surrounding water. (Shirley Vanderbil tJlndex Stock) (b) The pressure P2 at a depth h is greater than the pressure P l at the surface 史 The word is an acronym for s巳 I f- contai n ed underwater breathing apparatus Continued PD XC h a n g e Vi e N lic k to bu y N y bu to k lic o Knowns and Unknowns The data for this problem are listed below: Symbol Value Vj Cph Description 0.0150 m3 2.02 X 107 Pa 0.0300 m3/min 1025 kg/m 3 10.0 m P1 1. 01 X 10 5 Pa Comment Explicit Data Volum巳 of 川 p air in tank Pressur巳 of air in tank Rat巳 of air consumption Mass density of sea wat巳r Depth of diver Implicit Data Air pressure at surface of water Unknown Variable Time that diver can remain at 1O .0-m depth Atmospheric pressur巳 (see Section 11 .2). at sea level 7 Modeling the Problem 回国 Duration 川e 胁川ir insid巳 the scu川k has an in叫巳ssure of Pj and a volume of Vj (the volume of the tank). A scuba diver does not breathe the a让 directly from the tank , because the tank pressure of 2.02 X 107 Pa is nearly 200 times atmospheric pr巳 ssure and would cause his lungs to explode. Instead , a valve on th巳 tank adjusts the pressure of the air bei吨 sent to th巳 diver so it 巳quals the surrounding water pressure Pr. The time t (in minutes) that the diver can r巳 main under water is equal t。由 total volume of air consumed by the diver divided by the rate C (in cubic meters p巳r minute) at which th巳 air is consumed: 份'b 一 一 t~r , The total volume of air consumed is th巳 volume Vr available at the breathing pres s ur巳 Pr minus th巳 volume Vj of the scuba tank , because this amount of air always r巳 mains behind in the tank. Thus , we have Equation 1 at the right. The volume V and the rat巳 Car巳 known , but the final volum巳 Vr is not, so w巳 turn to Step 2 to 巳valuate it ( 11 、 、,, Total volume of air consum巳d C j 固盟 帅's Law 创 S川 m 仙灿阳叫 阳叫 nc l比川叫 c臼阳阳 e创… t阳 he 川巳创t le iv 号| This 巳xpression for Vr can be substituted into Equation 1, as indicated at the right. The initial pressure Pj and volume Vj are given. However, w巳 stiU need to determine the pressure Pr of the air inhaled by the div町, and we will evaluate it in the n巳xt step. 回111 Press…ω叩th in a Static Fl副 Figure 阳b shows the diver at a depth h below the surface of the water. The absolute pr巳 ssure P2 at this depth is related to the pressure P 1 at the surface of the water by Equation 11.4: P2 = P 1 + ρ'gh , whereρ ,,.‘ 、 volum巳 V 川r available to the diver at the pr巳ssur巳 Pr 凶 i s related tωo 由 th巳 initial pr巳 s sur巳 Pj and volum巳 Vj of air in the tank by Boyle's law PjVj = PrVr (Equation 14.3). Solving for Vr yields m C m o C .d o w w Reasoning The time (in minutes) that a scuba diver can remain und巳r water is equal to the volume of air that is available w .c .c . c u -tr a c k divided by the volume p巳r minute consumed by the diver. The volume of air avail able to the diver depends on the volume and d o c u - t r a c k pr巳ssure of the air in the scuba tank , as well as th巳 pressure of the air inhaled by the diver, according to Boyle's law. The pressure of the air inhaled equals the water pressure that acts on th巳 diver. This pressure can be found from a knowledge of the div町、 d巳pth ben巳ath the surface of the water. w w w w er ! F- ! w CHAPTER 14 THE IDEAL GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY O W h a n g e Vi e 420 O W XC er PD F- -i) (2) N y substitut巳 this .d o (2) +pgh l expression for Pr into Equation 2, as indicated in the right column. Solution Algebraically combining 出 e results of the thr巳e steps, we have ……… I . v: t PjVj ,, 1 PjVj + ol! h 二十 审 V, - Pg' t=-'一一一 c The time that the diver can 1'emain at a p, ι c d巳pth 审 , .I - c of 10.0 m is p.v: 一一---一一- V: PJ + pgh C (2.02 X 107 Pa)(0.0150 m3) + (1 025 kg/m 3 )(9.80 rnIs2)( 1O .0 m) 5 1 01 X 10 Pa 0.0300 m3/min 一 0.0150 m3 =医王E Note that at a fixed consumption rate C, greater values fo 1' h lead to smaller values for t. In other words , a deeper dive must have a shorter duration. Related Homework: Problems 24, 28 Another investigator whos巳 work contribut巳d to th巳 formulation of the ideal gas law was the F1'enchman Jacques Cha.rl巳 s (1 746-1823). He discovered that at a constant pressure , the volume of a fixed mass (fixed number of moles) of a low-density gas is direct\y proportiona\ to th巳 Ke\vin temperature (V α T). This re\ationship is known as Cha1'l 巳 s' law and can be obtain巳 d from the ideal gas law by noting that V = nRTIP = (constant)T, if n and P are constan t. Equivalently, wh巳 n an ideal gas changes from an initial volume and temperature (町 , T to a final volume and temperatur巳(町 , Tr), it is possib\e to write VJTj = nRIP and VrlTr = nRIP. Thus , one way of stating CharLes' Law is j ) Constant P, consωntn Vj Vr 贝 Tf (1 4 .4) ,j" CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING (The answers are given at the end ofthe book.) 4. A tightly sealed house has a large ceiling fan that blows air out of the house and into the attic. The owners tu rn the fan on and forget to open any windows or doors. What happens to the air pressure in the house after the fan has been on for a while , and does it become easier or harder for the fan to do its job? 5. Above the liquid in a can of hair spray is a gas at a relatively high pressure. The label on the can includes the warning "DO NOT STORE AT HIGH TEMPERATURES." Why is the warning given? 6. What happens to the pressure in a tightly sealed house when the electric furnace turns on and runs for a while? Continued Problem-solving insight When using the ideal gas law , either directly or in the form of Boyle's law , remember that the pressure P must be the absolute pressure , not the gauge pressure. m ) 11 c u -tr a c k o m o We now C lic k to bu y bu to k C lic | Pr=PJ w ,,飞 、 is. c the mass density of sea water and g is the magnitud巳 of the acc巳l巳 ration due to gravity. Sinc巳 PJ is the air pressure at the surface of the water, it is atmospheric p1'essure. Recall that the valve on the scuba tank adjusts the pressure Pr of the air inhaled by 出巳 diver to b巳巳qual to th巳 pressure P2 of the surrounding water. Thus , P2 = Pr, and Equation 11 .4 becomes c u -tr a c k w w .d o w w w ! h a n g e Vi ew O W XC N O W F- THE IDEAL GAS LAW 421 er 14.2 PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- .c h a n g e Vi e ! PD S w .d o 8. Atmospheric pressure decreases with increasing a ltitude. Given this fact , explain why helium-filled weather balloons are underinflated when they are launched from the ground Assume that the temperature does not change much as the balloon rises. 9. A slippery cork is being pressed into an almost full (but not 100% ful l) bottle of wine When released , the cork s lowly sl ides back ou t. However, if half the wine is removed from the bottle before th e co rk is in serted , the cork does not s lide out. Exp lain . 10. Consider equa l masses of three monatomic gases: argon (atomic mass = 39.948 u) , kryp ton (atomic mass = 83.80 u). and xenon (atomic mass = 131 .29 u). The pressure and volume of each gas is the same. Which gas has the greatest and which the smallest te mpe rature? (1) 11 KI NETI C TH EO RV 0F GAS ES .. 一寸 I~. .- I As lI seflll as it is , the ideal gas law provid巳s no insig ht as to how pressur巳 and temto properties of th巳 mol巳cu l es themselv町, such as their masses and sp巳eds. To show how sllch microscopic properties ar巳 related to the pressure and t巳mper atur巳 of an id巳 al gas , this section examines the dynamics of moleclllar motion. The pres sure that a gas 巳xerts on th 巳 walls of a container is due to the force ex 巳 rt巳 d by the gas molecllles wh 巳 n th巳Y collid巳 w ith the walls. Th 巳refo 1'飞 we will b巳gin by combining the notion of collisional fo 1'ces exerted by a fl lI id (Section 1 1. 2) with Newton's second a nd thú'd laws of motion (Sections 4.3 and 4.5). Th 巳 se concepts will allow lI S to obtain an expression for th巳 pl 巳SSUI 巳 in terms of microscopic properties. W,巳 will then 旦旦mbine this with th 巳 id巳 al gas law to show that the av巳 rag巳 trans l ationa l kinetic e nergy KE of a particl 巳 In an 阳1 gas is KE = ~kT, where k is B 阳nann's tωur陀 e. 1n the process , we will also se巳 that th 巳 int巳 rnal e n 巳 rgy U of a monatomic ideal gas is U = ~ nRT, wher巳 n is th巳 川 p巳 rature ar巳 related THE DISTRIBUTl ON OF MOLECULAR SPEEDS A macroscopic container fi lled with a gas at standard temp巳ratur巳 and pressure contain s a larg巳 numb巳r of particles (atoms or mol 巳cules) . These particles 缸·巳 in constant, random motion , colliding with 巳ac h other and with the wall s of the co ntain巳r. 1n th巳 course of one sec ond , a patticle undergoes many collisions , and each one chat1ges the particle's speed and di rection of motion. As a resu lt, the atoms or molecllles hav巳 different speeds. It is possible , howev巳r, to sp巳ak about an av巳rag巳 patticl 巳 spe巳d. At any given instant , som巳 particles have sp巳eds less than , some ne肌 and some greater than th巳 av巳rag巳. For conditions of low gas density, th巳 distriblltion of speeds within a larg巳 colJ 巳cti on ofmol巳cll les at a constant t巳mperature was calculated by the Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell (1 831-1879). Figure 14.8 displays th巳 Maxwell sp巳巳d distriblltion curves fo 1' O2 gas at two diff,巳 rent t巳 mperature s -2Uω」D 』E 。ω∞SEωU』ω止 UUE 的 ME3 -m〉LωH一 E它 且也 』ω Figure 14.8 The Maxwell distribution curves for molecular speeds in oxygen gas at temperatures of 300 and 1200 K. 400 800 1200 Molecular speed , m/s 1600 m When you climb a mountain , your eardrums 、 op" outward as the air press ure decreases. When you come down , theγpop inward as the pressure increases. At the sea coast , you swim through a completely submerged passage and emerge into a pocket of air trapped within a cave. As the tide comes in , the water level in the cave rises , and your eardrums pOp. Is this popping analogous to what happens as you climb Up or climb down a mountain? 在 节r o m o .c C lic k to bu y N y bu to k lic C c u -tr a c k w w .d o w w w w N ! CHAPTER 14 THE IDEA L GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY XC er 422 F- w O W h a n g e Vi e O W XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c y w Av 巳 rag巳 force = Final momentum - InitiaJ momentllm ...... . . c u -tr a c k ' \ 来/ . ..‘ (L KINETIC THEORV If a ball is thrown against a wall , it exerts a force on th巳 wal l. As Figure 14.9 suggests , gas particles do th 巳 sam巳 thing , except that their masses ar它 smaller and their speeds 创它 greater. Th巳 number of p缸ticles is so great and they strike th巳 wall so often that th 巳巳f fect of their individual impacts appe创's as a continuous force. Dividing the magnitude of thi s force by th巳 ar'ea of the wall gives the pressure exert巳 d by the gas. To calculate the force , consider an ideal gas composed of N identical particles in a cubical container whose sid巳 s have I 巳 ngth L. Exc巳 pt for 巳 l astic* collisions , these particles do not interac t. Figure 14.10 focus巳 s attention on on巳 particle of mass m as it strikes th巳 right wall perpendicularly and rebounds elastically. While approac hing the wall , th巳 parti cle has a velocity +V and Ii near momentum +mv (see Section 7 .1 for a review of linear mom 巳 ntum). The particle r 巳 bounds with a velocity -v and momentum -mv , travels to the le仇 wall , rebounds again , and heads back towar'd the righ t. The tim巳 t betw巳en collisions with the right wall is the round-trip distance 2L divided by th 巳 s peed of the particle; that is , t = 2 L1v. According to N巳wton 's second law of motion , in the form of the impulsemomentum theor巳 m , th 巳 averag巳 force 巳xert巳d on th巳 particl 巳 by the wall is given by the chang巳 in th巳 particle's momentum per unit time: .d o m 夫 o o --.., C m J 将"- --- lic k to bu y bu to k lic C When the t巳 mp巳rature is 300 K , the maximum in the curv巳 indicates that th巳 most proba. c speed is about 400 m/s. At a t巳mp巳rature of 1200 K , th巳 di stribution curv巳 shifts to the ble c u -tr a c k right , and the most probable speed incr巳ases to about 800 m/s. One particularly useful type of average s p巳ed , known as th巳 rms speed and written as Vrms' is also shown in the drawing . When the temp巳rature of th巳 oxyg巳 n gas is 300 K the rms s pe巳 d is 484 m/s , and it increases to 967 m/s when th巳 temp巳rature rises to 1200 K. The meaning of th巳 rms spe巳d and th 巳 reason why it is so important will be discussed shortly. w w .d o w w w ! h a n g e Vi ew 423 O W XC N F- N O W 14.3 KINET IC THEORY OF GASES er PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- J Figure 14.9 The pressure that a gas is caused by the collisions of its molecllles with the walls of the conta ll1 er. 巳xerts L L (7.4) Tim巳 b巳tw巳巳 n succ巳 ssiv巳 collisions -mv 2 ( mv) - (+mv) 2L1v L L 4 唔一一气 -u According to Newton's law of action-reaction , the forc巳 applied to the wall by the particle is equal in magnitllde to 由 is value , bllt oppositely directed (i .e., +mv2/L). Th巳 magm tllde F of the total force exerted on th巳 right wall is equal to the nllmber of particles that collid巳 with the wall during th 巳 time t mllltiplied by th巳 averag巳 force 巳X巳 rted by each p 创ticle. Since the N particles move randomly in three dimensions , one-third of them on th 巳 av巳rage strike the right wall during th巳 time t. Th 巳refore , th巳 total forc巳 IS F=(子)(子) In this reslllt v 2 has b巳巳n [巳plac巳d by v 2 , the αverage value of the squared speed. The collection of p缸 ticles possesses a Maxwell distribution of speeds , so an averag巳 value for v 2 must b~ used , rather than a value for any individllal particle. The sqllar'e root of the qllantity v 2 is called the root-mean-square speed, or, for short, the rms speed; v rms = \j v 2 . With this substitution , the total force becomes F=(子)(千) Pressur巳 is force per unit 创·巳a, so the pressure P acting on a wall of ar'ea L 2 is P =..!..一 ( !i ì ( mV~ns ì 二一·一.. u 飞 3 ) 飞 ---. L3 J Since the volum巳 of the box is V = L , the equation above can be written as 3 PV= i N(imuins) (1 4.5) ''T he term "elastic" is used here to mean that 011 the average , in a large llu l11 ber of particles , there is no gai n or loss of translational kinetic en巳rgy because of collisions Figure 14.10 A gas particle is shown colliding elastically with the right wall ofth巳 container and rebollnding from it. .c h a n g e Vi e ! XC N y bu k This result is similar to th巳 ideal gas law, PV = NkT (Equation 14 勾 Both 巳咀旦tions have identical terms on the left, so the terms on the right must be equal: 沪(阻) = Nk T. Ther巳for巳, 阻 2" 叫ns = ~kT (1 4.6) Equation 14.6 is significant , because it a1 lows us to interpret temperature in terms of th巳 motion of gas particles. This equation indicates that the Kelvin temp巳rature is d让巳ctly proportional to th巳 average translational kin 巳tic energy p巳r particle in an ideal gas , no matt巳r what the pressure and volume ar巳 On th巳 average , the particles have greater kinetic energies when the gas is hotter than when it is cooler. Conceptual Example 5 discusses a common rrusconc巳ption about the r巳 lation b巳tween kinetic en 巳rgy and t巳mperature. Conceptual Example 5 Does a Single Particle Have a Temperature? Each particle in a gas has kin巳 tlC 巳e阳巳 ne r皂 gy. Fu巾巳町rrr 盯 mo the re巳 lationship b巳创tw巳巳 n 由 t h巳 av巳rag巳 kin巳tlC energy p巳町r particle and 由 t h巳 t忧巳 mp巳ratur巳 of an gas. Is it valid , then , to conclude that a single particle has a temperature? id巳al Reasoning and Solution We know that a gas contains an 巳normous number of particles that are traveling with a distribution of speeds, such as those indicated by the graphs in Figure 14.8. Therefore , th巳 particles do not all have the same kinetic energy, but possess a distribution ofkin巳tic en 巳rgies ranging from very nearly zero to extremely larg巳 values. If each particle had a temperature that was associat巳 d with its kin巳 tlC en巳 rgy, there would be a whole range of diι ferent temp巳 ratures within the gas. This is not so , for a gas at thermal equilibrium has only on巳 temperature (see Section 15.2) , a temp巳 rature that would be registered by a thermometer placed in the gas. Thus , temperature is a property that characterizes the gas as a whole , a fact that is inherent in the relation ~ mv~ns = ~ kT. The 览巳 t忧巳rm 叫 vJ斗ι口nrns Th巳re巳for陀巳, ;mUιs is the 卢 verage kinetic energy per particle and is characteristic of the gas as a whole. Since the Kelvin temperature is proportional to ~ mvιs' it is also a characteristic of the gas as a whol巳 and cannot b巳 ascribed to each gas p缸ticle individually. Thus , a single gas particle does not have a tetr.ψ eraω re. If two id巳al gases have th巳 sam巳 temp巳削ure, the relation ~m哈s = ~ kT indicates that the average kin巳tic energy of each kind of gas p缸ticle is th巳 sam巳 . 1n general , however, the rms speeds of th巳 different particles are not the same , becaus巳 the masses may be diffl巳r en t. The n巳xt example illustrates these facts and shows how rapidly gas particles move at normal temperatures. Example 6 The Speed of Molecules in Air Air is primarily a mixture of nitrogen N 2 (molecular mass behaves like an id巳a1 gas and det巳rmine the rms = 28.0 u) and oxygen O2 (molecular mass = 32.0 u). Assum巳由 at 巳ach and oxygen molecules when the air temperature is 293 K sp巳巳d of 出巳 nitrogen Reasoning As Figure 14.8 illustrates , the same type of molecules (巳 .g. , O2 molecules) within a gas have different speeds , even though the gas itself has a constant temperature. The rms speed V rms of the mol巳cules is a kind ofαverage speed a吐 is related to the kinetic energy (also an average) according to Equation 6.2. Thus , the average translational kinetic 巳nergy KE of a molecule is 臣 KE = ; nm 肌 1仅Z 叫 t阳emp 巳阿erat 町阳 u町re 陀巳 Toft巾 h出巳 g 伊 a臼s 由山阳 rou咄 白 g h 由耻巳 r附d 由巳 lat 圳 创t阳 ion ∞n E = i扫kT( 抑向 句qu川 E 阳 m a创 ∞ tiiωO叫 n川14.6 州 6仿) . 悦巳 WI c创 an find 配 th忱e nns ηns 叩 sp巳创 ed 巾 0 f ea灿 ch 仰 ty叩 严巳 pe ofm 日 moω 时 伽 01l t由 h巳n 民, from a knowledge of its mass and the temperature. o c m lic o c u -tr . ack C m C lic k Equation 14.5 relates the macroscopic properties of the gas- its pressure and volumew .c .d o to the microscopic properties of the constitu巳nt particles-their mass and speed. Sinc巳 th巳 c u -tr a c k term ~mv.zm s is the average translational kinetic 巳I阳gy KE of an individual particle , it follows that PV = ~ N(阻) w w .d o w w w w to to bu y N O W ! CHAPTER 14TH 巨 IDEAL GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY F- er 424 w O W h a n g e Vi e PD XC er PD F- PD h a n g e Vi ew 425 N .c Description Symbol Value T 28.0 u 32.0 u 293 K Molecular mass of nitrogen (N 2) Mol巳cular mass of oxygen (0 2 ) Air temperature Unknown Variable Rms speed of nitrogen and oxygen molecules .d o m o m w o c u -tr a c k C lic k to bu y N y bu to k lic C Knowns and Unknowns The data for this problem are: w w .d o w w w ! XC er O W F- 14.3 KINETIC THEORY OF GASES O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k 9 V rms Modeling the Problem E圃 叫倪创仇叫叫 d归阳 ωa a川 缸 nE 沁 i sre 巳 lat旬 ed tωo kin巳tic energy KE by (6.2) U where m is its mass. Solving for V rmS gives Equation 1 at average kinetic 巳n巳rgy KE in Step 2. th巳 righ t. We will deal with the … 回国 的er咿Kinet山 ergy and Temperature Since 阳 gas IS a d to be an id巳 al gas , the average kinetic energy of a molecule is directly proportional to the Kelvin temperature T of the gas according to Equation 14.6: | KE = %kT I = F f E '飞 =j 叫 E l ( ''i) 甲川 where k is Boltzmann's constan t. By substituting this relation into Equation 1 at the right, we can obtain an expression for th巳 rms speed. Solution Algebraically combining the results of 出巳 two steps , we have In this result , m is the mass of a gas molecule (in kilograms) . Since the molecular mass巳S of nitrogen and oxygen are given in atomic mass units (28.0 u and 32.0 u, respectively) , we must convert them to kilograms by using 由e conversion factor 1 u = 1. 6605 X 10- 27 kg (see Section 14 .1). Thus , ( 1.6605 X 10- 27 kg \ Nitrogen mN2 = (28.0 u)\ Oxygen mo , = (32.0 u)!\ 1 U - 1 •• '" \1 u J / ( 16605 X 10- 27 kg\ '" ) r r = 4.65 Á " • ^ _?f, X lO- L Ò kg = 5.31 X lO- l ò kg The rms speed for each type of molecule is 店主旦 - Nitrogen V rmS 刊一飞 Oxygen Vrms 砰= V mN, 13: 日(1.3 8 V x 10-叫/K)(293 K)] 4.65 X 10- 26 kg 日t口 一 1511 m/sl 巳二二二二二 2 日 (1.3 8 X 10- 23 J/K)(293 K)l 币汇力 一 L = 1478 mJsl 5.3 1 X lO- L C> kg L一一一一」 Note that th巳 nitrogen and oxygen molecules have the same average kinetic 巳nergy, since the temperature is the same for both. The fact that nitrogen has the greater rms speed is due to its smaller mass. Related Homework: Problems 33, 58 、 ,,J the average r' a gas Problem-solving insight The average translational kinetic energy is the same for all ideal-gas molecules at the same temperatu 陀, regardless 01 their masses. The rms translational speed 01 the molecules is not the same , however, because it depends on the mass. .c XC h a n g e Vi e y bu y bu to k I r川川川Y 川川日 MIC I 川AS Chapter 15 deals with th 巳 science of thermodyna ll1 ics , in wh ich the concept of energy plays an important role. Using the reslllts jllst dev巳 loped for the averag巳 translational kinetic 巳 nergy, we con c\ ude this s巳 ctio n by expressing th 巳 internal energy of a monatomic ideal gas in a form that is suitable fo r use later on. The int巳rnal energy of a sllbstance is th 巳 sum of the various kinds of 巳n 巳rgy that the atoms or molecul巳s of th巳 substance possess. A monatomic ideal gas is cO ll1 posed of single atoms. T hese atoms 创-巳 assum巳d to be so s ll1 a Il that th 巳 mass is conc巳 ntrated at a point , with the r巳 s ul t that the mO ll1 ent of inertia 1 about the center of ll1 ass is negligible. T hllS, the rotational kin etic 巳ne即 ~Iω2 is also 问ligibl巳. Vibrational kinetic and potential energi 巳 s are absent , b巳calls巳 th巳 atoms are not co nn 巳 ct巳 d by c h 巳 mica l bonds and ,巳x cept for elastic co lI isions , do not int巳 ract. As a r 巳 sult , 由 t h 巳 int忧巳rna 剖l 巳 n陀阳巳创rgy U 臼 is 由 t h巳 total int巳rnal tran 丑础 创 a时 n1 i mU :Lnms = i kT a肌cc∞Oαr时.吐din吨g tωo Equ川a川t川ion 14札 t由h巳 internal 巳 nergy can be written in terms of the Kelvin te ll1 peratur巳 as U = N( ~ kT) Us ually , U is expressed in t巳 rms of the number of moles n , rath巳r than th巳 number of atoms N. Using th 巳 fact that Boltz ll1 ann's constant is k = RINA , where R is the universal gas constant and N A is Avogadro's nU ll1 ber, and realizing that NINA = n , w巳白 nd that Monatomicidealgas U = ~ nRT (14 .7) Thus , th巳 intern a1 energy depends on th巳 number of mol 巳s and the Kelvin temperature of the gas. 1n fact , it can be shown that th 巳 int巳rnal en 巳rgy is proportional to the Kelvin temp巳 ra ture for any type of id巳 a l gas (巳 . g . , monatomic , diatomic ,巳 tc.). For examp l巳, when hotair balloonists turn on th巳 burn巳 r, they incr巳 as巳 the temperature , and hence the internal 巳 nergy per mol巳 , of the air inside the balloon (s巳e Figur 巳 14.11). ~ CHECK Y 。 ωUR 川 U胁 NDωDERSTANDI川川'酌 N、唱a (The answers are Figure 14.11 Sinc巳 air b巳 haves approximat巳 Iy as an ideal gas , th巳 per mol 巳 insid巳 a hot-air balloon increases as the t巳 mperatur巳l ríses. (Erik Lam/Alamy Im ages) int巳rnal 巳nergy 伊 9 IV 阳 en at the end of the book.) 11. The kinetic theory of gases assumes that , for a given collision time , a gas molecule re bounds with the same speed after colliding with the wall of a containe r. If the speed after th e collision were less than the speed before the co llision , the duration of the collisio n remaining the same , would the pressure of the gas be greater than , equal to , or less than the pressure predicted by kinetic theory? 12. If the temperature of an ideal gas were doubled from 50 to 100 oC, would the average translational kinetic energy of the gas particles also double? 13. Th e pressure of a monatomic ideal gas doubles , while the volume decreases to one-half its initial value. Does the internal energy of the gas increase , decrease , or remain unchanged? 冒 4. The atoms in a container of helium (He) have the same translational rms speed as the atoms in a container of argon (Ar) . Treating eac h gas as an ideal gas , decide which , if eithe r, has the greater temperature. 15. The pressure of a monatomic idea l gas is doubled , while its volume is reduced bya fa cto r of four. What is the ratio of th e new rms speed of the atoms to the initial rms speed? o c m lic o c u -tr . ack C m C lic k to The 巳quation KE = ~ kT has also been applied to particles m 川 l吨er than atoms or w molecules. The Engli sh botanist Rob巳rt Brown (1 773-1858) observed through a micro.c .d o c u -tr a c k scope that pollen grains SllSp巳 nded in water move on very irr巳gular, zigzag paths. This Brownian motion can also be observed with other p 臼ticle S ll Sp巳 nsions , such as 自 ne smoke parti c\ es in air. 1n 1905 , A lb巳 rt Einstein (1879-1955) showed that Brow nian motion cOllld b巳巳xplain巳d as a response of the large susp巳 nd巳 d particl巳 S to impacts from the moving molecules of the f1 uid medium (巳 . g . , water or air) . As a reslllt of th 巳 impacts , the susp巳nd巳d parti c\ es J!旦v e the sam巳 average translational kinetic energy as the f1 uid moleculesnamely,阻 = ~ kT. Unl ike 阳 mo l ecll l es , however, 阳 pωticles are large 巳nough to b巳 seen through a microscop巳 and , b巳cause of their relatively 1缸~g巳 mass , have a cO ll1 paratively s ll1 all av巳rag巳 speed . w w .d o w w w w N ! F- N O W THE IDEAL GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY er 14 ! w CHAPTER O W h a n g e Vi e 426 PD XC er PD F- y k lic You can smell the fragrance of a perfume at some di s tan c巳 fro m an o p巳 n bottle because perfume molecules leave th 巳 s p ace above the Ii quid in the bottle , where they are relatively conce ntrated , and spread o ut into the air, wh 巳 r巳 th ey ω'e I 巳 ss concentrated. During their j ourney, they collid巳 with o the r m o l巳c ul es , so their paths rese mbl e the zigzag paths ch aract巳ri s tic of Brownian motio n. Th巳 proc巳 ss in which 1110lecul es m o v巳 from a region of higher conce ntration to one of lowe r con c巳ntration is called d.旷usion. Diffusion al so occurs in liquids and solids , and Fig ur巳 14 .1 2 illu s trat巳 s ink diffusing through wa t巳1'. However, co mp ar巳d to th巳 rate of diffusio n in gases , th巳 rat巳 I S g巳 n 巳rall y smaller in Ii quids and 巳ve n smaller in solids. T he host medium , such as th 巳 a i r o r water in the 巳xampl es a b ov巴, is referred to as the solvent, while the diffusing substance , li ke the p巳 rfume m o l巳 cules or the ink in Figure 14.12 , is known as the solute. Relati vely speaki ng , diffusion is a slow process , even in a gas. Co n c巳 ptu a l Example 7 illu strat巳s why. Conceptual Example 7 .d o o c m C m w o c u -tr . ack to bu y bu to k lic C f牛土豆\ *DIFFUSION w w .d o w w w ! h a n g e Vi ew 427 O W XC N F- N O W 14 .4 DIFFUSION er PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k @ O' , Inilially Laler Figure 14.12 A drop of ink placed in water eventllally becomes completely dispersed beca ll S巳 of diffllsion. Why Diffusion Is Relatively Slow The fragrance from an open bottle of perfllme takes several seconds or sometimes even minlltes to reach the other side of a room by th巳 proc巳 ss of diffll sion. Which of the fo llowing accounts for the fact that diffllsion is relatively slow? (a) The natllre of Browni an motion (b) The relati vely slow translational rms speeds that charac teri ze gas m o l 巳 c lll e s at room te mp巳ratllre @ @ e Reasoning The important charac teri stic of the paths fo llowed by objects in Brownian motion is their zigzag s h ap巳 s. We have calclllated typical t:ranslational rms speeds fo r gas molecllles near roo m te mp巳rature in Example 6, and those results will gllide our reaso ning here. Answer (b) is incorrect. 1n Example 6 we have seen that a gas m o l eC lll 巳 n ear roo m t巳 mp era ture has a translational rms speed of hllnd reds of meters per second . Sllch speed s 缸·巳 n o t slow. It wOllld take a moleCllle traveling at sllch a s pe巳 d jllSt a frac ti on of a s巳co n d to cross an ordinary roo l11 Answer (a) is correct. When a p巳rfllm e moleCllle di仔u ses thro llgh air, it makes millions of collisions each second with air moleCllles. As Figllre 14.13 illu s tra t巳 s , th巳 V巳 l oc ity of th巳 m o l 巳c lll e changes abruptly b巳ca ll s巳 of each collision , bllt b e tw巳巳 n co llisions , it m ov巳s in a straight lin巳. Althollgh it does move very fas t between colli sions , a pe rfllm巳 m o l ec lll e wanders only slowly away fro m the bottle becallse of the zigzag path . It wOllld t ak巳 a long tim巳 ind 臼 d to diffuse in this manner across a room. Usually, h owev凹, convection Cllrrents are present and calTy th巳 fra gra nc巳 to the other sid巳 of th巳 roo m in a matter of seconds or minlltes . @ @ Figure 14.13 A P巳rfllme molecllle collides with mjJj ions of air molecllles dllring its jOllrney, so 由巳 p ath has a zigzag s h ap巳 A ltholl gh the air molecllles ar巳 s h own as stationary, they are also moving. Related Homework: Problems 49, 51 Diffusion is th巳 basi s for drug delivery sy st巳 ms that bypass th巳 n巳ed to admini s t巳r medicatio n orally or via injecti o ns. Fi g ur巳 1 4 .1 4 shows o ne such syste m , th巳 tran sd e rm al patch. The word " tran s d巳rm al " m 巳 a n s "across the skin ." Such patc hes , for 巳 x ampl巴 , are Conlrol membrane .... \ The physics of drug delivery systems. Figure 14.14 Using diffusion, a transdermal patch deli v巳rs a drllg directly into the skin , where it 巳 nte rs blood vessels. The backing contains the dru g within the reservoir, and the control m巳 mbran e limits the rate of diffllsion into the skin .c h a n g e Vi e ! XC N y .c to k lic .d o (α) Cross-sectional area = A Figure 14.15 (α) Solute diffuses through the channel from the region of high巳 r concentration to th巳 region of lower conc巳ntration . (b) Heat is conduct巳d along a bar whose ends are maintained at diff,巳rent temperatures. (b) 、, ,- φ'' - h、 T 一 'κ A 一 used to deliver nicotine in programs d巳 slgn巳d to help you stop smoking. Th巳 patch is attach 巳d to the skin using an adh巳 sive , and the backing of the patch contains the drug within a reservoir. Th 巳 concentration of the drug in the reservoir is relatively high , just lik:e th巳 concentration of p巳tfume molecul 巳 s above the liquid in a bottle. Th 巳 drug diffus巳 s slowly through a controI membrane and directly into th巳 skin , where its conc巳 ntration is relatively low. Diffusion carries it into th巳 blood v巳 ssels present in the skin. The purpose of the control m巳 mbrane is to limit the rate of diffusion , which can also b巳 adjusted in the r巳 servoir by dissolving th巳 drug in a neutral mat巳rial to low 巳 r its initial concentration. Another diffusion-controlled drug deliv巳ry system utilizes capsules that ar巳 insert巳 d surgically beneath the skin. Contraceptiv巳 Sal 巳 adrninist巳r巳 d in this fashion , for instance. The drug in the capsule diffuses slowly into the bloodstream over extended p巳riods that can b巳 as long as a y巳ar. The diffusion proc巳 ss can b巳 described in terms of the arrangement in Figure 14.15a. A hollow channel of length L and cross-s巳 ctiona l area A is filled with a f1 uid. Th巳 I巳ft end of the channel is conn 巳cted to a contain巳r in which the solute conc巳 ntration C2 is relatively high , while the right 巳 nd is conn巳cted to a container in which the solut巳 conc巳 ntration C 1 is lower. These conc巳 ntrations are defined as the total mass of th巳 solute molecules divided by the volume of the solution (e.g. , 0.1 kg/m 3). B 巳cause of the difference in conc巳ntratlO n between the ends of the channel , D. C = C2 - C 1, th巳re is a net diffusion of the solute from th巳 left end to the right 巳 nd. Figure 14.15αis sirnilar to Figure 13.7 for the conduction of heat along a bar, which , for convenience , is reprodllced in Figure 14.15b. When the ends of the bar are maintained at differ巳nt temperatures , T2 and T 1, the h巳at Q conducted along the bar in a time t is A-L ( Q (13.1) where D. T = T 2 - T" and k is the thermal condllctivity. Wher巳 as conduction is the flow of heat from a region of higher temperature to a region of low巳r temperature , diffusion is th巳 mass flow of solute from a region of high巳r conc巳 ntration to a region of lower concentration. By analogy with Equation 13.1 , it is possible to write an equation for diffusion: (1) replac巳 Q by the mass m of solute that is diffusing through th 巳 channel , (2) replac巳 D. T = T2 - T 1 by the diff,巳r巳nce in concentrations D. C = C2 - C 1, and (3) replac巳 k by a constant known as the diffusion constant D . The resulting 巳 quation , first formulated by the German physiologist Adolf Fick (1829-190 日, is referred to as Fick's law of d旷usion. m o o c u -tr a c k C w w w .d o m C lic k to Cross-sectional area = A w w w w bu bu y N O W CHAPTER 14 THE IDEAL GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY er O W F- w PD h a n g e Vi e 428 ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c O W N y .c The mass m of solute that diffuses in a time t through a solvent contained in a channel of length L and cross-sectional ar巳aA is* (DA ð. C)t .d o m o m w o c u -tr a c k C lic k to bu y bu to k lic C FICK'S LAW OF DIFFUSION w w .d o w w w ! C h a n g e Vie w N O W -X DIFFUSION F 429 er 1 4 .4 PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k (1 4. 8) m= ----一 L where ð. C is th巳 concentrati o n differe nce be tween th e 巳 nds of the channel and D is the diffusion constan t. 51 Unit for the Diffusion Constant: m 2/s It can be verified fro m Equation 14.8 that th巳 diffu sio n constant has units of m 2 /s, the exact valu巳 de p巳 ndin g o n th巳 n ature of the solute and th巳 sol ve n t. For example , th巳 diffu sio n constant for ink in w at巳r is differe nt from that for ink in be nzene . Example 8 illustrates an important application of F ick's law. Example 8 Water Given Off by Plant Leaves Large amounts of water can b巳 gi ve n off by plants. It has been esti m at巳d , for in s tanc巳, that a single sunflower plant can lose up to a pint of water a day during th巳 growing season. F igure 14.16 shows a cross-sectional view of a leaf. Inside the leaf, water passes fro m the liquid phase to the vapor phase at the walls of the mesophyll cells. T he water vapor then diffuses through the intercellular air spaces and eventuall y ex its the leaf through small openings , call 巳d stomatal pores. The diffusion constant for water vapor in air is D = 2 .4 x 10 m 2/s. A stomatal pore has a cross-sectional area of about A = 8.0 X 10- 11 m2 and a length of about L = 2.5 x 10- 5 m. The conc巳ntrati on of wat巳r vapor on the interi or side of a pore is roughly C2 = 0.022 kg/m 3 , while the concentration on the outsid巳 i s approximately C 1 = 0.011 k g/m 3 . Det巳rmine the mass of water vapor that passes through a stomatal pore in one hour. The physics of water loss from plant leaves. • Reasoning and Solution Fick's law of diffusion shows that (DA ð. C)t 112 (14.8) L 112 = (2 .4 X 10- 5 m 2/s)(8.0 X 10- 11 m 2 )(0.022 kg/m 3 2.5 X 10 m - 0.0 11 kg /m 3)(3600 s) • Mesophyll cells = 13.0 X 10- 9 时 This amount of water may not seem significan t. However, a single leaf may have as many as a mi llion stomatal pores , so the w at巳r lost by a n 巳 n t:ire pl ant can be substantial. 。 y" CHECK epidermis Y。 ωUR UNDERS τ A 酌NDI川川 E酌N、唱a (The answers aιre gl 阳 V,en at the end of the book.) 16 . τ~ In the lungs , oxygen in very small sacs called alveoli diffuses into the blood . The 曹 diffusion occurs directly t hrough the walls of the sacs , which have a thic kness L The total effective area A ac ross which diffusion occurs is th e sum of the individual areas (each quite sma ll) of the various sac walls. Considering the fact that the mass m of oxygen that enters the blood per second needs to be large and referring to Fick's law of diffusion , what can you deduce about L and about the total number of sacs present in the lungs? '在 The same solute is diffusing through th e 户 same solvent in each of three cases . For Case Length Cross-Sectional Area (a) ~L A each case , the table gives the length and cross-sectional area of the diffusion channe l. (b) L ~A The concentration difference between the ends of the diffusion channel is the same i n~ ~L 2A each case. Rank the diffusion rates (in kg/s) in descending order (Iargest first). law assumes that th巳 te m peratu re of the solvent is constant throughout the channel. Experiments indicate that the d i仔u s i o n constant depends strongly on the temperature 不 F i ck ' s } LOWEr Figure 14.16 A cross-sectional view of a leaf. Water vapor di旺ü ses out of the leaf through a stomatal pore. .c F- h a n g e Vi ew O W ! XC y to bu k .d o This chapt巳r introduces th巳 id巳 al gas law, which is a r巳 lation b巳 twe巳 n the pressure , volume , temperature , and number of moles of an ideal gas. In Section 10.1 , we examined how the compression of a spring dep巳 nds on the force applied to it. Example 9 revi巳ws how a gas produces a force and why an id巳 al gas at different temperatures causes a spring to compress by different amounts. (α) Concepts & Calculations Example 9 The ldeal Gas Law and Springs Gas 1 (b) Figure 14.17 shows thre巳 id巳 ntical chambers containing a piston and a spring whose spring constant is k = 5.8 X 10 4 N/m. The chamber in p缸.t a is completely evacuat巳d , and the piston just touches its left end. 1n thi s position , the spring is unstrained . 1n part b of the drawing , 0.75 mol of ideal gas 1 is introduc巳d into the chamb町, and the spring compresses by XI 15 cm. 1n part c , 0.75 mol of ideal gas 2 is introduced into the chamber, and the spring compr巳 sses by X2 = 24 cm. Find the temperature of each gas Concept Questions and Answers Which gas exerts the greater Answer amoun t. W,巳 know Th 巳 refore , (c) Fi gure 1 4.17 Two ideal gases at different temperatures compress the spring by different amounts the piston ? that a great巳 r force is r巳quired to compress a spring by a greater gas 2 巳xerts the greater forc巳. How is the force required to compress a spring related to its un strain巳d position? Gas 2 forc巳 on th巳 displac巳 ment of th巳 spring from Answer According to Equation 10.1 , the applied forc巳 Fr^pplied required to compress a spring is directly proportional to th巳 displac巳 ment X of the spring from its un strain巳d position; F/ pplied = kx , wher巳 k is the spring constant of the spring. Which gas exerts the greater pressure on the piston ? Answer According to Equation 1 1. 3, pressure is d巳白 ned as th巳 mag nitude F of the force acting perpendicular to the surface of the piston divided by the area A of the piston; P = F/A. Since gas 2 ex巳 rts the greater force , and th巳 area of the piston is the sa m巳 for both gas巳s , gas 2 exerts the gr 巳 at巳r pressur巳. Which gas has the greater temperature? Answer According to 由 e id巳 al gas law, T = PV/(nR) , gas 2 has t h 巳 greater temperature. Both gases contain the same numb巳 r n of moles. How巳V巳r, gas 2 has both a greater pressure P and greater vo lum巳 V. Thus, it has the great巳 r temperatur巳 Solution W巳 can use the ideal gas law in the form T = PV/(nR) to determine th巳 temp e rature T of each gas. First , how巳ver, w巳 must find the pressure. According to Equation 11 .3 , th巳 pressure is th巳 magnitude F of the forc巳 that the gas ex巳rts on th巳 piston divided by the 盯ea A of the piston , so P = F/A. R巳call that the forc巳 F/pplied applied to the piston to compress the spring is related to the displacement X of the spring by F/ pplied = kx (Equation 10.1). Thus , F = F/pplied = kx , and the pressure can be written as P = kx/A. Using this expression for the pressure in th巳 ideal gas law gives T = PV 一 nR (子) V - nR However, the cylindrical vo lurn巳 V of the gas is equal to th巳 produ c t of the distance X and 缸ea A , so V = xA. With this substitution , the expression for the temperature becornes (子) V (子)俐 Th巳 temperaωres Gas 1 kx 2 of the gases are Ta kXl ..." 2 nR (58 lVN/m)(15 日百曰 ,_ .- ×.. ... ....".- × 10-2 m) 2 = 1210 K1 (0.75 mol)[8.31 J/(rnol' K)] '-一-' th巳 m w Unstrained spring o m o .c lic k GONGEPTS & GALGULATIONS lic C c u -tr a c k w w .d o w w w C to bu y N O W THE IDEAL GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY N 14 er CHAPTER PD h a n g e Vi ew 430 ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c XC h a n g e Vi e ! N c As anticipated , gas 2 , which compresses the spring more , has 1 '-一一一」 w th 巳 high巳r t巳mp巳rature. 。 The kinetic theory of gases is important because it allows us to understand the re1ation betw巳en the macroscopic properties of a gas , such as pressure and temp巳ratur巳, and th巳 microscopic prop巳rties of its parti c1es , such as sp巳巳d and mass. Th巳 following example reviews th巳巳 ssential features of this th巳ory. Concepts & Ca lculatïons 庭xample 冒 O O Hydrog川toms in Outer SP哇 In outer spac巳 the d巳nsity of matter is 巳xtrem巳 ly low , about on巳 atom per cm 3. Th巳 matt巳r IS mainly hydrog巳 n atoms (m = 1. 67 X lO - 27 kg) whos巳 rm s speed is 260 mls. A cubical box , 2.0 m on a si 白 , is placed in out巳 r space , and 出巳 hydrogen atoms are allowed to enter. (a) What is the magnitud巳 of the forc 巳 that the atoms 巳X巳 rt on on 巳 wall of th 巳 box? (b) Determin 巳 th 巳 pressure that the atoms 巳X巳rt. (c) Does outer space hav巳 a temperatur飞 and , if so , what is it? Concept Questions and An swers Why do hydrog巳 n atomsexe此 a forc巳 on 出巳 walls ofthe box? Answer Every tim巳 an atom col1id巳 s with a wall and rebounds , th巳 atom exerts a force on th巳 waU. lmagine op巳 ning your hand so it is Aat and having som巳on巳 throw a ball straight at it. Your hand is like the wall , and as th巳 ball rebounds , you can feel th巳 force Intuitively, you wou ld expect the force to be∞ me greater as the speed and mass of th巳 ball become greater. This is indeed th巳 cas巳 Do the atoms generate a pressure on the walls of th巳 box? Answer Yes. Pressure is defìned as the magnitude of the force exerted perpendicularly on a wall divided by th巳 area of the wall . Since the atoms 巳X巳rt a forc巳, th巳y also produc巳 a pressure. Do hydrog巳 n atoms in outer space have a properties of the atoms? temperatUJ 巳? If so , how is the temperature r巳 lat丑d to th 巳 microscopic Answer Yes. The Kelvin temperatul 巳 is proportional to the averag巳 kin 巳tic energy of an atom . The averag巳 kin巳 tic energy, in turn , is proportional to the mass of an atom and th 巳 square of the rms speed. Since we know both these quantities , we can d巳t巳 I币un 巳 the temp巳 rature of the gas Solution (a) Th巳 magnitud巳 F of the force exert巳d on a wall is given by (se巳 S 巳ction 14.3) F=(子)(千) where N is th巳 number of atoms in th巳 box , m is th巳 mass of a single atom , V rmS is the rms sp巳巳d of the atoms , and L is th巳 l巳 nσth of one side of th 巳 box. The volume of th巳 cubical box is D (2 .0 X 10 2 cm)3 = 8.0 X 10 6 cm 3. The number N of atoms is equal to the numb巳r of atoms p巳 r cubic centimeter times th巳 volum巳 of the box in cubic centimet巳rs N =(非主) (8.0 X 川3) = 8.0 X川 The magnitude of the force acting on one wall is 叶子) (千) = (乓旦) [Jl67 × 12)问 (b) The pressure is the magnitude of the force divided by F A p=~= 1. 5 X lO - 16 (2.0 m) L N th巳 area = 13.8 X lO - A 0f a wall: 川 11 Pa l 1 .d o m 1 to 日石Kl 540 K k = o . ack bu y o m C c u -tr w lic lic k to To吨=一二一= _k_X2_2 = ....:(_5._8_X_l_04_N_/n--'l)~(2_4_X_l.-:...0→ m)2 - . ...,,--, nR (0.75 mo1)[8.31 J/(mo1.K)] Gas2 w w .d o w w w C bu y N 431 er O W F- 14.5 CONCEPTS & CALCULATIONS O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c XC h a n g e Vi ew O W ! F- y bu bu y N O W THE IDEAL GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY N 14 to k T = mV~ms = ( 1. 67 X \0 - 27 kg)(2ωm/s)2日. 7 KI = 一一一一= 一 = 12.7 KI 3k 3( 1.38 x 10 一 υJ/K ) L一一」 This is a frigid 2.7 k巳 lvins above absolute zero. 。 nON'CEPT SUMMARV If you need more help with a concept, use the Learning Aids noted next to the discussion or equation. Examples (Ex.) are in the text of this chapter. Go to www.wiley.com/college/cutnell for the fo llowing Learnin g Aids: Interactive LearnlngWare (l LW) - Additional examples solved in a fi ve-step Concept 51mulations (CS) Interactlve 5olutlons (15) 一- Animat巳 d forma t. text fi gures or animations of important concepts. Models for certain types of problems in th巳 chapter homework. Th巳 calculations are carried out int巳 ractively learning Aids Discussion Topic Atomic mass unit Molecular mass int巳 racti ve 14.1 MOLECULAR MASS , THE MOLE , AND AVOGADRO'S NUMBER Each element in the periodic table is assigned an atomic mass. One atomic mass uni t (u) is exactly one-twelfth the mass of an atom of carbon-12. The mol巳cul ar mass of a molecule is the sum of the atomic mass巳s of its atoms. The number of moles n contain巳d in a sample is equal to the number of particles N (atoms or molecu les) in the sample divided by the number of particles per mole N A , N n= - - Number 01 moles Avogadro's number Number 01 moles Mass per mole NA NA is called Avogadro's number and has a value of NA = 6.022 X 1023 partic\ es p巳 r mol 巳. The number of moles is also equal to th巳 m ass m of the sample (expressed in grams) divided by the mass per mole (express巳d in grams per mole): nz Ex. n Mass per mole wh巳re The mass per mol 巳(i n g/mol) of a s ub s tan c巳 h as the salη巳 lecular Ill ass of one of its parti c\ es (i n ato mic mass units). nUlllerical 1 value as the atolllic or mo- The mass mpart i出 of a particle (in grams) can be obtai ned by dividing the mass per mole (i n g/mol) by Avogadro's number: Mass per mole Mass 01 a particle lηparti cJc A. l " A 14.2 THE IDEAL GAS LAW Th巳 i d ea l gas law relates the absolute pressure P, the volume V, the n of mol郎, and the Kelvin temperature T of an ideal gas accord ing to numb巳r PV Ideal gas law Universal gas constant where R = 8.31 J/(mol ' K) is th巳 unive rsa l Boltzmann's constant where N is the number of parti c\ es and k id巳al ( 14.1 ) gas constan t. An alternative fonn of the ideal gas law is PV Ideal gas law nRT = R = 一一- NA NkT = (14.2) Ex. 2, 3 , 9 is Boltzmann's constan t. A real gas behaves as an 15 14.25, 14.29 gas when its density is low enough that its p创ticles do not interact , except via elastic collisions. A form of the ideal gas law that applies when the number of 1ll 01es and the temperature are constant is known as Boyle's law. Using the subscripts "i" and "f" to denote , re spectiv巳 I y, initial and final conditions , we can write Boyle's law as Pi 只 = Boyle's law PrVr (1 4.3) EX.4 A form of the ideal gas law that applies when the number of moles and the pressure are constant is called Charles' law Charles' law 14.3 Maxwell speed distribution 只 Vr 盯 Tr (1 4 .4) KINETIC THEORY OF GASES The distriblltion of particle speeds in an id巳al gas at constant is the Maxwell speed distribution (see Figllre 14.8). The kinetic theory of gases temp巳 ra ture o c k. m lic o c u -tr a c C m C lic k to (c) According ωEquation 14.6 , the Kelvin t巳 mperature T of the hydro g巳 n atoms is relat巳 d to th巳 av巳r吨巳 kin巳tic energy of an atom by ~ kT = tmv~ms ' where k is Bo !tzmann 's constant w .c .d o c u -tr a c k Solving thi s equation for the temperature gives w w .d o w w w er CHAPTER PD h a n g e Vi ew 432 ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi e N k lic .c 」n 『 . .t6 @司 、 ea aE "u 『、 Average Iranslalional kinelic energy nnnuBt man" uea E " " "Mr aE indicates that the Kelvin temperature T of an ideal gas is related to the energy KE of a particle according to averag巳 translational 阻 =jmuι = ~ kT where v rms is the root-mean-squar巳 speed kinetic (14.6) .d o m o m o c u -tr a c k C k lic C to bu y N y to bu w w w .d o w Learning Aids Oiscussion Topic w w w ! XC O W F- FOCUS ON CONCEPTS 433 er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k EX.5.6.10 ......., IS 14.39, 14.61 n of the particles The internal energy U of n moles of a monatomic ideal gas is U = ~ nRT Inlernal energy The internal energy of any type of Kelvin temperature id巳al (1 4.7) gas (e.g. , monatomic , diatomic) is proportional to its 14.4 DIFFUSION Diffusion is the process wher巳by solute molecules move through a solvent from a region of high巳r solute concentration to a region of lower solute concentration . Fick's law of diffusion states that the mass m of solute that diffuses in a tim巳 t through the solvent in a channel of length L and cross-sectional area A is (DA /::"C)t Fick's law 01 diHusion (14.8) Ex. 7, 8 m= 一一一一一一 L wh巳re /::,. C is the solute concentration diffusion constan t. di旺er巳 nc巳 betwe巳n Note to 11I structors: All of the questions shown here are available for or WebAssign Section 14.1 Molecular Mass, the Mole , and Avogadro's Number 1. All but one of the followin!!: statements 缸巳 true. Which one is not true? (a) A mass (in grams) equal to the molecular mass (in atomic mass units) of a pure substance contains the same number of molecules , no matter what the substance is. (b) One mole of any pure substance contains the same number of molecules. (c) Ten grams of a pure substance contains twic巳 as many molecules as five grams of the substance. (d) Ten grams of a pure substance contains th巳 sam巳 number of molecules , no matter what the substance is. (e) Avogadro's number of molecules of a pure substance and one mole of the substance have the same mass. ass号nment the ends of the chann巳1 and D is the via an online homework management program such as WileyPLUS initial value , while the temperature is held constan t. How many moles /::"n of the gas must be allowed to escape through the valve , so that the pressure of the gas does not change? 。 2. A mixture of ethyl alcohol (molecular mass = 46.1 u) and water (molecular mass = 18.0 u) contains one mole of molecules. The mixture contains 20.0 g of ethyl alcohol. What mass m of water does it contain? Section 14.2 The Ideal Gas Law 3. For an ideal gas , each of th巳 following unquestionably leads to an increas巳 in the pressure of the gas , except one. Which one is it? (a) Increasing the temp巳rature and decreasing the volume , while keeping the number of moles of the gas constant (b) Increasing the temperature , the volume , and the number of mol巳 s of the gas (c) Increasing the temperature , while keeping the volume and the number of moles of the gas constant (d) Increasing the number of moles of th巳 gas , while keeping the t巳 mperature and the volume constant (e) Decreasing the volum巴 , while keeping the temperature and the number of moles of the gas constant 4. The cylinder in the drawing contains 3.00 mol of an ideal gas. By moving the piston , the volume of the gas is reduced to one-fourth its 5. Carbon monoxide is a gas at 0 oC and a pressure of 1.01 x 10 5 Pa It is a diatomic gas , each of its molecules consisting of one carbon atom (atomic mass = 12.0 u) and one oxygen atom (atomic mass = 16.0 u). Assuming that carbon monoxide is an ideal gas , calculate its density p Section 14.3 Kinetic Theory of Gases 6. If the speed of every atom in a monatomic ideal gas were doubled , by what factor would the Kelvin temperature of the gas be mu 1t iplied? (a) 4 (b) 2 (c) 1 (d) ~ (e) ~ 7. Th巳 atomic mass of a nitrogen atom (N) is 14.0 u, while that of an oxygen atom (0) is 16.0 u. Three diatomic gases have the same temperature: nitrog巳n (N2) , oxyg巳n (0 2) , and nitric oxide (NO). Rank these gas巳 s in asc巳nding ord巳r(small巳st 白 rst) , according to the values of their translational rms speeds: (a) O 2, N 2, NO (b) NO , N 2, O2 (c) N2, NO , O2 (d) O2, NO , N 2 (e) N 2, O 2, NO 8. The pressure of a monatomic ideal gas is doubled , while the volume is cut in half. By what factor is the internal energy of the gas mu 1tiplied? (a) ~ (b) ~ (c) 1 (d) 2 (e) 4 .c THE IDEAL GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY F- h a n g e Vi ew O W ! XC y bu to of 0.25 cm. Wh at wOllld be the diffu sion rate 111. /1 in a channe l with a cross-secti onal ru 巳a of 0.30 cm2 and a length of 0. 10 cm? PROp LEMS Note to Instructors: Mosl of Ihe homework p lV blems in Ihis chapter are available fo r ass ig ll lll en t as Wil 巳y P LUS or WebAssign , a l1 d those marked ùZleraclivity. See p, 呐ce fo r additional details. l\I ilh Ihe ico l1 NOle: The pre Molecular Mass, the Mole, and Avogadro's Number 1. ssm Hemoglobin has a molecul ar mass of 64500 u. Find (in kg) of one m o l 巳c llle of hemoglobin . th巳 m ass 啕害". Manllfacturers of headache re medi es rOlltinely c1 aim that th e ir ow n brands are more potent pain re li ev巳rs than th巳 co m peting brands. The ir way of makin g th巳 co mp ari s on is to compare the nllmber of mo lecllles in th巳 s ta nd a rd do s ag巳 Ty l e n o l lI ses 325 mg of acetamin ophen (C 8H9N0 2) as the standard d os巳, while Advil lI ses 2.00 X 10 2 mg of ibllprofen (C I3H 180 2)' Find the nllmb巳r of mo lecllles of pain re li巳ve r in the standard doses o f (a) Tyleno l and (b) Advi l 2. 自 3. The arti 白 c i a l sweete ner Nu traS weet is a chemi cal called aspartame (CI4H I8N20 5)' What is (a) its mo leclllar mass (i n atomic mass units) and (b ) the mass (in kg) of an aspartame mo lecul e? 4. ③ A 削ain 巳l巳m削 h as a mass per m由 of 196.967 g/mol What is the mass of a single atom in (a) atomic mass units and (b) kil ograms? (c) How many moles of atoms ru 巳 in a 285-g sampl e? 5. 唱伊 ssm The active ingredient in the aJl ergy medication Claritin contains carbon (C), hydrogen (H) , chl orine (CI) , nitrogen (N) , and oxygen (0 ). Its moleclllru' formul a is C22H23CIN20 2' The standard adll lt dosage utili z巳s 1. 572 X 10 19 molecllles of thi s species. Determine the mass (i n grams) of the active ingredient in the standru'd dosage. ~ 6. A mass of 135 g of a certain element is known to contain 30.1 X 10 23 atoms. What is the e l巳 m ent ? *7. A runner weighs 580 N (abollt 130 Ib), and 71 % of thls weight is water. (a) How many m o l 巳s of water are in the runner's body? (b) How many water mol ecules (H 2 0 ) 创毛 th el 巳? *咱8. ③ Cωon ω 巾 s l耐d臼阳 E创 阳r a mi x ( m o l eclll 创 a r mass = 39.948 g/mη0 1 ) , 2.60 g of neon ( m o le 巳C川 ll1让la 缸r mass = 20.1 80 g/mη 0 1 ) , and 3.20 g of he Lillm ( mη01 巳cαωu 阳 l创 a r mηIaSS = 4.0026 g/mo l). For this mi xture , determine the p巳 rc巳 ntag巳 of th巳 tota l number of atoms that corresponds to each of the components *9. ssm A cylindrical g lass of water (H20 ) has a radiu s of 4.50 cm and a height of 12.0 cm. The density of water is 1. 00 g/cm3 How many moles of water molecllles are contained in the glass? *10. 唱铲 T he preparati on of ho meopathi c " remedies" invo lves the repeated dillltio n of sollltions containing an acti ve ingredient sllch as arseni c tri ox id巳 ( A S2 0 3 ) . S lI ppose one b巳g in s with 18.0 g of arseni c tri ox ide di ssolved in water, and repeatedly dillltes the sollltion widl pure water, each di lll tion redllcing the amolln t of 创 seni c tri oxid ~ an onlille h Olll e wo rk 川allagelllenl prog ram SlI ch … 予下 γ T叽l川n 巾 ssm Solution is in the Student Solutions Manua l. www Solution is available online at www. Section 14.1 νia tml are presenled in Wiley PL US l/S川g a guided Iulorial forma l Ihat p lV vides enhanced b川 ion 刷佣删川… 111阳阳叫 n阳E四e<阳 re maining in the sollltion by a fac tor of 100. Assumin g perFect mi xing at each diluti on, what is the max imum nllmber of diluti ons one may p巳 rfo rm so th at at leas t one m o l 巳c ul e o f arseni c tri ox ide remains in the diluted solution? For co mpari son, h o m巳o p a thi c " remedi es" are co mm onl y dilllted 15 0 1' even 30 times Section 14.2 T he Ideal Gas L aw 11. ssm 1t takes 0. 16 g of he lillm (He) to fì ll a ball oon. How many grams of nitrogen (N 2) would b巳 reqllired to fìll the ball oo n to the sa me pressure , vo lum 巴 , and te mperatllre? 12. An empty oven w ith a vo lum巳 of 0. 150 m3 and a temperature of 296 K is tll rn巳d on. The oven is vented so th at the air p res s llr巳 in s id e it is always the srun e as th e air pressllre of the enviro nmen t. lniti all y, the air pressure is 1. 00 X 10 5 Pa , bll t after th巳 ove n has warmed up to a fì nal temperatllre of 453 K , th巳 atm os ph eri c air pressllre has decreased to 9.50 X 10 4 Pa due to a c h a n bσe in weather co nditi ons. How many m o l 巳s of air leave the ov巳 n whil e it is heating IIp? 13. An ideal gas at 15.5 oC and a pressllre of 1. 72 X 10 5 Pa occupi es a volllme of 2.8 1 m3 (a) How Ill any moles of gas are present? (b) lf th e volume is raised to 4. 16 m3 and th巳 temp巳rature raised to 28.2 oC , what will be the p l 巳ss ure of the gas? 14. ( Four c1 0sed tar盹 A ,川, and D ,巳川 contain an i出a l gas The table gives the abso lute press llr巳 a n d vo lllme of the gas in each tank. 1n each case , there is 0.10 11101of gas. Using this number and the data in the table , compute the te mperatllre o f the gas in eac h tank. Absolute press LII 巳 ( Pa) Volum 巳 ( m 3 ) A B C 25 .0 30.0 20.0 4 .0 5 .0 5.0 15. 电p' O xyg巳n D 2.0 75 for hospital pati巳nts is kept in special tanks , w here 由巳 oxygen has a pressllre of 65.0 atmospheres ruld a tem peratur巳 of 288 K. Tl回 国1I<:s are stored in a separat巳 roO Ill , and 由e oxygen is pllmped to the pati巳nt ' s room, where it is ad ministered at a pressure of 1.00 atlllosphere and a temperatllr巳 of 297 K. What volume does 1.00 m3 of oxygen in the tanks occupy at the conditions in the patient's room? 16. A Goodyear blimp typicall y contains 5400 m3 of helillm (H巳) at an absolute press ure of 1.1 X 10 5 Pa. The t巳 mp巳ra饥Ire of the he lillm is 280 K. What is the mass (in kg) of the he lilllll in th巳 blimp ? o m lic m o 9. The. c fo llowing statements concern how to increase the rate of difc u -tr a c k fusion (in kg/s). A lI but o n巳 s tatem e nt ar巳 a l ways tru e. Whi ch o n巳 I S not necessaril y tru巳? (a) lncrease the cross-secti onal area of the diffusion channe l, keeping constant its length and the di 仔巳 ren ce 111 solllte concentrations between its ends. (b) lncrease the difference in solllte concentrati ons between th e 巳nd s of the di ffu sion ch a nn巳 1 , keeping constant its cross-sectional area and its length. (c) D巳c rease the length of the di ffu sion channe l, ke巳pin g constant its cross-sectional area and the di ffere n c巳 in solute co n c巳ntra ti o n s between its 巳 nd s. w w .d o (d ) [ncrease the cross-sectional area of the di ffusion channel, and dew crease its length, keeping co nstant the d i仔巳 re n ce in solllte co ncentra.c .d o c u -tr a c k tions between its ends. (e) lncrease the cross-secti onal area of the diffusion channel, increase the d i 仔ere n ce in solute concentrations between its ends , and increase its length. 10. The diffll sion rate for a solllte is 4 .0 X 10- 11 kg/s in a solventfìll ed channel th at has a cross-secti onal area of 0.50 cm2 and a length k Di ffusion w w w C Section 14.4 C lic k to bu y N 14 N O W CHAPTER er 434 PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- XC h a n g e Vi e ! N y 19. ssm ln a diesel 巳ngin 巳 , the piston compl 巳 sses air at 305 K to a vo lume that is one-sixteenth of th 巳 original volllme and a press ure that is 48 .5 times the original press ur巳. What is the temperature of the air after the co mpression ? 20. A 0.030-m 3 contain巳 r is initial1 y evacuated. The口 , 4.0 g of water is placed in the container, and , aft巳r some time , a1l th巳 water evaporates. lf the t巳 mperature of the water vapor is 388 K , what is its pressure? 21. On th巳 s llnlit s urfac巳 of Venus , the atmosph巳I1 C pressure IS 9.0 X 10 6 Pa , and the temperature is 740 K. On the earth's surface th巳 atmospheric press ure is 1.0 X 10 5 Pa , while the surface temperatur巳 can reach 320 K. These data imply that VenllS has a "thicker" atmospher 巳 at its surface than do巳 s th巳巳 arth , which means that the numb巳r of molecllles p巳 r unit vo lum巳 (NIV) is greater on the sllrface of V巳 nll s than on the earth. Find the ratio (N/ V)venu,/(NIVh川' 22. When you push down on the handle of a bicycle pump , a piston in the pump cylinder co mpre ss巳s th巳 air inside th巳 cy linder. When the pl 巳 ss ure in the cy linder is grea t巳r th an th巳 pre ss ure inside the innel tube to which the pump is attached , air begins to flo w from th巳 pump to the inner tube. As a biker slowly begins to push down the handle of a bicycle pllmp , the pl 巳ss ur巳 in s id巳 the cylinder is 1.0 X 10 ) Pa , and the piston in the pllmp is 0.55 m above th巳 bottom of the cylin d巳r. The press ure in s id巳 th巳 inn e r tub巳 i s 2 .4 X 10 ) Pa. How far down mllst the biker push the handl e before air b巳gin s to flow from th巳 pump to th巳 inn e r tube? Ignore the air in the hose conn巳cting th巳 pump to the inn 巳 r tube , and assume that the temperatllre of the air in th巳 pump cylinder does not change *23. ssm www The drawing shows two thermally insulated tanks. They are conn巳cted by a valve that is initially clos巳d. Each tank contains n巳on gas at the pl巳ss ure, temp巳rature,产, = 5.0 x 10 5 Pa 5 P2 = 2.0 x 10 Pa and volume indicated in T~ = 220 K T 2 = 580 K the drawing. When th巳时= 2.0 m3 V2 = 5 .8 m ~ valve is opened , the contents of the two tanks nllX, and the pressure becomes constant through ou t. (a) What is th巳 fi nal tempel矶Ire? Ignor巳 any chang巳 111 temperature of th巳 tank s the m s巳 lves. (Hint: The heat gained by the gas in one tank is equal to that lost by the otha) (b) What is th巳 fìnal press UI毛7 to bu k ' 26. ( The dl 川19 s how s 川 deal gas confined 川咐毗r by a massless pi ston that is attached to an ideal spring. Olltside th巳 cylinder is a vac uum. The cross-sectional area of the piston is A = 2.50 X 10- 3 m2 The initial pr巳 ss ur巳 , vo lume , and temperature of the gas are , res pecti ve ly , PO, Vo = 6.00 X 10- 4 m 3, and 几= 273 K , a nd the spring is initially Piston stretched by an amount Xo = 0.0800 m with res p巳 ct to its un strained length . Th巳 ga s IS he a t时 , so that its final preSS llre , volllm巳, and temperature are Pr, Vr, and Tfo and the spring is stretched by an amount x r = 0.1000 m with res pect to its un strained length. What is the 到 nal temp巳 ratlll 巳 of the gas? ~ 27. ssm The relativ巳 hllmidity is 55 % on a day when th巳 t巳 mperature is 30.0 o Using the graph that accompanies Problem 75 in Chapter 12 , d巳 termine th 巳 number of moles of water vapor per cubic meter of aiI c. 司 28. M lI ltipl巳-Conce pt Example 4 and Conc巳 ptual Example 3 are pertinent to thi s problem. A bubble , located 0.200 m ben巳ath th巳 s ur face in a glass of b巳er, ri s巳 S to the top. The air press ur巳 at th巳 top IS 1.01 X 10 5 Pa. Assum巳 that the density of beer is the same as that of fresh wat巳r. lf the te mperature and number of moles of CO 2 in the bubble 1 巳 m a in co nstant as the bubbl巳 n ses , 自 nd the ratio of th巳 bub ble's vo lume at the top to its vo lllme at the bottom. 1' 29. Interactlve Solutlon 14.29 at www.wiley.comlco l1 ege/cutnel1 off,巳rs one approach to this problem. One assumption of the ideal gas law is that 出e atoms or molecules themselves occupy a n巳gligible volum巳. V巳门fy that this assumption is reasonable by considering gaseous xenon (Xe). Xenon has an atomic radius of 2.0 X 10- IO m. For STP conditions , calculate th巳 percentage of the total volume occupi巳d by th巳 atom s. 川 30. A s ph巳 rical balloon is made from a material whose mass is 3.00 kg. The thickness of the material is n 巳gligibl巳 compared to the 1.50-m radius of th巳 balloon. The balloon is filled with helium (He) at a t巳 mperature of 305 K and ju st f] oats in air, neither rising nor falling. The dens ity of th 巳 s urrounding air is 1. 19 kg/m 3 . Find the absolut巳 pr巳 ssure 0 1' th e helium gas. 出 * 3 1. ssm A cylindrical glass beaker of height 1.520 m rests on a table. half of the beaker is filled with a gas , and th巳 top half is fìlled with liguid mercury that is ex pos巳 d to the atmosphere. The gas and mercury do not mix because they aI巳 separated by a frictionless movable piston of negligibl 巳 m ass and thickness. The initial tempel ature is 273 K. Th巳 t巳 mperature is increased lI ntil a valu巳 is reached when one-half of the m巳rcury has spilled Oll t. Ignore the thermal expansion of the glass and the mercury , and fìnd this temperature. Th巳 bottom **32. A gas fìll s th e ri ght portion of a horizontal cylinder whos巳 radius _. theσas þ is 5.00 cm. The initi al oressure of is 1.01 X 10 5 Pa. A frictionless movable pi sto n separates th巳 gas from the left portion of the | sprint Jln cylinder, which is evacuated and contains an ideal spring , as the drawing shows. The pisto n is 1l1 1tiall y he ld in place by a pin. The spring is initi all y un strained , and the length of th巳 gas- fìll ed portion is 20.0 cm. wh巳 n the pin is remov巳d and the gas is all owed to ex pand , the length of the gas-fì1led charnbeI doubles. The initial and fìnal temperatures ar巳 equal. Determine the spring constant of the spring. ~._ UV !' 24. 孔iJultipl e-Con c巳 pt Example 4 reviews the principles that play rol 巳S in this problem. A primitive diving bell consists of a cylindrical tank with one end open and one end closed. The tank is lowered into a freshwater lake , open end downward. Water rises into the tar虫, compress ing the trapped air, whose temperature remains constant during the d巳scen t. The tank is brought to a halt wh巳 n the di stanc巳 between the surface of the water in the tank and the s UIfac巳 of the lak巳 i s 40.0 m. Atmospheric pressure at the surface of th巳 lake is 1.01 X 10 5 Pa. Find th巳 fraction of the tank's volume that is fìlled with ai r. 习' 25. Ref,巳r to Interactlve Solutlon 14.25 at www.wiley.comlcolI ege/ cutnelI for help with problems like thi s on 巴. An apartment has a room ~ ._ ~.._ 叫肌)m,~1;~ m o m o w 18. ( The volllme of an ideal gas is held constan t. Detemu削he ratio P2 1P 1 of 由e fìnal preSSllre to the initial preSSllre when th巳 temperature ofth巳 gas ri ses (a) 台 om 35.0 to 70.0 K 创ld (b) from 35.0 to 70.0 oC. lic k lic C w whos巳 dimensions are 2.5 m X 4.0 m X 5.0 m. Assume that th巳 air in the room is co mpo s巳d of 79% nitrogen (N 2) and 21 % oxygen w(0 .c .d o 2 ) c u -tr a c k At a t巳m p巳rature of 22 oC and a pressure of 1.01 X 10 5 Pa , what is the mass ( in grams) of th 巳 air? w 17. A clown at a birthday party has brought along a helillm cylinder, with . c which he intends to fill balloons. When full , each balloon con.d o c u -tr a c k tains 0.034 m3 of he lillm at an absolllte pressur巳 of 1.2 x 10 5 Pa. Th巳 cylinder contains helillm at an absolute pl 巳ssure of 1.6 x 10 7 Pa and has a volllm巳 ofO.0031 m3 • Th巳 temp巳 ratllre of th巳 h e lillm in the tank and in tbe balloons is the sa m巳 a nd remains constan t. What is the maximllm number of balloons that can b巳 自 lled ? w w w C to bu y N 435 O W PROBLEMS F- er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi ew O W ! XC y bu to k Ki netic Theory of Gases 33. Consult Multiple-Concept Example 6 to review the principles invo lved in this problem. Near the surface of Venus, th巳 rm s speed of carbon di ox ide molecules (C0 2) is 650 mJ s. What i s 由e temperature (in kelvins) of th巳 atmosph巳 re at that point? c u -tr a nd D 盯 ar陀巳 白阳11巳e d 川 w it由h mona 削 a创t 阳 34. ③ Four tanks A , B , C , 削 ga s巳s. For each ta nk, 由巳 mass of an individual atω 0口 m1 η1 and 由 th巳 rn 口 mη1 S s p巳巳d of 阳 th 忱 1e 巳 ato m s are expressed in terms of m and V忖 nl1 阳 】 1 ! 斗ιnl1 h 2 tabl 巳吩). Suppose 由 tha 刽tm = 3.32 X 10 - 药 6 kg , and Vrms = 1223 m/s. Find the t巳mpe ratllre of 由e gas in each tank. A Mass 月1 Rms speed Vnns B C D m 2v rm s 2m 2m V rm s 2v rm s 35. (ãi) Suppose a tank contains 680 m3 of neo n (Ne) at an absolute pressure of 1. 01 x 10 5 Pa. The temperature is changed from 293.2 to 294.3 K. What is the increase in the internal energy of the neon? 36. l f the translational rms speed of the water vapor molecules (H20 ) in air is 648 mJs, what is the translational rms speed of the carbon dioxide molecules (C0 2) in the same air? Both gases are at the same temperature. 37. ssm Initially, the translational rms speed of a molecule of an ideal gas is 463 m/s. The pressure and volume of this gas are kept constant, while the number of molecules is doubled. What is the fìnal translati onal rms speed of the molecules? 38. Tw o gas cylinders ar巳 identic al. One contains the monatomic gas argon (Ar) , and the other contains an equal mass of the monatomic gas krypton (Kr). The pressures in the cylinders are th巳 same , but the temperatures are differe n t. Determjne th巳 ratlO 粤皿 of A、.&.....1 Argon the … ge kinetic energy of a krypton atom to the average ki netic energy of an argon atom 39. Consult Interactive Solution 14.39 at www.wiley.comlcollege/ cutnell to see how tills problem can b巳 so lved . Y,巳ry fìne s m ok巳 p ar ticles are sllspended in ai r. The translati onal rms speed of a s mok,巳 parti cle is 2.8 x 10 mJ s, and the t巳mp巳rature is 301 K. Find the mass of a p articl巳 . • 40. A contai ner holds 2.0 mol of gas. The total average kinetic energy of the gas molecules in the contruner is equal to the kin eti c 巳 n ergy of an 8.0 X 10 - 3句 bullet with a speed of 770 m/s. What is the Kelvin temp巳ra tur巳 of the gas? 拉 41. ssm average rate (in atoms/s) at which neon ato l11 s collide with one side .c .d o of the co ntain巳r? Th巳 m ass of a single neo n atom is 3.35 X 10- 26 wkg. c u -tr a c k Section 14.4 Diffusion 45. 哼,. lnsects do not have lungs as we do , nor do they breathe ~ through their mouths. Instead , th巳y have a system of tiny tllbes , called tracheae , through w h.i ch oxygen diffuses into their bodies. The trach ea巳 beg in at the surface of an insect's body and pe n巳trate into th巳 int巳rior. S lI ppose that a trachea is 1.9 mm long with a crosssectional area of 2.1 X 10- 9 m2. The concentration of oxygen in the air outs id巳 the insect is 0.28 kg/m 3, and the diffusion constant is 1. 1 X 10- 5 m2/s. If the mass per second of oxyg巳n diffusing through a trachea is 1. 7 X 10- 12 kg/s, fìnd the oxygen concentration at the inteno l 巳nd of the tube. 46. A large tank is filled with methane gas at a concentration of 0.650 kg/m 3 . The valve of a 1.50-m pipe connecting the tank to the atm os ph巳 re is inadvertently left open for twelve hours. During thi s tim巳, 9. 00 X 10- 4 kg of meth ane diffuses out of the tank , leaving the concentrati on of methane in the tank essenti ally unchanged. Th巳 dif fusion constant for methane in ru r is 2. 10 X 10 m2/s. What is the cross-sectional area of the pipe? Assume that th巳 co n ce ntrati o n of methane in the atmosphere is zero. • 47. ssm The diffusion constant fo r the alcohol ethanol in water is 12 .4 X 10- 10 m2/s. A cylinder has a cross-sectional area of 4.00 cm2 and a length of 2.00 cm. A diff巳re n c巳 in ethanol concentration of 1.50 kg/m 3 is mruntained between the ends of th巳 cylinder. In one hour, what mass of ethanol di旺u ses through the cylinder? 48. ( When a gas is diffusing through air in a diffusion chann巳1 , the di仔U si o n rate is the number of gas atoms per second diffusing fro m one end of th巳 c h a nn el to th巳 o th er end. The faster the atoms move, the greater is the diffusion rate , so the diffusion rate is proporti onal to the rms speed of the atol11 s. The atom.i c mass of ideal gas A is 1. 0 1I , and that of ideal gas B is 2.0 u. For diffusion through the same channel under the same conditions, fìnd the rati o of the diffusion rate of gas A to the diffusion rate of gas B 49. Review Conceptllal Exa mple 7 before wo rki n g 由i s problem . For wa t巳 r vapor in air at 293 K, the di ffusion constant is D = 2 .4 X 10- 5 m2/s. As outlined in Problem 51 (纱, the time required for th巳自 rs t solute molec ules to traverse a channel of length L is t = U/(2D ), according to Fick's law. (a) Find the time t fo r L = 0.010 m. (b) For comparison, how long would a water molecule tak巳 to travel L = 0.010 m at the translati onal rms speed of water 1110lecules (assul11 ed to be an ideal gas) at a temperatu re of 2 www The pressure of sulfur dioxide (S02) is 2. 12 X 10 4 Pa. There al毛 42 1 moles of tills Dσas in a vo lume of 50.0 m3 Find the translati onal rms speed of the sulfur dioxide molecules. Hel.i ul11 (剧 , a 1110natomic gas , 创 I s a 0.0 1O -m 3 container Th巳 press ure of the gas is 6.2 X 10 5 Pa. How long would a 0.25-hp engine have to run (1 hp = 746 W) to produce an amount of energy eqllal to the intern al energy of this gas? 14 2. ( 忡43. ssm www ln 10.0 s, 200 bllllets s trik巳 a nd embed th巳 mse l ves in a wall. The bullets strike the wall perpendicularly. Each bullet has a mass of 5.0 X 10- 3 kg and a speed of 1200 m/s. (a) What is the average change in momentllm per second fo r th e bullets? (b) Determine the average force exerted on the wall. (c) Assu m.i ng the bullets are spread out over an area of 3.0 X 10- 4 m2, obtain the average pressllre th巳y ex巳rt on this region of the wall. 才 * 44. A cllbical box with each sid巳 of length 0.300 m contains 1.000 moles of neon gas at rool11 t巳 mperature (293 K). What is the 5.00 x 10- 3 m m lic c o . ack C m Section 14.3 o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W F- N CHAPTER 14 THE IDEAL GAS LAW AND KINETIC THEORY er 436 PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi ew XC h a n g e Vi ew ! bu y N O W PD to k 一一一一- Dry air **52. The drawing shows a container that is partially filled with 2.0 grams of water. The temperature is maintained at a constant 20 oC. The space above the bquid contains air that is completely saturated with water vapo r. A tube of length 0.15 m and cross-sectional area 53. At the start of a trip , a driver adj usts th巳 absolut巳 pressure in her tires to b巳 2 . 81 X 10 5 Pa when the outdoor temperature is 284 K. At the end of the trip she measures the pressure to be 3.01 X 10 5 Pa Ignoring the expansion of the tires , find the air temperature inside the tires at the end of the t目 p. 54. 电V A young male adult takes in about 5.0 X 10- 4 m 3 of fresh air during a normal breath. Fresh air contains approximately 21 % oxygen. Assuming that the pressure in the lungs is l. 0 X 10 5 Pa and that air is an ideal gas at a temperature of 310 K, find the number of oxygen molecules in a normal br 刨出 . 55. ssm Wh at is 出e density (i n kglm 3) of nitrogen gas (molecular mass = 28 u) at a pressure of 2.0 atmospheres and a tempera阳re of3lO K? 忱 1e di迂仙 f 56. ③ The 2 has a va川lu巳 of l. 06 X 10- 9 m 口1 勺 /s . In a 2.0-cm-long tube with a cross4 2 s巳ction 阳 1旧 al area of l. 5 X 10- rπm 气 , the mass rate of dωif旺 fu 山 lsi I览 盯iωon 臼 1 s m/μt = 1 4 4.2 X 10- kg/s , becaus巳 t由h巳 g剖lycωIII 巳 concentration is maintained at a value of 8.3 X 10 kg/m 3 at one end of the tube and at a lower value at the other end. What is the lower concentration? • 57. ssm The average value of the squared speed v 2 does not equal the square of the average speed (百 ) 2 . To verify this fact , consider three particles with the following speeds: V I = 3.0 m/s , V 2 = 7.0 m/s , and V 3 = 9.0 m/s. Calcu late (a) v 2 = ~ (v? + v l + v } ) and (b) (v? = [ ~ (VI + v2 十 问 )] 2. 58. Refer to Multiple-Concept Example 6 for insight into the concepts used in this problem. An oxygen molecule is moving near the earth 's surface. Another oxygen molecule is moving in the ionosphere (the uppermost part of the earth's atmosphere) where the Kelvin temperature is three times greater. Deterrrune th巳 ratio of the translational rrns speed in the ionosphere to the translation aI rms sp巳巳d near the earth' s surface. 59. ssm A tank contains 0.85 mol of molecular nitrogen (N 2). Determine the mass (i n grams) of nitrogen that must be removed from the tank in order to lower 由 e pressure from 38 to 25 atm. Assume that the volume and temperature of the nitrogen in the tank do not change. 习 60. Estimate the spacing between the centers of neighboring atoms in a piece of solid aluminum , based on a knowledge of the density (2700 kg/m 3) and atomic mass (26.98 15 u) of aluminum. (Hint: Assume that the volume of the solid is filled with many small cubes, with one atom at the center of each.) 世 6 1. Intera c1 ive Solution 14.61 at www.wiley.com/college/cutnell a model for problems of this type. Th巳 temperature near th巳 sllrface of the earth is 291 K. A xenon ato m (atomic mass = 13 1. 29 ll) has a kinetic energy equal to the average translational kinetic 巳 nergy and is moving straight up. If th巳 atom do巳s not collide with any other atoms or molecllles , how high IIp will it go before coming to rest? Assume that 由e acceleration dlle to gravity is constant throUghOllt the ascen t. provid巳s *62. Compressed air can be pumped llnderground into huge cavems as a form of energy storage. The vol ll me of a cav巳m is 5.6 X 10 5 m3, and the pressure of the air in it is 7.7 X 10 6 Pa. Assume that air is a diatomic id巳al gas whose intemal energy U 比 given by U = ~ I1RT. If one home llses 30.0 kW . h of en巳rgy per day , how many homes cOllld th is intemal e n巳rgy serve for one day? -* 63. 电害,. When perspiration on the human body absorbs heat , some of the perspiration tums into water vapor. The latent heat of vaporization at body temperature (37 oc) is 2 .42 X 10 6 J/kg. The heat absorbed is approximately equal to the average energy E given to a single water molecllle (H 20) tÏ mes the nllmber of water molecules that are vaporized. What is E ? 3 l'* 64. The mass of a hot-air balloon and its occupants is 320 kg (excluding the hot air inside the balloon). The air outside the balloon has a pressure of l.01 X 10 5 Pa and a density of l.29 kg/m 3 . To lift off, the air insid巳 the balloon is heated. The volllme of th巳 h巳ated balloon is 650 m3 . The pressure of the heated air remains the sam巳 as the pressure of the olltside ai r. To what temperature (in kelvins) must th巳 air be heated so that the balloon jllSt lifts 0旺? The moleclllar mass of air is 29 II m lic 0.15 m o m o k lic w 3.0 X 10- 4 m2 connects the water vapor at one end t。但r 出at remains w completely dry at th巳 other end . The diffusion constant for water .c . d ovac u -tr a c k por in air is 2 .4 X 10- 5 m2/s. How long does it take for the water in the container to evaporate completely? (Hint: R吃fe r to Problem 75 in Chapter 12 tofind the pressure ofthe water vapo r.) w ssm www Review Conceptual Exar口ple 7 as background for this problem. It is possible to convert Fick's law into a forrn that is us巳ful .c .d o k c u -tr a c when the concentration is zero at one end of the diffusion channel (C 1 = 0 in Figure 14.15α) . (a) Noting that AL is 出e volum巳 Vofthe channel and that m/V is the average concentration of solute in the channel , show that Fick's law becomes t = C/(2D). This form of Fick's law can be used to estimate 由etim巳 requ ired for the first solute molecules to traverse th巳 channel. (b) A bottle of perfum巳 is opened in a room where convection currents are absen t. Assuming that the diffusion constant for perfume in a让 is l. 0 X 10- 5 m2/s, estimate th巳 minimum time required for 由巳 perfume to be smelled 2.5 cm away. C 。' 5 1. w w w C to bu y N O W F- ADDITIONAL PROBLEMS 437 er ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi e N y bu to lic .d o o w .c m C m c u -tr a c k c u -tr a c k 丁 HERMODYNAMICS A high-performance Funny Car dragster accelerates down the track. Such dragsters use a heat engine for propulsion that can develop 8000 or more horsepower. Note the "header flames" from the exhaust system The laws that govern the use of heat and work form the basis of thermodynamics , the subject of this chapter. (@ Oavid Allio/lco 门 SM I/Corbis) THERMOOVNAMIC SVSTEMS ANO THEIR SURROUNDINGS Figure 15.1 The air in thjs colorful hot-air balloon js one example of a thermodynarnk system (@ William Panzer/Alamy Images) 438 w k C H A P T E R 1 !5 o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W ! XC er O W F- w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- We have studied heat (Chapter 12) and work (Chapter 6) as separate topics. Often , however, th巳y occur simultaneously. 1n an automobile engine , for in sta nc巳 , fuel is burned at a relatively high temperature , some of its int巳 rnal 巳 nergy is used for doing th 巳 work of driving the pistons lI P and down , and th巳 excess h 巳 at IS 1 巳 mov巳 d by th 巳 cooling system to pr巳vent overheating. Thermodynamics is th 巳 branch of physics that is built upon the fundam 巳 ntal laws that heat and work obey. 1n thermodynamjcs the collection of objects on which attention is b巳ing focus巳 d is called the system, whil巳巳V巳rything els巳 in the environment is called th 巳 surroundings. For 巳xample , the system in an alltomobile engine could b巳 th巳 burning gasoline , while the surroundings would th巳 n inclllde the pistons , the 巳 xhaust system , th 巳 radiator, and th 巳 outs ide a让, The system and its surroundings are se p创'ated by walls of some kjnd. Wall s that permit h 巳 at to flow through them , such as those of th 巳 engine block , are called diathermal walls. P巳rfectly insulating walls that do not permit h巳at to flow between the system and its surroundings are known as adiabatic walls. To understand what the laws of thermodynamics have to say about the relation ship betw 巳巳 n heat and work , it is n巳 ce ssary to describ巳 the physical condition or state of a system. We might be int巳 rested , for instance , in the hot air within the balloon in Figure 15. 1. The hot air itself would b巳 th 巳 system , and th 巳 skin of th 巳 balloon provides the walls that separate this syst巳 m from th 巳 s urrounding cooler ai r. The state of the system would b巳 sp巳cifi巳d by giving values for th巳 pressur巳 , volum巴 , temperature , and mass of th 巳 hot ai r. As this chapter discusses , th巳re are four laws of thermodynamics. W巳 begin with the one known as the zeroth law and th巳 n consider the remaining three. .c h a n g e Vi ew N y bu to k lic .c The zeroth law of thermodynanucs deal s with th 巳 conc巳 pt of thermal equilibrium. Two systems ar巳 said to be in thermal equi librium if there is no net 饲 ow ofh 巳 at b巳 tween them when th巳y are brought into thermal contac t. For instance , you ar巳 d巳finitely not in thermal equilibrium with the wat巳r in Lake Michigan in January. Just dive into it , and you will find out how quickly your body l os巳 sh巳 at to the frigid water. To help 巳xplain the c巳 n tral idea of the zeroth law of thermodynamics , Figure 15 .2αs hows two s yst巳 ms labeled A and B. Each is within a container whose adiabatic wall s are made from insulation that prevents the flow of heat, and each has the same t巳 mp巳rature , as indicated by a thermometer. 1n pωt b , one wall of 巳 ach container is replaced by a thin silver sheet, and th巳 two sheets are touched together. Silver has a larg巳 thermal conductivity, so heat flow s through it r巳 ad ily and the s ilv巳r she巳ts b巳hav巳 a s diathermal walls. Even though the diathermal walls would pern1i t it , no net flow of heat occurs in part b , indicating that th 巳 two systems are in thermal equilibrium. Th巳re is no net flow of h巳 at b巳cau se the two systems have the sa m 巳 temperature. We see , th巳 n , that temperature is the indicator 01 thermal equilibrium in the sense that there is no net .flow 01 heat between two systems in thermal contact that have the same temperature. In Figure 15.2 the thermometer plays an important role. System A is in equilibrium with the thermometer, and so is system B. ln each cas巳, the th巳 rmometer regi sters the sam 巳 temperatul 巳, th 巳reby indicating that the two sys t巳 ms ar巳 equally ho t. Consequently, systems A and B are found to be in thermal equilibrium with 巳ach other. ln effect , th巳 thermometer is a third syst巳 m. The fact that system A and system B are 巳ach in thermal equilibrium with this third syst巳 m at th巳 same temperature m巳 an s that th巳y aI巳 in thennal equilibrium w ith each other. Thi s finding is an example of the zeroth law 01 thermodynamics. Diathermal walls (silver) (b) Figure 15.2 (α) Systems A and B aI巳 surrounded by adiabatic walls and register the same temperature on a thermometer. (b) Wh en A is put into thermal contact with B through diathermal wa lI s, no net flow of heat occurs b巳 tween the syst巳 ms . Tw o systems individually in thermal equilibrium with a third system* are in tbermal equilibrium with eacb otb巳E The zeroth law 巳 stablis be s temperature as the indicator of thermal equilibrium a nd implies that all parts of a system mu st be in th 巳 rmal eq uilibrium if the system is to have a definable single t巳 mperature. 1n oth巳 r words , ther巳 can b巳 no tlow of heat within a system that is in thermal equilibrium. THE FIRST LAW OF THERMODVNAMICS o-.. ~ . - - ---o - ~ "' ~ ' . _ "" Problem-solving insight """ """" 'b *The state of the third system is the same when it is in th巳rmal 巳quilibriu l1l with either of the two systems. 1n Figllre 15.2 , for examp l e , 由巳l1lercll ry level is th巳 same in the ther l1l ometer in either syste l1l. c u -tr a c k (α) THE ZEROTH LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS Th巳 atoms and molecul 巳 s of a s ub sta nc巳 have kin 巳tic and potential 巳 nergy. These and other kinds of molecular energy constitute the internal e nergy of a s ub sta nc巳 .Wh 巳 na substance participates in a process involving energy in the fo rm of work and h 巳 at , th 巳 111ternal en巳 rgy of the substance can chang巳. Th巳 relationship between work , heat , and changes in the int巳rnal energy is known as the first law of thermodynamics. W,巳 will now see that the first law of thermodynamics is an 巳 xpression of the cons巳 rvation of 巳 nergy. Suppose that a system gains heat Q and that this is th巳 only effect occurring. Consist巳 nt with the law of conservation of energy, th巳 internal energy of the syst巳 m incl 巳ases from an initial value of Uj to a fìnal value of Ur, th巳 chang巳 b巳 ing t;" U = Uf - Uj = Q. ln writing thi s equation , w巳 us巳 th巳 convention that heαt Q is positive when the system gains heat and negative when the system loses heat. The int巳rnal en巳 rgy of a system can also change because of work. If a system does work W on its sLmoundings and there is no heat flow,巳 n巳rgy conservation indicates that th巳 interna l energy of the system decreases from Uj to Ur, the change now being t;" U = U "'"'1, - U "-'1 = - W. The minus s iσn is included b巳cau se we follow the convention that work is positive when it is done by the system and negative when it is .d o m w o c u -tr a c k o m C lic k NII THE ZEROTH LAW OF THERMODVNAMICS Iri w w .d o w w w C to bu y N 439 ! PD XC er O W F- 15.3 THE FIRST lAW O F THER MODYNAMICS O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- Problem-solving insight .c ! O W THERMODYNAMICS h a n g e Vi e y to bu y k THE FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS Work Heat The int巳mal energy of a system changes from an initial value Uj to a fin a1 value of Uf due to heat Q and work W: 6.. U = U f (a) - Uj = Q - W (1 5.1) Q is positive when the system gains heat and negative when it loses heat. W is positive when work is done by the system and 乒任,问 negativ巳 when work is done on the system. Surroundings, Example 1 illustrates the use of Equation 15.1 and the sign conventions for Q and W. 。 Exarn回e 1 Wørk Heat (b) Figure 15.3 (a) The system gains energy in the form of heat but loses energy because work is done by the system. (b) Th巳 syst巳m gains energy in the form ofh巳at and also gains energy because work is done on the system Problem-solving insight When using the first law of thermodynamics , as expressed by Equation 15.1 , be careful to follow the proper sign conventions for the heat Q and the work W. Positive and Negative Work Figure 15.3 illustrates a system and its surroundings. In part a , th巳 system gains 1500 J of h巳 at from its surroundings , and 2200 J of work is done by the system on the surroundings. In part b , the system also gains 1500 J of heat, but 2200 J of work is done on th巳 system by the surroundings. In each case , determine the change in the internal energy of the system Reasoning In Figure 15.3a the system loses more energy in doing work than it gains in the forrn of heat , so th 巳 internal energy of th巳 system decreases. Thus , we expect the change in the int巳 rnal energy, !1 U = Uf - Uj , to be negative. In p盯t b of the drawing , the system gains 巳n ergy in the form of both heat and work. The internal energy of the system increases , and we expect !1 U to be positive. Solution (a) Th巳 heat is positive , Q = + 1500 J, since it is gained by the system. Th巳 work is positive , W = +2200 J , since it is done by the syst巳 m. According to the first law of thermodynamics !1 U= Q - W= (+1500 J) 一 (+2200 J) The minus sign for !1U indicates that th巳 internal = 1-700 J 1 (15 .1) energy has decreased , as expected. (b) Th巳 heat is positive , Q = 十 1500 J, since it is gained by the system. But th巳 tive , W = -2200 J, since it is done on the system. Thus , work !1 U= Q - W= (+1500 J) 一 (-2200 J) = 1+ 3700 J 1 The plus sign for !1 U indicates that the internal 巳nergy has increas巳d , is nega- (15.1) as expected. In the first law of thermodynamics , the internal energy U , heat Q, and work W are enquantities , and each is expressed in energy units such as joules. However, th巳r巳 is a fundamental difference between U , on th巳 one hand , and Q and W on the other. The n巳xt example sets the stag巳 for explaining this di旺erence . 巳rgy O Exarnple 2 An Ideal Gas Th巳 temp巳rature of three moles of a monatomic ideal gas is reduced from T j = 540 K to T f = 350 K by two different methods. In the first method 5500 J of heat flows into the gas , whereas in the second , 1500 J of heat flows into it. In 巳 ach case find (a) th巳 change in the internal energy and (b) the work don 巳 by the gas. Reasoning Sinc巳优 internal ene韧 of a monatomic i伽I gas is U = ~nRT (Equation 14.7) and sinc巳 the number of moles n is fixed , only a change in temperature T can alt巳r the internal en巳rgy. Because the change in T is the same in both methods , the change in U is also the same. From the given t巳mperatures , the change !1 U in internal energy can be determined. Then ,由e first law of thermodynamics can be used with I1 U and the giv巳nh巳at values to caIc ulate the work for each of the methods. m lic m o c o k lic C c u -tr . ack C to bu w w .d o done on the system. A system can gain or lose 巳nergy simultaneously in the form of heat Q and work W. The change in internal energy due to both factors is given by Equation 15.w1. .c .d o c u -tr a c k Thus , th巳 first law of thermodynamics is just the conservation-of-energy principle applied to heat , work, and the change in th巳 intemal 巳nergy. ./ r四 w w w w N 15 XC N O W CHAPTER F- er 440 w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi ew XC h a n g e Vi ew ! to bu y N O W PD lic k of a monatomic ideal gas , we find = ~nR(Tf - T = ~(3.0 mol)[8.31 j) (b) Since ð. U is now known to deterrnine th巳 work : and 由巳 heat J/(mol' K)](350 K - 540 K) = 1- ð. U= 目00 J 一(一 7100 J ) = W= Q - 2ndmethod W=Q 一 ð. U= 臼00 J 一 (斗 100 J) = 18600 J I m c u -tr a c k 7100 J 1 is given in each method , Equation 15.1 can 1st method .d o o w c u -tr a ð. U C internal 巳nergy m Solution (a) Using Equation 14.7 for the for . c each method of adding heat that ck o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W F- 15 .4 THER MAL PROCESSES 441 er ! XC er PD F- b巳 u sed 11 2 600 J I In each method the gas does work , but it does more in the first method. To und巳rstand th巳 difference between U and eith巳r Q or W, consider the value for !:::.U in Example 2. In both methods !:::.U is th巳 same. Its value is deterrnin巳d once the initial and final t巳 mperatures are specified because the internal energy of an id巳 al gas d巳pend s only on the temperature. Temperature is one of the variables (along with pressure and volume) that d巳自 n巳 the stat巳 of a system . The internal energy depends on秒 on the state of a system, not on the method by which the system arrives at a given state. In r巳cognition of thi s characteristic , int巳rnal energy is referred to as a function of state. * In contrast, heat and work are not functions of state b巳cau se they have different values for each diff,巳rent method used to make the system change from one state to another, as in Example 2. Problem-solving insight ~ CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING (The answer is given at the end of the book.) 1. A gas is enclosed within a chamber that is fitted with a frictionless piston . The piston is then pushed in , thereby compressing the gas. Which statement below regarding this process is consistent with the first law of thermodynamics? (a) The internal energy of the gas will increase. (b) The internal energy of the gas will decrease. (c) The internal energy of the gas will not change. (d) The internal energy of the gas may increase , decrease , or remain the same , depending on the amount of heat that the gas gains or loses. 守 11 uHl. .- THERMAL PROCESSES ..I A system can interact with its surro undings in many ways , and the heat and work that come into play always obey th巳白 rs t law of thermodynamics. This section introduces four common thermal processes. In each case , the process is assumed to be quasi-static, which means that it occurs slowly enough that a uniform pressure and te mperature exist throughout a11 regions of the syst巳 m at all tim巳 s. An isobaric process is one that occurs at consωnt pressure. For instance , Figure 15 .4 shows a substance (solid , liquid , or gas) contained in a chamber fitted with a frictionless piston. The pressure P experi巳 nc巳 d by the substance is always the same , b巳cau se it is deterrnined by the external atmosphere and th巳 weight of the piston and the block resting on it. Heating the substance makes it expand and do work W in lifting the piston and block through the displacement 言 The work can b巳 calcul ated from W = Fs (Equation 6 .1) , where F is the magnitude of the forc巳 and s is the mag nitllde of the di splacemen t. The forc巳 i s generated by the pressure P acting on the bottom sllrface of the piston (area = A) , according ω F = PA (Equation 10.19) . 认rith this substitlltion for F, the work becomes W = (PA)s . But the product A . s is the change in volllme of the material, !:::. V = Vf 一町, where Vf and Vj are the final and initial volumes , respectively. Thus , the relation is lsobaric process W= P !:::.V= P(Vr - Vj ) (1 5.2) Consistent with our sign convention , this reslllt predicts a positive vallle for the work don巳 by a system when it expands isobarically (Vf exceeds Vj ) . Equation 15.2 also applies to an *The fact that an ideal gas is used in Example 2 does not restrict our conclusion. Had a real (nonideal) gas or other material been used , the onl y di 仔'eren ce would have been that the expression for the internal energy would have been more compl icated. 1t might have involved the volume V, as well as the temperature T , for instance F= PA F= PA kk Figure 15.4 The substance in the chamber is expanding isobarically because the pressure is held constant by the external atmosphere and the weight of the piston and the block .c PD ! XC h a n g e Vi e N to bu y N y bu to k c Example 3 Iso b a ri c Exp ansi o n o f Water One gram of water is placed in the cylinder in Figur巳 15 .4, and the pressure is maintained at 2.0 X 105 Pa. The temperature of the water is raised by 31 C O • In one cas巳 , the water is in the liquid phase, 巳xpands by the small amount of 1. 0 x 10- 8 m 3, and has a specifìc heat capacity of 4186 J/(kg . C O ). In another case , the water is in the gas phase , expands by the much greater amount of 7.1 X 10- 5 m3, and has a sp巳cifìc h巳at capaci ty of 2020 万(kg . C O ) . Detennin巳 the chang巳 in th巳 internal energy of the wat巳r in each case. Reasoning The chang巳 ~U in the intern a1 energy is given by the fìrst law of thermodynamics as ~U = Q - W (Equation 15.1). The h巳at Q may be evaluated as Q = cm ~T (Equation 12.4). Fin a1 1y, since the process occurs at a constant pr巳 ssur巳 (isobaric) , the work W may b巳 found using W = P ~ V (Equation 15 .2). Knowns and Unknowns The following table summarizes the Description giv巳n Symbol Value m data: Comment Mass of water Pressur巳 on water Increase in t巳 mperature Increase in volume of liquid Specifìc h巳 at capacity of liquid Increa s巳 in volume of gas Specifìc h巳 at capacity of gas ~VI叩 id Cgas 1. 0 g 2.0 X 105 Pa 31 C。 1. 0 X 10- 8 m3 4186 J/(kg' C O ) 7 .1 X 10- 5 m3 2020 J/(kg . C O ) Unknown Variables Change in internal energy of liquid Change in internal energy of gas ~Uliquid 7 ~Ugas 7 P ~T Cliquid ~Vgas 0.0010 kg Pressure is constan t. Expansion occurs. Expansion occurs. Modeling the Problem E圃 T、heF 川 山 eF First 山川啊 Law 川r咱叫 w of 旷川le 阳阳町… e町 e叫 口 rrm m m is given by 出 t h巳 first law of 仙 t h巳町rmodyna 缸mη 旧 ùcs趴, as shown at the righ t. In Equation 15.1 , neither the h巳 at Q nor the work W is known , so we turn to Steps 2 and 3 to evaluate them. M E圃I Heat and Specific Heat Ca川ty Acc叫ng to Equation 山, 川削 Q needed to raise th巳 t巳mperature of a mass m of material by an amount ~T is |Q= cm ~T I •• I Q=cm 飞 (1 2.4) where c is the material' s specifìc heat capacity. Data 缸巳 available for all of the terms on 出 e right side of this expression , which can be substituted into Equation 15.1, as shown at the righ t. The remaining unknown variable in Equation 15.1 is the work W, and we 巳valuate it in Step 3. m固 W 响or此k】ω{Done 剖 a tCωon削 sta删 nt Pressure 町e Und 毗 1缸 c∞onst 川 s创tan叫m盹 Oωr i osωob阳 缸 an ∞ c ondi凶 tlOns趴, the work W don巳 i臼s given by Equation 15.2 as | W= P ~V I where P is 出e pressure acting on the mat巳rial and ~ V is the chang巳 in the volume of th巳 materia l. Substitution of this expression into Equation 15.1 is shown at the righ t. (15.1) (1 2 .4) (15.2) m lic o c u -tr . ack C m C lic k isobar北 compression (Vf \ess than VJ Th巳 n , the work is negative , since work must b巳 done w , on the system to compress it. Example 3 emphasizes that W = P ~ V applies to any system .c .d o c u -tr a c k solid , liquid , or gas , as long as the pressure remains constant while the vo\ume changes. w w .d o w w w w er O W F- ! w 442 CHAPTE R 15 TH ERMODYNAMICS O W h a n g e Vi e o XC er PD F- PD N . ??AT甲!1T 一川 Applying this A【U 叫 /1叩 jd r巳 sult .d o m o m w o c u -tr a c k C lic k to bu y N y bu to k lic C Solution Combining the results of each step algebraically, we find that c w w .d o w w w ! C h a n g e Vie w er O W -X 15.4 THERMAL PROCESSES F 443 O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k to the Ii quid and to the gaseous water gives = C1 叩j q耶甲叩uωA = [4186 J/尺(kg'C。勺) ](0.0010 kg)(31 C。可) - (ο2. 0 x 10 伊5 Paω)(ο1. 0 x 10一 8 m3巧) = 130J 一 0.0020 J = 1130 JI !1 Ugas = cgasm ÂT - P !1 V: = [2020 J/(kg' C )](O.OO lO kg)(31 C ) 一 (2 . 0 X 105 Pa)(7.1 X 10- 5 m 3) O = 63 O J 一川=囚 For the Ii quid , virtually all the 130 J of h 巳 at s巳rves to chang巳 the int巳rnal energy, sinc巳 the volum巳 chang巳 and the corresponding work of expansion ar巳 so small. 1n contrast , a significant fraction of the 63 J of heat added to the gas causes work of expansion to be done , so that only 49 J is left to change th巳 int巳rnal energy. Related Homework: Problem 14 ' P UL 3的的ω』 ι O Vf Vj Volume Figure 15.5 For an isobaric process , a pressure-versus-volume plot is a hori zontal straight line, and the work done [W = P(Vr - Vj )] is the colored reclangular area under the graph. 才llIAIl-t ? Pf U』3町的UL ι Pj 11 ·V 1t is often convenÏent to display thermal processes graphically. For in s tanc巳, Figur巳 15.5 shows a plot of PI 巳 ssure versus volum 巳 for an i so b aric 巳 x p a n s ion . Since th 巳 pressllre is constant , th巳 graph is a horizontal straight line , beginning at the initial volume V j a nd 巳 ndin g at the final volume Vf . 1n terms of such a plot , the work W = P(Vr - VJ is th 巳 are a und巳 r the graph , which is the shaded rectangle of height P and width Vr - Vj • Another common thermal process is an isochoric process, one that occurs at constant volume. Figure 15 .6α illu strates an isochoric process in which a sllbstance (solid , liquid , or gas) is heated. The substance would expand if it could , but the rigid container k巳eps the vo lum 巳 co n stant , so the pressure-volum 巳 plot shown in Figure 15 .6b is a vertical straight line. Because the volume is constant, the pressure inside ri ses , and the substance exerts more and more force on the walls. Althouσh enormous forc巳 s can b巳 σ巳 nerated in the D c1 0sed container, no work is done (W = 0 J) , sinc巳 th巳 walls do not move. Consistent with zero work being done , theω'ea under th 巳 vertical straight lin 巳 in Figur巳 15.6b is z巳ro . Sinc巳 no work is done , the first law of thermodynamics indicates that th 巳 h巳 at in an isochoric process serves only to chang巳 the int巳rnal energy: !1 U = Q - W = Q. A third important thermal process is an isothermal process, one that takes place at constant temperature. The next s巳ctio n illustrates the importa nt features of an isothermal process when th巳 sys tem is a n ideal gas. Last , there is the adiabαtic proce叫 one that occurs without the transfer of heat. Since there is no heat transfer, Q equals zero , and th 巳白 rs t law indicates that !1 U = Q - W = - W. Thus , wh巳n work is done by a system ad iabatically, W is pos itive and th 巳 int巳 rna l 巳 nergy decreases by exactly th 巳 amount of the work done. When work is don e o n a system adiabatically , W is negative and the intern a l 巳 n ergy in c reas巳 s corr巳 s pondin g l y. Th 巳 n 巳 xt s 巳 c tion di sc usses an adiabatic proc巳 ss for an id 巳 al gas A process may be complex e nough that it is not recognizable as one of the four just discussed. For instance , Fi g ure 15 .7 shows a proc巳ss for a gas in which the press ur巳, volume , and te mperature ar 巳 changed along the straight line from X to Y. With th巳 aid of integral calculus , th巳 following can be proved . Problem -solving insight: The area under a pressure-volume graph is the work for any kind of process. Thus , the area representII1 g th巳 work has b e巳 n color Vol ume (b) (a) Figure 15.6 (α) The substance in th巳 chamber is being heated isochorically b巳cau se the rigid chamber keeps the volume constan t. (b) The pressure-volume plot for an isochoric process is a vertical straight line. The area under the graph is zero , indicating that no work is done. .c ! O W THERMODYNAMICS y to bu y bu to c Det巳rmine .d o the work for the process in which the pr巳 ssure , volume , and temperature of a gas are changed along the straight Ii n巳 from X to Y in Figure 15.7 Reasoning The work is given by the area (i n color) und巳r the straight line between X and Y. Since the volum巳 increases , work is done by the gas on the surroundings , so the work is positive. The area can b巳 found by counting squares in Figure 15.7 and multiplying by th巳 area per square. Solution We estimate that there are 8.9 color巳d sqllares in th巳 drawing. The area of one is (2.0 X 10 5 Pa)( l. O X 10- 4 m3) = 2.0 X 10 1 J , so th巳 work is sq ll ar巳 w= +(8.9 叩ares)(2.0 X 川 J/叩则= 1+180 J I 。 ω』3的的ω』 ι ~ CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING (The answers are given at the end of the book.) 2. The drawing shows a pressllre-versus-volume plot for a three-step process: A • 8 , B • C, and C •A. For each step , the work can be positive , negative , or zero. Which answer in the table co rrectly describes the work for the three steps? Wo rk Done by the System A • labede l) { ) { ) ll B Positive Positive Negative Positive Negative B • C Negative Positive Negative Negative Positive B C • A Negative Negative Positive Zero Zero ωL2国的ω』且 Volume Figure 15.7 The colored area gives the work done by 出巳 gas for the process from X to Y. A C Volume 3. Is it possible for the temperature of a substance to rise without heat flowing into the substance? (a) Yes , provided that the volume of the substance does not change. (b) Yes , provided that the substance expands and does positive work. (c) Yes , provided that work is done on the substance and it contracts. E3 的的ω』 ι 4. The drawing shows a pressure-versus-volume graph C in which a gas expands at constant pressure from A to 8 , and then goes from 8 to C at constant volume. Complete the table by deciding Q ð. U W whether each of the four unspecified quantities ? + 7 is positive (+), negative A • B A B ? ? B • C + (一), or zero (0) Volu me 5. When a solid melts at constant pressure , the volume of the resulting liqu id does not differ much from the volume of the solid. According to the first law of thermodynamics , how does the interna l ene rgy of the liquid compare to the internal energy of the solid? The internal energy of the liquid is (a) greater than , (b) the same as , (c) less than the internal energy of the solid. Hot water at temperature T (α) ωL3 的的ω』且 THERMAL PROCESSES USING AN IDEAL GAS ISOTHERMAl EXPANSION OR COMPRESSION Volume (b) Figure 15.8 (a) The ideal gas in the cylinder is expanding isothermally at temperature T. Th巳 force holding th巳 piston in place is reduced slowly, so th巳 expansion occurs quasi-statically. (b) The work done by the gas is given by the colored area. wh巳n a system performs work isothermally, the temperature remains constan t. In Figure 15.8α , for instanc巳 , am巳tal cylind巳 r contains n mol 巳 s of an id巳 al gas , and the large mass of hot water maintains the cylind巳r and gas at a constant Kelvin temperature T. The piston is held in p\ac巳 initially so the vo\um巳 of the gas is V i • As th巳 externa\ force appli巳d to th巳 piston is reduc巳d quasi-statically, the pressure decreas巳 s as th巳 gas 巳xpands to the fìnal volum巳 Vf • Figure 15 .8b gives a plot of pressur巳 (P = nRT/V) v巳rsus vo\um巳 for the process . Th巳 solid red line in th巳 graph is called an isotherm (m巳 aning "constant temperature") and represents the relation betw巳en press ur巳 and vol ume wh巳 n the t巳 mperature is m o w o c u -tr . ack C lic k Work and the Area Under a Pressure-Volume Graph m C lic k Example4 w w .d o w w w w N 15 h a n g e Vi e N O W CHAPTER XC er 444 F- w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c h a n g e Vi ew y bu to w= nR叫 .d o m w o m Isothermal expanS lO n or compression of an ideal gas C lic k held constan t. The work W done by the gas is not given by W = P ß V = P (Vf - VJ because the pressure is not constan t. Nevertheless , the work is eqllal to the area under the .c c u -tr a c k graph. Th巳 techniques of integral calculus lead to the following result* for W: o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N 445 ! PD O W XC N F- er 15.5 THERMAL PROCESSES USING AN IDEAL GAS O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k (15.3) Where-does the 巳 nergy for this work originate? Since th 巳 internal energy of any ideal gas is proportional to the Kelvin temperature (U = ~ nRT for a monatomic ideal gas , for 巳xample) , the int巳rnal energy remains constant throughollt an isothermal process , and the change in internal energy is zero. As a result , the first law of thermodynamics becomes ßU = 0 = Q - W. ln other words , Q = W, and the en巳 rgy for the work originates in the hot water. Heat ftows into the gas from the water, as Figure 15.8a illustrates. If the gas is compressed isoth巳rmally, Equation 15.3 still appli臼, and heat ftows Ollt of the gas into the wat巳r. Example 5 deals with the isoth巳rmal expansion of an id巳 al gas. Exan冒 ple5 Isothermal Expansion of an Ideal Gas Two moles of the monatomic gas argon expand isothermally at 298 K , from an initial volum巳 of Vj = 0.025 m3 to a final volllme ofV f = 0.050 m3 . Assllming that argon is an ide aJ gas , find (a) the work done by the gas , (b) the change in the internal en巳 rgy of th巳 gas , and (c) the heat supplied to the gas. Reasoning and Solution (a) The work done by W=n川 R盯T 叫丘旦) 飞 V, I = 由 t h巳 gas (ω2 川川 O叫 m州 mo 01仰)[阳 1) 8幻3川 1门Jν阳/ … (b) The internal energy of a monatornic ideal gas is U change when (c) Th巳 heat can be fOllnd from Eqllation 飞 U.UL己3 町1γ" I = 15.3 丘: 4 一一一一一一-一 ~ nRT (Eqllation 14.7) and does not perature is constan t. Therefo战 1 ßU = 0 JI Q 'supplied can be deterrnined from the first law of thermodynarnics: Q = ßU + W = 0 J + 3400 J = ~豆豆E (1 5 .1 ) ADIABATl C EXPANSION OR COMPRESSION Adiabatic expans lO n or compression of amonatomic idealgas Insu lating material (a) Pj ω』2町的ωL 且 When a system perfonns work adiabatically, no heat ftows into or out of the system. Figure 15.9a shows an arrangem巳 nt in which n moles of an ideal gas do work under adiabatic conditions ,巳xpanding quasi-statically from an initial volum巳 Vj to a final volume Vr. The arrang巳 ment is similar to that in Figure 15 .8 for isothermal 巳xpansion. However, a diffl巳rent amount of work is done her巳 , b巳cause th巳 cylinder is now surrounded by insulating material that pr巳vents the ftow of heat from occurring , so Q = 0 J. According to the first law of th巳rmodynarnics , the change in internal 巳 nergy is ßU = Q - W = - W. Since the internal energy of an ide aJ monatornic gas is U = ~ nRT (Equation 14凡 it follows directly that ßU = Uf - Uj 二 ~nR(冉一引), where 贝 and 冉的 the initial and final Kelvin temperatures. With this substitution , the relation ßU = - W becomes PtI- --→一-~ 问 Volume Vf (b) W = ~nR(引鸟) (1 5 .4) When an ideal gas expands adiabatically, it does positive work , so W is positive in Equation 15 .4. Therefore , the te口口 Tj - Tf is also positive , so 由e final temperature of the gas must be less 出 an the initial temperature. The internal energy of the gas is reduced to *In this result , "In" denotes the naturallogarithm to the base e = 2.71828. The naturallogarithm is related to the common logarithm to the base ten by In(Vf/V;) = 2.303 10g(Vf/V;). Figure 15.9 (α) The ideal gas in the cylinder is expanding adiabatically. The force holding the piston in place is redllced slowly, so the expansion occurs qllasi-statically. (b) A plot of pressure verslls volllme yields the adiabatic cllrve shown in red , which intersects 由e isotherms (bllle) at 由e initial temperature Tj and the final temperature Tf . The work don巳 by the gas is given by the colored area. .c THERMODYNAMICS F- h a n g e Vi ew O W ! XC y bu k lic .c m o o c u -tr a c k C w w w .d o m C lic k Table 15.1 Summary of Thermal Processes w w w to to bu y N 15 N O W CHAPTER er 446 PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- . .d o c u -tr a c k First Law of Thermodynarnics Typ巳 of Thermal Process Isobaric (constant pr巳ssur巳) Isochoric (constant volum巳) Work (ð. U Don 巳 W= P(Vr - Vj) Q - W) = ð. U = Q - P(Vr - V j) 、-r-----------' W W=OJ Isoth巳rmal (constant temperature) W= nRT In { V, \ I 一ι| 飞V:/ oJ = Q- 」一-..--' 飞 ð. U for an W = ~ nR(Tj - T r) (for a monatornic ideal gas) ~r ) V . J 一一斗千二二J ideal gas Adiabatic (no h巳at f1 ow) nRTl n ( W AU =OJ- j nR何一 Tr) 、---v--' 、--一一一~一一一~ Q W provide the nec巳 ssary 巳 n巳rgy to do the work , and because th 巳 internal energy is proportional to the KeJvin temp巳 rature , th巳 t巳 mpe rature decreases. F igure 15.9b shows a plot of pressure versus voJum 巳 for an adiabatic proc巳 ss . The ad iabatic curve (red) inte创rs巳ct岱s th巳 i臼sot由 h沱 m 巳创r丁 -m fìnal 忧t 巳 mp巳町ra创tu 盯 I江 r巳 [盯乓f = 冉 Pr 只 Vjr 尺 / (nR)刀]. The ∞ c 010ωI 巳 ed area un md巳创r 由 盯 th巳 adiaba 创仙 t l C cur 凹 V巳 r陀巳pr纪巳s巳 nts the work don巳. Th巳 r巳verse of an adiabatic 巳xpansion is an adiabatic compression (W is n 巳gat l v时, and Eq uati on 15 .4 indicates that the final t巳 mperature 巳 xceeds th 巳 initial temperature. The en 巳 rgy provid巳d by th 巳 ag巳 nt doing th巳 work increases the interna J 巳 nergy of the gas. As a result, th巳 gas becomes hotter The 巳quation that gives the adiabatic Cllrve (red) betw巳巳 n the initi al pressur巳 and volume (Pj , V;) and th巳 fìnal pressure and voJume (Pr , V r) in Figure 15.9b can b巳 derived llsing int巳gral caIc ulus. The result is Adiabatic expanswn or compressioll of an ideal gas PjVj "Y = PrV/ (1 5.5) where the exponentγ(Greek gamma) is the ratio of the sp巳 cifi c heat capacities at constant pr巳 ssur巳 and constant volume , γ = cp/cv. Equatio n 15.5 applies in conjunction with the id 巳 al gas law, becaus巳 e ach point on the adiabatic curve satisfies the relation PV = nR T. Table 15.1 sllmmarizes the 飞Ñ' ork don巳 in th巳 four typ巳 s of 由 t h巳 αr画: m h av巳 b巳巳 n considering. For each proc巳 ss it also shows how th 巳 fìrst law of thermodynamics depends on th巳 work and other variables. ~ CHECK VOUR 川 U NDERSτANDU 川 N (The answers are given at the end of the book.) 6. One hundred joules of heat is added to a gas , and the gas expands at constant pressure. Is it possible that the internal e nergy increases bγ100 J? (a) Yes (b) No; the increase in the internal energy is less than 100 J , since work is done by the gas. Icl No; the increase in the internal energy is greater than 100 J , since work is done by the gas. 在 A gas is compressed isothermally, and its internal e nergy increases. Is the gas an ideal gas? (a) No , because if the temperature of an idea l gas remains constant , its internal energy must also remai n constant. (bl No , because if the temperature of an idea l gas remains constant , its internal energy must decrease. (c) Yes , because if the temperature of an ideal gas remains constant , its interna l energy must increase 8. A material undergoes an isochoric process that is also adiabatic. Is the internal energy of the material at the end of the process (a) greater than , (b) less than , or (c) the same as it was at the start? c 447 y bu to k 11 SPEGIFIG HEAT GAPAGITIES IÔ II ... ,. I In this section the 自rst law of thermodynamics is us巳d to gain an understanding of the factors that determine the sp巳cific heat capacity of a material. R巳 m 巳 mber, when th巳 temp巳rature of a substance changes as a result of heat flow , th巳 chang巳 in temperature !::.T and 出e amount of h巳at Q are relat巳d according to Q = cm !::.T (Equation 12 .4). In this expression c d巳 notes the specific h巳 at capacity in units of J/(kg. C O ) , and m is th 巳 mass in kilograms. Now, however, it is more convenient to express th巳 amount of material as the number of moles n , rather than the number of kilograms. Therefore , we replace the expression Q = cm !::.T with the following analogous expression: Q = Cn!::.T (1 5.6) where the capital letter C (as opposed to the lowercase c) refers to the molar specifìc heat capacity in units of J/(mol. K). In addition , the unit for measuring the temp巳 rature change !::.T is th巳 kelvin (K) rath巳r than the Celsius d巳gr巳巳 (C ), and !::.T = TI' - T , where Tf and T are th巳 final and initial temp巳ratures. For gases it is necessary to distinguish between the molar specific heat capacities C p and C v , which apply, respectively, to conditions of constant pressure and constant volume. With the help of the first law of thermodynarnics and an ideal gas as an example , it is possible to see why Cp and Cv diffl巳r. To determine the molar specific heat capacities , we must first calculate th巳 heat Q n巳eded to rais巳 the t巳mperature of an ideal gas from T to Tf • According to the first law , Q = !::.U + W. We also know that the internal energy of a monatomic ideal gas is U = ~ nRT (Equation 14.7). As a result , !::.U = Uf - Uj = ~ nR(冉一只). When the heating process occurs at constant pressure , the work done is given by Equation 15.2: w= P !::. V = P(Vf - V;). For an ideal gas, PV = nRT, so th巳 workbecom巳s W = nR(Tf - Tj ). On th巳 oth巳r hand , when the volum巳 is constant, !::. V = 0 m3, and th巳 work done is zero. The calculation of the heat is summarized below: O j j j Q =!::.U +W Qc川mlp…c = j nR(骂一引) + nR(冉一只) = ~nR(冉一盯 η) η) + 0 R( 乓 - 贝 Qc∞OI1S川 v叨01阳u川阳 1川llC 11咀c = j n础 Th巳 molar specific heat capacities can now that C = Q/[n(Tf - T;)]: Constant pressure for a monatomic idealgas COllstant volume for a monatomic idealgas con 阳11 volu I11 e _ 3 ,., = .2:. C"v-n(Tf TI)- EH the specific heats is 一一 一一 叩' 一一 Monatomic ideal gas 口 n(Tf-Ti)- 2H '主抖 ratioγof Qconsl川 pressure 户 up 户 均G - The b 巳 determined , sinc 巳 Equation 15.6 indicates (1 5.7) (15 .8) 573 (15.9) .d o m o m w c u -tr a c k <0 C lic 9. The drawing shows an arrangement for an adiabatic free expansion or "thro创 ing " .c process. The process is adiabatic because the entire arrangement is contained within perfectly insu lating walls. The gas in chamber A rushes suddenly into chamber B through a hole in the partition. Chamber B is initially evacuated , so the gas expands there under zero external pressure and the work (w = P ß V) it does is zero. Assume that the gas is an ideal gas. How does the final temperature of the gas after expansion compare to its initial temperature? Th e final temperature is (a) greater than , (b) less than , (c) the same as the initial temperature. o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W PD C h a n g e Vie w N O W -X er 15.6 SPEC IFI C HEAT CAPACITIES F ! h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c F- XC h a n g e Vi e ! THERMODYNAI\i\ ICS N y bu to k Cp - In fact , it can be shown that Equation 15.10 diatornic , etc. Cv = R (15.10) appli 巳 s to any kind of ideal gas-monatomic , ~ CHECK Y 。 ωUR 川 U ND 、 (The answers are given at the end of the book.) 10. Suppose that a material contracts when it is heated. Following the same line of reasoning used in the text to reach Equations 15.7 and 15.8 , deduce the relationship between the specific heat capacity at constant pressure (Cp ) and the specific heat capacity at constant volume (C v). Which ofthe following describes the relationship? (a) Cp =Cv (b) Cp is greater than Cv (c) Cp is less than Cν 11. You want to heat a gas so that its temperature will be as high as possible. Should you heat the gas under conditions of (a) constant pressure or (b) constant volume? (c) It does not matter what the conditions are. THE SECONO lAW OF THERMODVNAMICS Ic巳 cream melts wh 巳 n left out on a warm day. A cold can of soda warms up on a hot day at a picnic. Ice cream and soda n巳ver b巳com巳 colder when left in a hot environment , for heat always 刊 ows spontaneously from hot to cold , and never from cold to ho t. The spontaneous flow of heat is the focus of one of th 巳 most profound laws in a l1 of science , the second law of thermodynamics. THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS: THE HEAT FLOW STATEMENT Heat flows spontaneously 仕om a substance at a higber temp巳rature to a substance at a lower temp巳rature and does not flow spontaneously in the reverse d让ection. It is important to realize that th 巳 second law of thermodynamics deals with a diffl巳 rent of nature than does the fìrst law of thermodynamics. The second law is a statem 巳 nt about the natural t巳nd 巳 ncy of heat to f1 0w from hot to cold , wher巳 as the fìrst law d巳 als with energy conservation and focuses on both h 巳 at and work. A number of important devices dep巳 nd on heat and work in their operation , and to understand such devices both laws are ne巳 ded. For instance , an automobile engine is a type of heat 巳 ngine because it us巳 sh巳 at to produc巳 work. In discussing h巳at 巳 ngines , Sections 15.8 and 15.9 wiU bring togeth 巳 r the fìrst and s巳cond laws to analyze 巳 ngin 巳巳ffìciency. Then , in Section 15.10 we will s巳e that refrig巳rators , air condition 巳l飞 and heat pumps also utiliz巳 heat and work and are c1 0sely related to heat engin巳 s. The way in which thes巳 thre巳 appliances operate also depends on both the fìrst and second laws of th 巳 rmodynamics. asp巳ct o .c m lic c u -tr a c k C m o .d o w For real monatomic gases near room temp巳 ratur巳, expenm巳 ntal values of Cp and Cv give w ratios very c10s巳 to th巳 theor巳tical value of ~ .c .d o c u -tr a c k Many gases are not monatomic. In stead , th巳y consist of molecules formed from more than one atom. The oxygen in our atmosphere , for example, is a diatornic gas , b巳cause It conslsts of mol巳cules formed from two oxygen atoms. Sirnilarly, atmospheric nitrogen is a diatomic gas consisting of molecules form刨 食om two nitrogen atoms. wh巳r巳as the individual atoms in a monatornic ideal gas can exhibit only translational motion ,出 e molecules in a diatomic id巳al gascan 巳xhibit translational and rotational motion , as well as vibrational motion at suffìciently high temperaωr巳s. Th巳 r,巳sult of such additional motions is that Equations 15.7 -15.9 do not apply to a diatomic ideal gas. In stead , if the t巳 mp巳rature is suffìciently moderate that the diatornic molecules do not vibrat巳, the mol 盯 specific_ heat capacities of a diatomic ideal gas are C p = ~R and C v = ~ R, with 由巳 result thatγ= 艺 =i The difference between C p and Cvaris巳 s becaus巳 work is done when th 巳 gas 巳xpands in respons巳 to the addition of heat under conditions of constant pressur巳 , wher巳as no work is done under conditions of constant volume. For a monatomic ideal gas , Cp 巳 xce巳ds C v by an amount equal to R , th巳 id巳al gas constan t: w w w w w C lic k to bu y N 15 O W CHAPTER PD w er 448 ! h a n g e Vi e O W XC er PD F- y bu to k lic A heat engine is any device that uses heat to perform work. It has thre巳 essential features: .d o m o m w w o C y bu to k lic nhU w C TE FEmNnu FF 』 .c FE 刷刷 c u -tr a c k .... Hn 且HR w .d o ω.mF w w ! h a n g e Vi ew 449 O W XC N F- N O W 15.8 HEAT EN G INES er PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k The physics of a heat engine. 1. Heat is supplied to the engi ne at a relatively high input temperature from a place call巳d the hot reservoir: 2. Part of th巳 input heat is used to perform work by th巳 working substance of th巳巳 n gin 巴 , which is th 巳 mat巳 rial within the engine that actually do巳 s th 巳 work (e.g. , the gasoline- air mixture in an automobile engine). 3. The remai nder of the input heat is r巳j 巳cted to a place ca ll 巳d the cold reservo Ìl; which has a temperature low巳 r than the input temp巳 rature. Figur巳 15.10 illustrates these features . Th巳 symbol QH ref,巳 rs to the input heat , and th巳 subscript H indicates th巳 hot reservoir. Similarly, th巳 symbol Qc stands for the r巳Ject巳d h巳 at , and the subscript C denotes the cold res巳 rvoil". T he symbol W ref,巳 rs to the work done. The vertical bars enclosing each of these thr巳巳 symbols in th巳 drawing are incllld 巳d to emphasize that w巳 are co n c巳 rn ed here with th 巳 absolute vallles , or magnitudes , of th巳 symbols. Th盹 IQHI indicates 由巳 magnitud巳 of the input heat, IQcI denotes the magnitude of 由e rej巳cted heat, and 1wl stands for 伽e magnitude of the work don巳 Problem - solving insight: Since IQHI , IQd , and Iwl r,φrω magnitudes only, they never have negative values ass机ed to them when they appear in equations. To be highly efficient , a heat 巳ngin e must produce a r巳 l ativ巳 l y large amount of work 位 om as little input heat as possible. Th巳refore , th巳 efficiency e of a heat engine is defìned as the ratio of the magnitud巳 of the work Iwl done by th巳 engine to the magnitud巳 of the inpllt h巳at IQHI: Iwl (15.11) e = IQ可 If th巳 input heat w巳r巳 co nv erted 巳 ntirel y into work , the engine wou ld of 1. 00, 剑 s in 肌ce叫|阳 圳1 = 1ωQHI ; such an eng W ♂lI1 e hav巳 an Figure 15.10 This schematic representation of a heat eng in巳 shows th巳 input heat (magnitude = IQHI) that ori ginat巳 s from th巳 hot reservo 日, the work (magnitude = IWI) that the 巳ngine does , and the heat (magnitude = IQ cI) that th巳 engme r句 ects to th巳 cold reservoi r. efficiency quoted αωsp 严er, 陀 .cenωge臼s obtained 均 b'y mult句切圳秒刷 1)y川 lin 咔 g the ratio Iw l/IQHI by a factor of 100 Thus , an efficiency of 68 % would m巳 an that a valu 巳 of 0.68 is used for the effìciency in Equation 15.11 An engine , lik巳 an y device , must ob巳y the principle of co n s巳 rvation of energy. Som 巳 of the engine 's input h巳at IQHI is converted into w。此 Iw l, and th巳陀阳maηa创ind巳r IQ cI is 陀 j扣巳cαt巳 ed tωo the cold r巳servoir. If th巳re are no other losses in th巳 eng in e, the principle of energy cons巳rvation requires that 1QH 1 = 1wl + (15.12) 1Qc 1 Solving this 巳quation for Iwl and substituting the 1 巳sult into Equation 15.11 leads to the fo llowing a1ternative expression for the effic iency e of a heat engine: e = JQHI 一 I Qc L = IQHI Example 6 illustrates how the concepts to a h巳at 巳 ngin巳. 1 _ 1Qcl IQHI of 巳ffìc i ency and 巳 n ergy co n servat i on 创 e A NALVZING MULTIPLEExample 6 (15. 13) applied ONCEPT PROBLEMS An Automobile Engine An automobile engine has an effìciency of 22.0% and produces 2510 J of work. How much heat is rejected by the engine? Reasoning Energy conservation indicates that th巳 arnount of heat 1可 ected to t l1巳 cold reservoir is the part of the input heat that is not converted into work. The work is given, and the inpllt heat can be obtain巳d since the efficiency of the 巳ngine is also given. Continued .c w Symbol Value Efficiency of engine E Magnitud巳 ofwork Iwl 22.0% (0.220) 2510 J Unknown m .d o l旬riable Magnitude of rej 巳cted heat ? IQd Modeling the Problem 11:11且画. -i 、1'/ r,,、 The Conservation of Energy According ωthe energy-conservation principle , the magnitudes of the input h巳at IQHI , the work done Iwl , and the rejected heat IQd are related according ωIQHI = Iwl + IQd (Equation 15.12). Solving for IQd gives Equation 1 at the righ t. In 出is result , Iwl is known , but IQHI is not , al由ough it will be 巳valuated in Step 2 3 E圃 问阳 EnE咆g刽昭盼… i白Er =平 | which can be substituted into Equation 1 as shown in the right colurnn. | IQHI 'EA 、‘,,, , | IQHI rs-、 e = Iwl/IQHI . Solving for IQHI , we find that =平 | Solution Combining the resu Its of each step algebraically, we find that 甲甲wl IQc l = IW1(+ 一 1) = (2510 怕 Related Homework: Problems 45, 84 Problem-solving insight When efficiency is stated as a percentage (e.g. , 22.0%) , it must be converted to a decimal fraction (e.g. , 0.220) before being used in an equation. In Example 6 , less than one-quarter of the input heat is conv巳 rted into work because the efficiency of the automobil 巳巳 ngine is only 22.0 %. If th巳 engine were 100% efficient , all th巳 input heat would be converted into work. Unfortunately, nature do巳 s not permlt 100%-efficient heat engines to exi st, as the next section discusses. 。 11 -: 10 CARNO T' S PRINCIPlE AND THE CARNOT ENGINE What is it that allows a heat engine to operate with maximum efficiency? The French engineer Sadi Carnot (1796-1832) proposed that a heat engin巳 h as maximum efficiency when the process巳 s within the engine are reversible. A reversible process is one in which both the system and its environment can be returned to exactly the states they were in before the process occurred. In a reversible process , both th巳 sy s tem and its environment can be return 巳d to their initial states. Therefore , a process that involves an en巳rgy-dissipating mechanism , such as friction , cannot be r巳versible because the energy wasted due to friction would alter th巳 sy s tem or th巳巳nvironment or both. There are also r巳 asons other than friction why a process may not be r巳versible . For instance , the spontaneous flow of heat from a hot substance to o w c u -tr a c k Description C m lic k to bu y N O W .d o w w w o w C lic k to bu y N 15 h a n g e Vi e ! Knowns and Unknowns The following data are available: .c ! THERMODYNAMICS PD CHAPTER XC er 450 F- w O W h a n g e Vi e er PD XC w F- c u -tr a c k .c y to bu y bu to k lic o .d o m C m w o k lic C a cold substance is 盯eversible, even though friction is not present. For heat to flow in the re.c vers巳 d让巳ction , work must be done , as we will se巳 in S巳ction 15.10. The agent doing such c u -tr a c k work must be located in the environm巳nt of the hot and cold substances , and , therefore , the environment must chang巳 while the heat is moved back from cold to hot. Since th巳 system and 由巳 environment cannot both be returned to their initial states , the process of spontaneous heat flow is irreversible. In fact , all spontaneous proc巳ss巳s ar,巳 irrev巳rsible, such as th巳巳xplo sion of an unstable chemical or the bursting of a bubble. When the word "reversibl巳" is used in connection with engines , it does not just mean a gear that allows the engine to operate a device in reverse. All cars have a reverse gear, for instance , but no automobile engine is thermodynarnically reversible , since friction exists no matter which way the car moves Today, the idea that the efficiency of a heat engin巳 is a maximum when the engine operates reversibly is referred to as Carnot 亏 principle. w w .d o w w w ! h a n g e Vi ew 451 O W XC N F- N O W 15.9 CARNO T' S PRINCIPLE AND THE CARNOT ENGINE er PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k CARNOT'S PRINCIPLE: AN ALTERNATIVE STATEMENT OF THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS No irreversible engine operating between two reservoirs at constant temperatures can have a greater efficiency than a reversibl 巳 engine op巳 rating between the same temp巳阳, tures. Furthermore , all reversible engines operating between the same temperatures have the same efficiency. Carno t' s principle is quite remarkabl 巴, for no mention is mad巳 of the working subthe engine. It does not matter whether the working substance is a gas , a liquid , or a solid. As long as the process is reversible , the efficiency of the 巳 ngine is a maximum. How巳ver, Carno t' s principle does not stat巳, or 巳ven imply , that a reversible engin巳 has an efficiency of 100%. It can be shown that if Carno t' s principle wer巳 not valid , it would be possible for h巳 at to flow spontaneously from a cold substance to a hot substanc巳, in violation of the s巳cond law of thermodynamics. In 巳ffect, then , Carnot's principle is another way of expressing the S巳cond law. No real engin巳 operates reversibly. Nonetheless , the idea of a r巳versible engine provides a useful standard for judging the performanc巳 of real engines. Figure 15.11 shows a r巳versible engin巳, call巳d a Carnot engine, that is p缸 ticularly us巳ful as an idealized mode l. An important feature of a Carnot engine is that all input heat (magnitude = IQHI) originates from a hot reservoir at a single temperature T H and all r巳:jected heat (magnitude = IQcI) goes into a cold reservoir at a single temperature Tc . This important feature is emphasized in Problem 61 , which focuses on a pressure-versus-volume plot for a Carnot engine that utilizes an ideal gas as its working substance. Carno t' s principle implies 由at the efficiency of a reversible engin巳 is independent of the working substance of 由巳 engine , and therefore can depend only on the temperatures of the hot and cold res巳rvoirs. Since efficiency is e = 1 一 IQcI /IQHI according to Eq uation 15.13 , the ratio IQcI /IQHI can d巳严nd o n1 y on 由巳 reservoir t巳mperatures. This observation led Lord Kelvin to propos巳 a thermodynamic temperaωre scale. H巳 proposed that 出e thermodynamic 也mp巳raturl臼 of the cold and hot res巳rvoirs be defined such that their ratio is equal to IQcI/ IQHI Thus, 由e thermodynarnic temperature s叫e is rela忧d to the heats absorbed and 叫ected by a Carnot engine , and is independent of the working substanc巳 . If a reference t巳 mp巳rature is properly chosen , it can be shown 由 at the thermodynamic t巳 mp巳rature scale is identical to the Kelvin scale introduced in Section 12.2 and used in the ideal gas law. As a result, the ratio of the magnitude of the rej巳cted heat IQcI to 出巳 magn山de of the input heat IQHI is stanc巳 of IQcl IQHI wh巳re Tc (15.14) TH temperatur巳s Tc and TH must be expressed in kelvins. a Carnot engine can b巳 written in a substituting Equation 15.14 into Equation 15.13 for the efficie fdn E ae mvDE -A plvc C‘ a o the The 巳fficiencye 跄 Ca盯r口n】刚 of pa 创rticωu 川la 缸1忖 useful way by 主几 一- 河,啤 -MM 例M 如m (1 5.15) Temperature = T H Temperature =Tc Figure 15.11 A Carnot engine is a reversible engine in which all input heat IQHI originates from a hot reservoir at a single temperature TH , and all rejected heat IQcI goes into a cold reservoir at a single temperature Tc . The work done by the engine is Iwl. .c XC h a n g e Vi ew y bu to k T hi s relation gives the maximum possible e.庐ciency for a heat e ngi ne operating between w .c .d o two Kelvin temp巳ratures Tc and TH , and the next 巳xa mpl e illu strat巳 s its application. c u -tr a c k The physics of extracting work from a warm ocean. Problem-solving insight When determining the efficiency of a Carnot engine , be sure the temperatures Tc and T H of the cold and hot reservoirs are expressed in kelvins; degrees Celsius or degrees Fahrenheit wil l not do Example 7 A Tropical Ocean as a Heat Engine Water near the surface of a tropical ocean has a temp巳 ra tur 巳 of 298.2 K (25.0 o c) , whel 巳 as water 700 m beneath th 巳 surface has a temp巳rature of 280.2 K (7.0 o c). 1t has been proposed that th 巳 warm water be used as the hot res巳rvoir and the cool water as the cold reservoir of a heat engine. Find the maximum possibl巳巳fficiency for such an engine. Reasoning The maximum possible efficiency is th巳巳ffìci巳 ncy that a Carnot engine wou ld have (Equatio n 15.15) operating between temp巳ratures of T H = 298.2 K and Tc = 280.2 K. Solution Using TH = 298.2 K and Tc = 280.2 K in Equatio n 15.15 , er:l rnnl 山川 Tr 一 ~== TH we 且 nd that 280.2 K 1 _ _ 1 一一一一一一 = 10 .060 (6.0 %) 1 298.2 K .1 u • 。 In Example 7 the maximum possible effìciency is o nl y 6.0%. The small efficiency of the hot and cold reservoirs are so close. A greater 巳ffìcie n cy is possible on1y when there is a greater difference betwe巳 n the [ 巳s巳 rvoir temperatures. However, there 创·巳 li mits on how large the effìciency of a heat engine can be , as Conceptual Exampl巳 8 discusses. 创'i ses becallS巳 th巳 Kelvin temp巳ratures Conceptual Example 8 Natural Limits o o巾日ficiency 们阳t Engine Consid巳 r a hypothetical eng in 巳 th at receives 1000 J of heat as input fro m a hot reservoir and 1000 J of work , rejecting no heat to a cold r巳 servoir whose temperature is above 0 K. Which law of th巳 rmodynamics does this 巳ng ll1巳 violate? (a) The fìrst law (b) The second law (c) Both the fìrst and second laws d巳 livers Reasoning Th巳 first law of th巳rmody n ami cs is a n 巳xpression of 巳 nergy conservation. The second law states that no irreversible 巳 ngine operating between two r巳S 巳r voirs at constant temperatures can have a great巳I 巳fficien cy than a reversible engi ne operating between the same temperatures. The efficiency of sllch a 1 巳versible engine is eCarn ot> th 巳 efficiency of a Carnot 巳n gi n e. Answers (a) and (c) are incorrect. From 由 e point of view of en 巳 rgy co n s巳 rvation , nothing is wrong with an 巳 n g lll 巳 th at conv巳rts 1000 J of h巳 at into 1000 J of work. Energy has been n 巳 1 th 巳 r c [ 巳 ated nor destroyed; it has only been transformed fro lll one form ( h 巳 at) into another form (WOl北). TherefOl巳, this 巳 ngine does not vio l at巳 th e fìrst law of therlllodynamics. Answer (b) is correct. Si nce a Ll of the input heat is converted into work , the efficiency of the engi ne is 1, or 100%. But Equation 15 .15 , which is based on the second law of therlllodynalllics , indi cates that th巳 lllaXillllllll possibl巳巳ffìciency is e CarnOl = 1 - TcfTH , where Tc and T H are the telllp巳ratures of th巳 Cοld and hot reservoirs , resp巳ctively. Sinc巳 we 缸?巳 told that Tc is above o K , it is clear that 由巳 ratio Tc /TH is greater than zero , so 由 e Ill axilllulll possible effìciency is l ess 由 a n 1 (or less than 100%). The e n gir眩 , therefore , violates the second law of therlllodynalllics , which Ii lllits the effìci 巳 nc i es of h eat 巳ngin es to va lu 巳 s less than 100%. 。 Example 8 has e mphasized that even a perfect heat engine has an efficiency that is reg创"d, we note that th巳 maximum possible effìcie ncy, as g lv巳 n by Equatio n 15 .15 , approach巳 s 1. 0 w h巳n Tc approach巳 s absolllte z巳ro (0 K). However,巳x pen m 巳 nts h av巳 shown that it is not possible to cool a substanc巳 to absolute zero (se巳 Sect ion 15.12) , so nature do巳 s not allow a 100%-effìcient heat e ngine to exist. As a result , there will always be h巳at rejected to a cold reservoir w h 巳 never a h eat 巳 n gin 巳 I S llsed to do W Ol飞 even if friction a nd other ÌlTeversible process巳S 缸"e elimi n at巳d completely. This rej 巳 cted h巳 at is a form of the rmal poll11tion. The s巳 co nd law of thermodynamics reqllires that at least some thermal poll11tion be g巳 n erated wh 巳n 巳ver heat 巳 ngines aJ巳 u sed to p巳 rform work. This kind of thermal polllltion can b巳 redllced o nly if society reduces its dependenc巳 on h 巳 at 巳 ng in es to do work less than 1. 0 or 100%. 1n this The physics of thermal pollution. o c m lic c u -tr . ack C m o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W ! F- N O W CHAPTER 15 THERMODYNAMICS er 452 PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi ew N y bu to (The answers are given at the end of the book.) 12. The second law of thermodynamics , in the form of Carnot's principle , indicates that the most efficient heat engine operating between two temperatures is a reve rsibl e one. Does this mean that a reversi ble engine operating between the temperatures of 600 and 400 K must be more efficient than an irreversible engine operating between 700 and 300 K? 13. Concept Simulation 15.1 at www.wiley.com/college/cutnell allows you to explore the concepts th at relate to this question. Three reversible engines, A, B, and C, use th e sa me cold reservoir for their exhaust heats. However, they use different hot reservoirs that have the following temperatures: (A) 1000 K,但) 1100 K, and (C) 900 K. Rank these engines in order of increasing efficiency (smallest efficiency first). (a) A, C, B (b) C, 8, A (c) 8, A, C (d) C, A, 8 14. In Concept Simulation 15.1 at www.wiley.com/college/cutnell you can explore th e concepts that are important in this question. Suppose that you wish to improve the efficiency of a Carnot engine. Which answer describes the best way? (a) Lower the Kelvin temperature of the cold reservoir by a factor of four. (b) Raise the Kelvin temperature of the hot reservoir by a fa cto r of fou r. (c) Cut the Kelvin temperature of the co ld reservoir in half and double the Kelvin temperature of th e hot reservoir. (d) AII three choices give th e same improvement in efficiency. 15. Consider a hypothetica l device that takes 10000 J of heat from a hot rese rvoir and 5000 J of heat from a cold reservoir (whose temperature is greater than 0 K) and produces 15000 J of work. What can be said about this device? (a) It viol ates the first law of thermodynamics but not the second law. (b) It violates the seco nd law of th ermodynamics but not the first law. (c) It violates both the first and second laws of thermodynamics. (d) It does not violate either the first or the second law of t hermodyn am ics. ~ il m REFRIGERATORS , AIR CONDITIONERS , AND HEAT PUMPS Th巳 natural tendency of heat is to flow from hot to cold , as indicated by th巳 sec ond l aw of thermody namks . However, if work is u s巳d , heat can be mα de to flow fro m cold to hot, against its natural tendency. Refrig巳rators , air condition巳 rs , and heat pumps are, in fact, devices that do just tha t. As Figure 15 .1 2 illu strates, th巳s巳 devices use work (magnitude = IWI) to extract heat (magnitude = IQ fro m the cold res巳rvoir and deposit heat (m agni tude = IQHI ) into the hot res巳rvoir. Generally sp巳akin g , such a process is called a r,价igeration process. A compari son of the l eft and right sides of thi s drawing shows that the dir 巳ction s of the arrows symbolizing heat and work in a refJ培巳ration process are oppo- cI) site to those in an engine process. Non巳thel巳ss , en巳rgy i s conserved during a refri g巳 rati on cI. proc巳ss , just as it is in an engine process, so IQHI = Iwl + IQ Moreover, if the process occurs r巳versi bly, we have ideal d巳vices that are called Carnot refri g巳 rato rs , Carnot air co nditioner飞 and Carnot h巳at pumps. For th巳S巳 id巳al d巳vic町, th巳 relation (Equation 15.14) applies , just as it does for a Carnot e n g in 巳 . IQcll IQH I = TcIT , J• The physics of refrigerators. ln a r,刷gerator, th巳 interior of the unit is the cold reservoir, while the warmer exterior is th巳 hot reservoir. As Fiσure 15 .13 illustrates , the refri gerator b takes h巳 at fro m the food inside and deposits it into th巳 kitc h巳 n , along w ith the energy needed to do th e work of making the h 巳 a t flow fro m cold to ho t. For thi s r巳 aso n , the b Refrigeration Process Engine Process Figure 15.12 In the r巳fri gerati on process on the left, work I 叫 i s used to remove heat IQd from 由巳 cold m巳川 ir and deposit heat IQHI into th巳 hot reservoir. Compare this with the en gi l1巳 process 011 the righ t. Hot reservoir (outside refrigeratorJ • Figure 15.13 A refri gerator. .d o m w .c o m c u -tr a c k C lic k ~ CHECK Y 。 ωUR UNDERSTAND It川 N唱 o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N 453 ! PD XC er O W F- 15.10 REFRIGERATORS , AIR COND ITIONERS , AND HEAT PUMPS O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c h a n g e Vi ew O W ! XC y bu to k outside surfaces (usually th巳 sides and back) of most refrigerators 缸巳 warm to the touch w .c .d o while the units operate. c u -tr a c k An air conditioner is like a refrigerator, except that the room itself is the cold res巳 r voir and th巳 outdoors is the hot reservoir. Figure 15.14 shows a window unÜ, which cools a room by removing heat and depositing it outside , along with the work used to make th巳 heat flow from cold to ho t. Conceptual Example 9 considers a common IlÚ sconception about refrigerators and air conditioners. Tlle physics of air conditioners. Conceptual Example 9 You Can't Beat the Second Law of Thermodynamics Is it possible (A) to cool your kitchen by leaving the refrigerator door open or (B) to cool your b巳droom by putting a window air condition巳r on the floor by th巳 bed? (a) Only A is possible. (b) Only B is possible. (c) Both are possible. (d) Neith巳 r is possible. Re <l soning During a refrigeration proc巳ss (b巳 it in a refrigerator or in an air condition 时, heat (magnitude = IQ c!) is remov巳d from a cold r巳servoir and h巳at (magnüude = IQHI ) is deposited into a hot r巳S巳rvoir. Moreover, according to the second law of thermodynarnics , work (magnitude = IWI) is 叫 uired to move 出is heat from the cold r巳阳voir to th巳 hot res巳创I川 I忧r.. Th巳 princiψple 巳 of ∞ c on阳vat1刚 10nαn of 巳n巳 we will Figure 15.14 A window air conditioner removes heat from a room , which is the cold reservoir, and deposits heat outdoors , which is the hot reservoi r. us 优巳 this as a guid巳 111 ass巳sS ll1 g 由 th巳 pos 岱si油 bi凶 liti巳臼s. Answers (剖, (时, and (c) are incorrect. If you wanted to cool your kitchen by leaving the refrigerator door open , th巳 refrig巳 rator would have to take heat from directly in front of th 巳 open door and pump less heat out the back of th巳 unit and into 由巳 kitch巳 n (since the refrigerator is supposed to b巳 cooling the entire kitchen). Lik巳wis巳, if you tried to cool your entire bedroom by placing the air conditioner on the f1 00r by th巳 bed , the air conditioner would have to take heat (magnitude = IQ c!) from directly in front of the unit th巳 back. According to the second law of thermodynamics this cannot happen , since IQHI = out 由 Iwl 十 IQc!;由at 队 IQHI is greater than (not less than) IQc! because I is greater than zero wl A可swer (d) is correct. The heat (magnitude = IQ c!) removed from the air directly in front of the open refrig巳rator is deposited back into th巳 kitch巳n at the rear of the uni t. Moreover, according to 出e second law of tI阳modynarnics , work (magnitud巳= IWI) is ne巳ded to move that heat from cold to hot, and 由 e energy from this work is also deposited into 由巳 kitch巳 n as additional hea t. Thus ,出巳 open refrigerator puts into th巳 kitch巳n an amount of heat IQHI = Iwl + IQc!, which is more 由 an it removes from in front of the open refrigerator. Thus , rather than cooling the kitchen , the op巳nr巳frig巳rator warms it up. Putting an air conditioner on the floor to cool your bedroom is sirnilarly a no-win game. The heat pump巳d out the back of the air condition巳 r and into the bedroom is g1巳ater than the heat pulled into th巳仕ont of the uni t. Consequ巳 ntly,出 e air condi tioner actually warms th巳 bedroom. Relat~d Homework: Problem 71 。 Th巳 quality of a refrigerator or air conditioner is rat巳d according to its co巳fficient of performance. Such appliances perform well wh巳nth巳y remov巳 a relatively large amount of heat (magnitud巳= IQc!)仕om a cold reservoir by using as sm a1 1an amou川 of work (magniωde = IWI) as possible. Therefore , th巳 coefficient of performance is d巳fìned as 由e 则o of IQc! to Iwl , and the greater this ratio is , th巳 b巳tter the performance is: Refrigerator or air conditioner Figure 15.15 In a heat pump the cold reservoir is the wintry outdoors , and the hot reservoir is the inside of the house. Coefficient of performance I Qc I IwI (15.16) Commercially available refrigerators and air conditioners have coeffici 巳 nts of performance in th巳 rang巳 2 to 6 , depending on the temperatures involved. The coefficients of p巳r formance for these real devices 缸巳 less than those for ideal , or Carnot, refrigerators and air conditioners. In a sense, refrigerators and air conditioners operate like pllmps. They pump heat "uphill" from a lower temperatme to a higher temperature, just as a water pump forces water uphill from a lower elevation to a higher elevation. It would be appropriate to call them heat pllmps. However, the nam巳 "heat pump" is reserved for the device illustrat巳d in Figure 15.15 , which o c m lic c u -tr . ack C m o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W F- N CHAPTER 15 THE RMODYNAM ICS er PD h a n g e Vi ew 454 ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi ew N y bu Heat = lic k The physics of heat pumps. .d o o w m C m o C lic k to is a home heating applianc巳 The heat pump uses work Iwl to make heat IQ cI from th巳 win. c outdoors (the cold reservoir) flow up the temperature "hill" into a w缸.m house (th巳 hot try c u -tr a c k reservoir). According to 由 e conservation of en巳rgy, the h巳 at pump deposits inside the house an amount of heat IQHI = Iwl + IQ cI. The air conditioner and the h巳at pump do closely related jobs. The air condition巳r ref吨erates the inside of the house and heats 叩 the outdoors , while the heat pump refl吨巳rates the outdoors and heats up the inside. These jobs ar巳 so closely relat巳d that most heat pump systems serv巳 in a dual capacity, b巳in g 巳q uipped with a switch that conv巳rts them from heaters in the winter into air conditioners in the summer. Heat pumps ar巳 popular for home heating in today 's energy-conscious world , and it is easy to understand why. Suppose that 1000 J of energy is available for home heating. Figure 15.16 shows that a conventional electric h巳ating system uses this 1000 J to heat a coil of w iJ.e , just as in a toaste r. A fan blows air across the hot coil , and forc巳d conv巳ction carries the 1000 J of heat into the house. In contrast, the heat pump in Figur巳 15.15 does not use the 1000 J directly as h巳 at. Instead , it uses the 1000 J to do the work (magnitude = Iwl) of pumping heat (magnitud巳= IQ cI) from th巳 cool巳r outdoors into th巳 warmer house and , in so doing , delivers an amount of en巳皂y IQHI = Iwl + IQcI. With Iwl = 1000 J , this b巳comes IQHI = 1000 J + IQ cI, so that the heat pump deliv巳rs mor巳 than 1000 J of heat , whereas the conventional 巳lectric heating system d巳liv巳rs only 1000 1. The n巳xt 巳xample shows how the basic r巳lations IQHI = Iwl + IQ cI and IQ cI /IQH I = Tc/TH ar巳山巳d with heat pumps. w w .d o w w w to bu y N 455 ! PD XC er O W F- 15.10 REFRIGERATORS , AIR CONDITIONERS , AND HEAT PUMPS O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c 1000 J Figure 15.16 This conventional electric heating system is d巳Iivering 1000 J of h巳 at to the Ii ving room. 卢寸盯百古有ττ古节古τ百百百[E百百百了 , Example 唱 o A Heat Pump An ideal , or Carnot, heat pump is used to h巳 at a house to a t巳 mperature of 294 K (21 o C). How much work must th巳 pump do to deliv巳r 3350 J of heat into the house on a day when the outdoor temperature is 273 K (0 o C) and on another day wh巳n the outdoor temperature is 252 K (-21 o C)? Reasoning The conservation of 巳nergy dictates that the h巳 at d巳 livered into the hous巳 (the hot reservoir) equals the energy from th巳 work don巳 by the heat pump plus th巳 energy in the form of heat tak巳n from th 巳 cold outdoors (the cold res巳rvoir). Th巳 h巳at deliv巳 redinto the house is giv巳 n , so that w巳 can u s巳 e nergy cons巳rvation to determine the work , provided that we can obtain a valu巳 for the heat taken from the outdoors. Sinc巳 we are dealing with an ideal heat pump , w巳 can obtain this valu 巳 by using Equation 15.14 , which relat巳s th巳 ratio of the magnitudes of the heats for the cold and hot reservoirs to the ratio of the r巳S巳rvoir temperatures (in kelvins). Knowns and Unknowns The following data are available: 294K 273 K or 252 K 3350 J 内M Hn Unknown Variable Magnitude of work done by pump Value 11 Temperature of hot reservoir (interior of house) Temp巳rature of cold reservoir (outdoors) Magnitud巳 ofh巳at deliver巳d into house Symbol l门UL T刮 T川 Description W Comment Temperature in kelvins must be used . Temperature in kelvins must be used. 7 Modeling the Problem E跚 T川…阳 ofEI陀阳叫叫叩 r咆g白咱叨即y 川皂叨盼 川y沪归川川 ψ 钊创 -c 川 ωOαnserv唰 c∞ 刚 vaa创tion prin 川 川叫 inci 肌n1比cα 呻唰 阳叫叩 叫叫 1甲pμ 叫 刷le ( 11 , ‘EEB , 、、 t ha创t IQH川1=lwl 十 IQcI (Equation 15.12), wh巳re IQHI , Iwl , and IQcI旧, respectively, the 由 magnitudes of the heat deliver巳d into the house (th巳 hot res巳 rvoir) , th巳 work don巳 by the heat pump , and the heat taken from th巳 cold outdoors (the cold res巳rvoir) . Solving for Iwl gives Equation 1 at 出巳 right. In this result, w巳 have a value for IQH I but not for IQ cI. Step 2 deals with this rnissing information. & Continued ! h a n g e Vi e y c u -tr a c k m ,1 ' Iwl=IQHI 一 IQd given about the ,temp巳臼 也 r创 at山.巳创S TH for 由 t h巳 hotr巳s巳rvoi让r and Tc for 由巳 cold = TcI凡, which can be solved for IQd: 、 m 时 uormation rst 、 use 由 th巳 .d o -i r陀巳s优巳r凹vo ∞ ir. According to Equation 15.14, IQd/IQHI 、 At th巳 right , we substitute this Solution Combining the r巳 sult r,巳sults 、、11II/ L 、‘、 ,, S,EE-. ,, QH 王 「M 一一 Q into Equation 1. of each step algebraically, w巳白 nd that ?!一 IQ甲|一 IQHI阳 It follow s 由 t ha 创t the magn 川lÏ tωud巳 oft白 h巳 3mm m2叫…… 纺 e例m 刚叫t阳 u旷r陀肌e work for 白 th巳 two giv巳n outdoor 臼t 巳mp巳ratur巳 s is 恻 W刑仲川…|←川斗=斗节咄|恒陆 Q岛Hi(1 去剖扑非) = (刃 川叫叫 3350 川川叫 50O川刊叫 Jη叫)(1卜一 击击剖 引) = 124011 E 气咆惚切 仇 i? 0咋 2γγt 印… e OT~;)~ 飞/飞/ Problem-solvin 日 insight When applying Equation 15.14 CIQ cI /IQHI = Tc/T H) to heat pumps , refrigerators , or air conditioners , be sure the temperatures Tc and TH are expressed in kelvins ; degrees Celsius or degrees Fahrenheit will not do. More work must be done wh巳n the outdoor temperature is lower, because the heat is pumped up a greater temperature "hill." Related Homework: Problem 88 It is also possible to sp巳cify a coeffìcient of performanc巳 for heat pumps. However, unlike refrig巳 rators and air conditioners , the job of a h巳 at pump is to heat , not to cool. As a result, the coeffìcient of p巳rformance of a heat pump is the ratio of th巳 magnitude of th巳 heat IQHI delivered into th巳 house to the magnitud巳 of the work Iwl required to deliver it: Coefficient of performance Heatpllmp IQH I Iw I (1 5. l7) The coeffìcient of perform anc巳 d巳pends on the indoor and outdoor temperatures. Commercial units have co巳fficients of about 3 to 4 under favorable conditions. ,j" CHECK V 。 ωUR U 酌m 巨 RSTANDII 川N 川‘唱4 伊 g iven at the end of the book.) 16. Each drawing represents a hypothetical heat engine or a hypothetical heat pump and shows the corresponding heats and work. Only one of these hypothetical situations is allowed in nature. Which is it? (The answers are (α) (b ) (c) (d) (e) 17. A refrigerator is kept in a garage that is not heated in the cold winter or air-conditioned in the hot summer. Does it cost more for this refrigerator to make a kilogram of ice cubes o o w w w .c E圃 H圳 an川 E .d o C lic k to bu y bu to k lic C w w w N O W PD ! XC N CHAPTER 15 THERMODYNAMICS er O W F- w m h a n g e Vi e 456 w PD XC er F- c u -tr a c k .c C h a n g e Vie w :: 11 ENTROPV Iri 1m A Carnot engine has the mηax川1m 盯m川1 possible 巳ffì白kωci巳 within it are r巳 V巳rsi 臼削 ib ble 巳. Irreversible processes , such as friction , caus巳 real 巳 ngines to operate at less than maximum 巳ffìciency, for th巳y reduce our ability to use h巳 at to perform work. As an 巳xtr巳 m巳巳xample , imagine that a hot object is placed in thermal contact with a cold object, so heat ftow s spontaneously, and hence 盯eversibly, 仕.om hot to cold. Eventually both objects reach the same t巳 mp巳rature , and Tc = TH • A Carnot engin巳 using these two objects as heat reservoirs is unable ωdo work , because the efficiency of the 巳ngin巳 i s zero [eCamol 二 1 - (TcITH ) = 0]. In general , iπb versible process巳 s cause us to lose some , but not necessarily all , of the ability to perform work. This partialloss can be expressed in terms of a conc巳pt called entropy. To introduce th巳 idea of entropy we recall the relation IQc! / IQHI = TcfTH (Equation 15 .1 4) that applies ωa Carnot engine. It is possible to reaITa吨巳 this 巳quation as IQc! ITc = IQHIITH, which focuses attention on the heat Q divid巳d by the Ke\vin temp巳刚ure T. The quantity QIT is called the change in the entropy ð. S: .... 11 b巳cause 由 t h巳 proc 臼巳s邱s巳臼s oc ∞ C Ul时 甘tn T 吨 1鸣 g ð. S = (手)R (1 5.18) In this expression the temperature T must be in kelvins , and the subscript R refers to the word "reversible." It can b巳 shown that Equation 15.18 app\ies to any process in which heat 巳nters (Q is positive) or \eaves (Q is negative) a system reversib\y at a constant temp巳 rature. Such is the case for the heat that ftows into and out of the r巳 servoirs of a Carnot engine. Equation 15.18 indicat巳 s that the SI unit for 巳 ntropy is a jou\e per kelvin (J /K) . Entropy, Iik巳 internal energy, is a function of the stat巳 or condition of the system. Only the state of a system determines the 巳 ntropy S that a system has . Therefore , the change in entropy ð. S is equal to th巳 entropy of the fìnal state of the system mjnus the entropy of the initial state. We can now describe what happens to the entropy of a Carnot engine. As the engine operates , the 巳ntropy of the hot reservoir decreases , since heat of magnitude IQHI departs rev巳rsibly at a Kelvin t巳 mp巳rature TH. The cOITesponding change in the entropy is ð. SH = - IQHIITH, where the llÚ nus sign is needed to indicate a decrease , since the symbol IQHI denot巳s only th巳 magn山de of the hea t. In contrast, the 巳ntropy of the cold r巳s巳rvoir increases by an amount ð. Sc = + IQc! ITc , for the 叫巳ct巳d heat reversibly ent巳rs the cold reservoir at a Kelvin t巳mperature Tc . The total change in entropy is ð. Sr + ð. Su becaus巳 IQcI!Tc IQc l IQHI +~- 一一一!... =o Tc TH = IQHIITH according to Equation 15 .14 that th巳 total change in entropy is zero for a Carnot 巳 ngtn巳 is a specifìc illustration of a general r巳sult. It can be proved that when any reversible process occurs , the chang巳 in th巳巳ntropy of the universe is zero; ð. Suniverse = 0 J/K for a r巳V巳rs ible process. The word "universe" means that ð. Suniverse takes into account the 巳ntropy changes of a l\ parts of Th巳 fact lic .d o m C w o o m in the winter or in the summer? (a) In the summer (b) In the winter (c) It costs the same in both seasons. 18. The coefficient of performance of a heat pump that is removing heat from the cold outdoors (a) must always be less than one , (b) can be either less than or greater than one , (c) must always be greater than one. 19. A kitchen air conditioner and a refrigerator both remove heat from a cold reservoir and deposit it in a hot reservoir. However, the air conditioner 一一一一一一 the kitchen , while the refrigerator 一一一一一 the kitchen. (a) coo ls , cools (b) cools , warms (c) warms , warms (d) warms , cools 20. On a summer day a window air conditioner cycles on and off, according to how the temperature within the room changes. When are you more likely to be able to fry an egg on the outside part of the unit? (a) When the unit is on (b) When the unit is 0忏 (c) It does not matter whether the unit is on or off. .c k to bu y N O W PD N y bu to k lic C c u -tr a c k w w .d o w w w er O W -X 15.11 ENTROPYF 457 ! h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c h a n g e Vi ew ! PD XC N y c u -tr a c b巳cau s巳 of 5 Hypothetical reversible process for irreversible ð. S for hypothetical reversible process process Figure 15.17 Although the relation S = (Q/T)R applies to reversible processes , it can be used as part of an indirect procedure to find the entropy change fo r an irreversible process. This drawing illustrates the procedure di sc u ss巳d in the tex t. ð. S /:::,. Example 11 The Entropy of the Universe Increases Fig ur 巳 1 5.18 shows 1200 J of heat flowin g spontaneollsly through a copper rod fro m a hot reservoir at 650 K to a cold reservoir at 350 K. Det巳rmine th巳 amollnt by which thi s irreversible proc巳 ss changes 由e entropy of th 巳lI niverse , assllming that no oth巳 r changes OCCll r. Hot reservoir TH = 650 K ./ or cl nvnvnu mdo rJ Reasoning The hot-to-cold h巳at flow is irreversible , so th巳 r巳lati on D. S = (Q/ T) R is applied to a hyp oth巳 tic al pro c巳ss w h 巳 reby the 1200 J of h巳at is taken rev巳 rs ibl y from th 巳 hot reservoir and added reversibly to the cold reservoir. 叫ζ Solution The total fo r each r巳5巳rV01r : 巳 ntropy change of the lI niverse is the algebraic sum of th巴巴ntropy 1200 J 1200 J !1 S……… =一一-一一一+ ~ "" "、 6 50 K 350 K U II' Cold reservoir TC = 350 K Figure 15.18 Heat flows spontaneously fro ll1 a hot reservoir to a cold reservoir. m sm巳, th 巳巳 ntropy The i rr巳vers ible 、--v-' 、--、-- Entropy lost by hot res巳rv oi r Entropy gained by cold reservoi, process causes the entropy of the uni ve rse to = chang巳s 1+1. 6 J/K I in cr巳ase by 1. 6 J/K Example 11 is a specific illustratio n of a g巳 n era l res ul t: Any irreversible process increases the entropy of the universe. In other words , !1 Sunivcrsc > 0 J/K for an irreve rsible process. Reversible processes do not alter the e ntropy of the unive rs巳, whereas irr巳versible processes caus巳 th巳 entropy to increase. Th er巳fore , th巳 e ntropy of the univ巳rs巳 co ntinu ally incr巳 a s es , lik巳 tim巳 it se lf, and entropy is sometimes ca ll 巳d " time's arrow." It can b巳 s h ow n that this b巳 h avior of the 巳 ntropy of the univ巳rse provides a co mplet巳 ly g巳 n eral s tatem巳 nt of the s巳c ond law of thermodynamics , whi ch applies not o nly to heat flow but also to all kinds of other processes. THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS STATED IN TERMS OF ENTROPY The total entropy of th巳 umv巳 rse does not chang巳 w h巳 n a reversible process occurs (!1Sun 阳 When a n irr巳V巳 r s ibl e process occurs and the e ntropy of th 巳 univer se in c r巳 ases , the avai lable fo r doing work d ecr巳 as町, as th 巳 n ex t exam ple illustrates. e n 巳 rgy υ 巨臼 xamp 附'恒 e 12 En叫 1 5u 叩 1ψppo s巳 t仙 ha 川t 1200 J of heat is lI sed as inpllt foαr an 巳n g in 巳 lI nd巳创r two dωif配 毛祀 er陀巳n 川 lt cοnditi ons . In Figllre 15 .19a the heat is supplied by a hot reservoir whose temperature is 650 K. In part b of th巳 drawin g , the heat flows irreversibly through a copper rod into a second reservoir whose temp eratllr巳 i s 350 K and then enters th 巳 e n g in e . In e i th 巳 r case , a 150-K reservoir is used as the o w of o n 巳 part of the universe may change .c .d o c u -tr a c k a r巳versib l e process , but if so , the entropy of a nothe r part changes in the opposite way by the same amount. What happens to th巳巳ntropy of the univ巳rse w h 巳 n an irreversible process occurs is more complex , b巳cau se th巳巳xpr巳 ss i on !1 S = (Q/ T) R do巳s not apply directly. However, if a system changes irreversibly from an initial state to a fin al state , this expression can be used to calculate !1 S indirectly, as F igur巳 15 .17 indi cates. We imag ine a hypothetical reversible process that causes th巳 sys te m to ch ang巳 betwee n the sαme initial and final states a nd th巳 n find !1 S for this reversible process. The value o btained for !1 S also applies to th巳 1Iτ巳vers ible proc巳 ss that actually occurs , si nce o nly th 巳 nature of the illÍ tial and final states , and not th巳 path b巳tw巳巳 n the m , d巳termines !1 S. Example 11 illustrates this indirect me thod and shows that spontaneo us ( ineversible) proc巳 ss es increase the entropy of the umverse. entropy of the universe. To be 己与 Reversible processes do not alter the total k th巳巳 nvironm巳 n t. lic the system and all parts of to bu o m C lic k Irreversible c k. w w .d o w w w C to bu y N O W F- er CHAPTER 15 THERMO DY NAMICS O W h a n g e Vi ew 458 ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi e 15.11 ENTROPY 459 w N k obtain 巳d lic o .d o m m w o the maximum amount of work that can be C d巳t巳rnúne to bu y N y bu to k lic C cold reservoir. For each case, .c from the 1200 J of hea t. c u -tr a c k w w .d o w w w ! XC O W F- er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k Reasoning According to Equation 15.11 , th巳 w。此 (magnitude = IWI) obtained from th巳巳n gine is the product of its efficiency e and the input h巳at (magnitude = IQHI) , or Iwl = elQιFor a given input heat , the maximum amount of work is obtained when 由巳 efficiency is a maximum that is , wh巳n 由e engine is a Carnot engine. The efficiency of a Carnot 巳ngine is given by Eq uation 15 .l 5 as eCamot = 1 - Tc/TH • Therefor巳, the efficiency may be deternúned from th巳 Kelvin t巳m peratures of th巳 hot and cold reservoirs. Solution B矿ore irreversible heatflow Tr TH -~ er.....".... , 150 K 650 K 一一一一 = 0.77 |川 川1=(比 W E陀 eCa ωω 化‘a盯1fr口川t1叫 Tr eCarn O l 。 After irreversible ( ) 150 K 350 K 一 一ι= 1 一 一一-一一 = 'H 0.57 heatflow |阳川 川1=(问 W 勺 气 E陀 ω C,a叫 1‘ 呐 w巾 h巳 n 由 t h巳 1200 J of inpu川th巳at 比 1s tak巳 n the 巳伍 cα1巳 ncy oft由 h巳 Carnot 巳 ng ♂ine extracted from the input from 由 t h巳 350-K r巳s巳rvoi让r in s 忧t 巳 ad oft由 h巳 650ι-K re 巳 s巳臼rvoir, is smalle r. As a r巳 s ult , less work (680 J versus 920 1) can be h巳at. 。 Example 12 shows that 240 J less work (920 J - 680 J) can be p巳rformed wh巳n the inis obtained from the hot reservoir with the lower temperature. In other words ,由巳让 reversible process of heat flow through the copp巳r rod causes en巳rgy to becom巳 unavailable for doing work in the amount of Wunav,巾ble = 240 1. Example 11 shows tha创t this 让i .rr巳ver邱siblee proc 臼巳s岱s 剖 s imul让tan巳ousl忖 y cωau 时s巳臼s 巾 th巳 巳ntropy 仗 0f 白 th巳 川 umi忖 V巳町rs优 e tωo incαr巳 eas优巳 by an amount puth巳at ßS山 n1 u川 tipl忖 y ßS ,乱u山n阳llve陌 川 rse by 150 K , which is the lowest Kelvin temperature in Example 12 , you obtain Wu 川 ülable = (150 K) X (1. 6 JIK) = 240 1. This illustrates th巳 following general resul t: Wunavailable = TOßSuniverse wh巳r巳 To (1 5.19) is th巳 Kelvin t巳 mp巳rature of the cold巳 st heat res巳rvoir. Since irr 巳versible processes cause the entropy of the universe to increase , they cause 巳n 巳rgy to be degraded , in the sense that part of the energy becomes unavailable for th巳 p巳rformance of work. In contrast , ther巳 is no penalty when reversible processes occur, b巳cause for them ßSuniverse = 0 J/K , and there is no loss of work. Entropy can also be interpreted in terms of order and disord巳r. As an example, consider a block of ice (Figure 15 .20) with each of its H 20 molecules fìxed rigidly in place in a highly structured and ordered arrangem巳 n t. In comparison , th巳 puddle of water into which the ice melts is disordered and unorganized , becaus巳 the molecules in a liquid are free to move from place to place. Heat is required to melt the ice and produce the disorder. Moreover, heat flow into a system increas巳 s the entropy of the system , accOI由 ng to ßS 二 (Q/T)R. We associate an increase in 巳 ntropy, th巳n , with an incr巳as巳 in disorder. Conv巳rs巳ly, we associat巳 adecr巳ase in entropy with a decrease in disorder or a greater d巳gre巳 of ord巳r. Example 13 illustrates an order-to-disorder change and th巳 increas巳 of 巳ntropy that accompanies it. Block 口f (b) Figure 15.19 Heat in the amount of IQI-II = 1200] is used as input for an engine under two di:ff,巳r巳nt conditions in parts a and b. ice ‘ -一气、 PU削e 川ter Figure 15.20 A block of ice is an example of an ordered syst巳 m relative to a puddle of water_ .c h a n g e Vi ew F- XC h a n g e Vi ew O W y bu to to bu y N TH E RMODYNAMICS ! PD 15 N O W CHAPTER o c u -tr . ack c .d o F ind the change in entropy th at results w hen a 2.3-kg block of ic巳 melts slowly (reversibly) at 273 K (0 o c). Reasoning Since the phase change occurs reversibly at a constant temp巳ra阳陀 , the change in entropy can be found by using Equation 15 .18, I:l. S = (Q/T) R' where Q i s 由 e heat absorbed by the m巳 I ting i c巳. Thi s heat can be determined by using th巳 rel ati o n Q = mL r (Equation 12.5) , where m is the mass and Lr = 3.35 x 10 5 J/kg is the latent heat of fusion of wat巳r (se巳 Table 12.3). Solution Using Equation 15 .18 and Equation 12.5 , w e fìnd that thechange in entropy IS I:l. S ( Q\ _ = 1 一一 | 飞 T /R mLr 一 (2.3 kg)(3.35 一一一一 一 T x 10 5 J/kg 273 K 飞 | = 1+2.8 X 10 3 J/K 1 a result th at is positive, since th 巳 ice absorb s heat as it m 巳 Its F ig ure 15.21 shows a n oth 巳 r order-to-d i sorder change that can be described in term s of entropy. ~ CHECK V 。 ωUR U 酌NDERSTANDI川川'酌 N、唱a (The answers are given at the end of th e book.) 21. Two equal amounts of water are mixed togethe r in an insu lated container, and no work is done in the process. The initial temperatures of the water are different , but the mi xtu re reaches a uniform temperature. 0 0 the interna l energy and entropy of the water increase , decrease , or rema in constant as a resu lt of the mi xing process? Figure 15.21 With the ai d of 巳xp los i ves , demoLition experts caused th巳Ki ngdome in S巳attle , Washington , to go from the o rder巳d s tat巳(l ower entropy) shown in the top ph otograph to the di so rd er巳d state (higher entropy) , shown in the bottom photograph (Anthony Bolante/Reuters/Landov LL C) Interna l Energy of the Water Entropy of the Water (a) Increases Increases (b) Oecreases Oecreases (c) Remains co nstant Oecreases (d) Remains constant Increases (e) Remains constant Remains constant 22. An event happens somewhere in the universe and , as a result , the entropy of an object changes by - 5 J/K. Consistent with the second law of thermodynamics , which one (or more) of the following is a possible value for the entropy change for the rest of the universe? (a) - 5 J/K (b) 0 J/K (c) + 5 J/K (d) + 10 J/K 23. In each of the fo ll owing ca ses , whi ch has the greater entropy, a handful of popcorn kerne ls or the popcorn that results from t hem; a salad before or after it has been tossed; and a messy apartment or a neat apartment? 24. A glass of water contains a teaspoon of disso lved suga r. After a while , the water evaporates , leaving behind sugar crystals. The entropy of the sugar crysta ls is less t han the entropy of the d isso lved sugar because the sugar crystals are in a more ordered state. Why doesn't t his process violate the second law of t hermodynamics? (a) Because , consid ering what happens to the water, the tota l entropy of the universe also decreases. (b) Because, considering wh at happens to th e water, the total entropy of the universe increases. (c) Because the seco nd law does not apply to th is situation. 25. A builder uses lumber to construct a building , which is unfortunately destroyed in a fire. Thus , the lumber existed at one time or another in three different states: (A) as unused building material , (B) as a bui lding , and (C) as a burned-out shell of a building. Rank these three states in order of decreasing entropy (I argest first). (a) C ,日, A (b) A , B, C (c) C, A , B (d) A , C, B (e) B, A. C ~ II 一 THE THIRD lAW OF THERMODYNAMICS 的 F To thezeI Otl1, 自 rst, and s巳cond laws of thermodynamics we add th巳 third (and last) law. The third law of thermodynamics indicates that i t is impossible to reach a t巳 mp巳 ra ture of absolute z巳1'0. THE THIRD LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS It i s not possibl e to l ower th巳 t巳 mp巳ra阳 re of an y sys t巳 m to absolute zero (T = 0 K) in a 白 nite number of s t巳p s. m o w w w .d o C lic k Order to D isorder m C lic k Example 13 w w w er 4 60 ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c CALCU LATIONS 461 w N y CONCEPTS & CAlCUlATIONS Th巳自 rst law of thermodynamics is basically a r巳 statem巳 nt of th巳 conservation plinciple in terms of heat and work. Example 14 emphasizes this important fact by showing that th巳 conservation principle and th巳 fìrst law provide th巳 sam巳 approach to a problem. 1n addition , the example reviews th巳 concept of latent h巳 at of sublimation (s巳e Section 12.8) and th巳 ideal gas law (se巳 Section 14.2). of-巳 nergy Concepts & Calculalïons Example 14 0 The Sublimation of Zinc The sllblimation of zinc (mass per mole = 0.0654 kg/mol) takes plac巳 at a t巳 mp巳 rature of 6.00 X 102 K , and th巳 latent heat of sllblimation is 1.99 x 106 J/kg. The pressllre remains constant during the sllblimation. Assume that th 巳 zinc vapor can be tr巳ated as a monatomic id巳 al gas and that the volllm巳 of solid zinc is n巳gligible compar叫 to the corresponding vapor. What is the change in th巳 internal energy of th巳 z inc when 1.50 kg of zinc sllblimat巳 s ? Concept Questions and sllblimation? Ans而vers What is sllblimation and what is the latent heat of Sublimation is the process wh巳reby a sobd phas巳 changes directly into a gas phase in respons巳 to th巳 inpllt of heat. Th 巳 h巳 at per kilogram n 巳eded to caus巳 th巳 phas巳 change is call巳d th巳 latent heat of sublimation Ls. The heat Q n 巳巳d巳 d to bring abollt the sllblimation of a mass m of solid material is giv巳 n by Eqllation 12.5 as Q = mLs. Answer When a solid phase changes to a gas phase , does the volllme of and by how mllch? th巳 material increas巳 OI d巳crease , Answer For a giv巳n mass of material , gases g巳 n巳rally have greater volllmes than solids do , so the volume of the material incl 巳 as巳 s. Th巳1I1CαI 巳as巳 in volllm巳 i臼s~V= 飞酣一飞oliωd Sinc巳 t由 h巳 volllm巳 of 由巳 sobd Vsolid is n巳gbgibly sm 曰1all in comηp缸'1βson tωo 由 th巳 volum巳 of 由巳 gas we have ~ V =飞回 . Usi吨 the ideal gas law as given in Eqllation 14.1 , it follows that 飞as = nR刃P, so that ~ V = nRT/P. 1n 由is reslllt, n is the n Ul曲目 of moles of mat巳rial , R 自由e lI niversal gas constant , and T is th巳 Kelvin temp巳rature . 飞,,, , As th巳 mat巳rial chang巳s 巳 nvironm巳 nt from a solid to a gas , does it do work on do work on it? How mllch work is involv巳d? th巳巳 nvironment or do巳 s the 卜 1 To mak巳 room for itself, 由 t h巳巳 xpanding 盯 r a m 创t巳创rial m 引1U 创 S t pllsh aga 创I川n 川s创t 仙 t h巳巳 nvi让ron 忏 and , in so doing , does work on the 巳 nvironmen t. Since the pr巳 ssure remalI1 S constant , work don巳 by the material is given by Eqllation 15.2 as W = P ~V. Sinc巳 ~V = nRT/P , work b巳comes W = P(nRT/ P) = nR T. Answer mη1巳 旧 nlt th巳 th巳 1n this problem we begin with heat Q and realize that it is lI sed for two pllrpos巳 s: First , it mak巳s the solid change into a gas , which entails a change ~U in th巳 internal energy of th巳 material , ~U = Ugas - Usolid' Second , it allows th巳巳xpanding material to do work W on th巳巳 nvironmen t. According to the cons巳rvation-of-巳 nergy principle , how is Q relat巳d to ~U and W? According to the cons巳rvation-of-巳nergy plinciple , energy can neither b巳 created nor destroyed, bllt can only be convelted from one form to ano由巳r (see Section 6.8). Ther巳fore, part of the heat Q is used for ~ U and p也.t for W, with the resnlt that Q = ~U + W Answer According to the fìrst law of th巳rmodynamics , how is Q related to ~U and W? As indicat巳d in Equation 15.1 , th巳 fìrst law of thermodynamics is ~U = Q - w. Rearranging this eqllation gives Q = ~U + W , which is identical to th巳 I 巳 slllt obtain巳d from the conservation-of-energy principl巳. Answer Solution Using the facts that Q = Q = ~U ~U + + W W , Q = mL" and W = nRT, we or mL s = ~U + nRT hav巳 that k lic .d o o w m C m o ~ II to bu y bu to k lic C This law, lik巳 th巳 S巳cond law, can b巳巳Xpl 巳ss巳d in a numb巳r of ways , but a discussion of th巳m is b巳yond th巳 scop巳 of this t巳X t. The third law is need巳d to 巳 xplain a nllmber of exper.c c u -tr a c k imental observations that cannot b巳 explained by the other laws of thermodynamics. w w .d o w w w ! h a n g e Vi e N & XC O W 15.13 CONCEPTS F- er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c ! y to bu y bu to k lic c /::"U = mL s - nRT .d o ln this result , n is the numb巳r of moles of th巳 id巳 al gas. According to th巳 discussion in S 巳:ction 14.1, the number of moles of gas巳 ous zinc is the mass m of the sample divid巳d by the mass per mole of zinc or n = m/(0.0654 kg/mol). Th巳 refore , we find /::"U = mLs - nRT { , ^^ " '^^ J \ { 5 0 kg \f n~ , J \ = (1. 50kg) l 1. 99 X 10 6 一一 ) - l ^:~~-:.~ , 11 8.31-一一-:::- )(6.00 X 10 2 K) \ k g ) \ 0 . 0 6 5 4 kg/mol )\mol.K) ^ =12.87 X 10 6 JI Heat engines can b巳 us巳d to P巳rform work , as we have s巳en in this chapte r. The concept of work , how巳ver, was 白 rst introdllced in Chapter 6 , along with th巳 idea of kinetic energy and the work-e n巳rgy theorem . The next example r 巳views some of the main featur巳s of heat engines , as well as kinetic energy and th 巳 work-en 巳rgy theor巳 m Concepts & Ca 刮Icu 川lat 创a阳。 ns Exampl悟 e15 0 T阳 W呐一 Ene 附叫 1旧 er咱 r即 gy yT 刊刊 The 怡 1冶 eo陀 Temperature = TH Each of two Carnot engines uses th巳 same cold reservoir at a 忧t 巳 mp巳ratωllr陀巳 of 275 K for its ex♂111 g 阳 le 巳 re 町 c巳创lV 四 es 1450 J of input hea t. The work from either of these engines is hallst 忱h巳a创t. Each 巳en咆耶 used to driv巳 a pulley arrang巳 ment that us巳 s a rop巳 to accelerate a 125-kg crate from rest along a horizontal frictionless sllrface , as Figure 15.22 suggests. With engine 1 the crate attains a speed of 2.00 m/s , while with 巳 ngin巳 2 it attains a speed of 3.00 m/s . Find the t巳 mperature of th巳 hot reservoir for each engin 巳 Concept Questions and Answers With which engine is the change in the crate's kinetic energy greater? Answer The cha咿 lS grea阳 with engine 2. Ki netic energy is 阻 = tmv 2 , according to Equation 6.2 , wh巳 re m is the mass of the crate and v is its speed. The change in th巳 ki netic energy is the final minus the initial valu 巳, or KE f - KEo. Since the crate starts from rest , it has zero initial kinetic energy. Thus , the change is equal to th 巳 final kinetic 巳nergy Since engine 2 gives th巳 crat巳 th 巳 greater final speed , it callses th 巳 greater chang巳 111 kinetic en巳rgy. Temperature = Tc Which engine does more work? Answer The work-e nergy theorem, as stated in Equation 6.3, indicates that the net work don巳 on an object equals the change in the object's kin巳tic 巳 nergy, or W = KE f - KEo. The net work is the work done by th巳 net force. ln Figure 15 .22 the sllrface is horizontal , and the crate does not leave it. Therefore , th巳 llpward normal force that th巳 surface applies to the crate must balance th巳 downward weight of the crat巳 . Fll此hermore , the surface is frictionless , so ther古 is no friction force. The net force acting on the crate, then , consists of th巳 single force due to the tension in the rope , which arises from the action of the engine. Thus , the work don巳 by the engin巳 is , in fact , the net work done on 由巳 crate . But w巳 know that engine 2 causes the crate's kinetic 巳nergy to change by the greater amount, so that engin巳 must do more work. Figure 15.22 With the aid of pulleys and a rope , a Carnot engine provides th巳 work that is us巳d to acce \e rate the crate from rest along a horizontal frictionless surface. See Example 15. For which 巳ngine is the t巳 mperature of the hot reservoir greater? Answer Th巳 temperatur巳 ofth巳 hot reservoir for engine 2 is greater. We know that 巳 ngine 2 does more work , but 巳ach 巳ngin 巳 rec 巳ives the same 1450 J of input hea t. Th巳refor毡 , engine 2 d巳rives more work from th巳 input hea t. ln other words , it is more efficien t. But the efficiency of a Carnot engin巳 depends only on the Kelvin t巳 mperatures of its hot and cold reservoirs. Since both 巳 ngine s use the same cold reservoir whose temperature i Solution According to Equation 15 .11 , the efficiency e of a heat engine is th巳 magnitude of th巳 work Iwl divid巳d by the magnitude of the input heat IQHI , or e = Iwl/ IQHI. Accordi 吨 to m o m w o c u -tr . ack C k lic C Solving for /::"U gives w w .d o w w w w N O W THERMODYNAMICS h a n g e Vi e N 15 XC O W CHAPTER F- PD 462 ! w er h a n g e Vi e XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c w N y bu to c u -tr a c k 王~ IQHI TH Iwl .d o m w o m l C lic k Equation 15.15 , the efficiency of a Carnot engine is e C arnot = I - Tc/TH , where T c and T H are , resp巳ctively, th巳 K巳lvin t巳 mp巳ratures of the cold and hot res巳 rvoirs. Combining thes巳 two 巳qua .c c u -tr a c k tions , we have o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N 463 ! CONCEPT SUMMARY h a n g e Vi e O W XC er O W F- w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- But is the magnitude of th巳 net work done on th巳 crate, and it equals the change in the 2 crate's kinetic 巳阳gy, or = KE f - KEo = , according to Equations 6.2 and 6.3. With this substitution , the effìciency expression becomes imv Iwl l Tc=imd 一一一 IQHI TH Solving for the t巳mperature TH , we fìnd TH 1t = 1As exp巳cted , 。 mV" 21QHI the value of TH for engine 2 is greater: Engine 1 TH = 275 K l 一(125 kg)(2.00 m/s)吗 [332 K[ 2(1450 J) Engine 2 TH = l 一 275 K (1 25 kg)(3.00 m/s) 句三 = [449 KI 2 (1 450 J) rrON:CEPT SUMMARV lf you need more help with a concept , use the Learning Aids noted next to the discussion or equation. Examples (Ex.) are in the text of this chapter. Go to www.wiley.com/college/cutnell for the following Learning Aids: Interactive LearningWare (l LW) Concept Simulations (CS) Interactive Solutions (IS) - Additional examples solved in a fìve-step interactive forma t. Animated text fìgures or animations of important concepts. Models for certain types of problems in the chapter homework. The caIc ulations are carried out interactively. Di scussion Topic Learning Aids 15.1 THERMODYNAMIC SYSTEMS AND THEIR SURROUNDINGS A thermodynamic system is the collection of objects on which attention is being focused , and the surroundings are everything else in the environmen t. The state of a system is the physical condition of the system , as described by values for physical parameters , often pressure , volume , and temperature. Thermal equilibrium 『 『 a巳 咱a mnur t "u 臼巳 γt m" Zerolh law 01 Ihermodynamics Firsllaw Ihermodynamics 15.2 THE ZEROTH LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS Two systems are in thermal equilibrium if there is no net f1 0w of heat between them when they are brought into thermal contac t. Temperature is th巳 indicator of thermal equiLibrium in the sense that there is no net f1 0w of heat between two systems in thermal contact that have the same temperatur巳. The zeroth law of thermodynamics states that two systems individually in thermal equilibrium with a third system are in thermal equilibrium with each other 15.3 THE FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS The fìrst law of thermodynarnics states that due to heat Q and work W, the internal energy of a system changes from its initial value of Uj to a final value of U f according to t:.. U 。1 Sign convenlion lor 0 and W = Uf - Uj = Q- Q is positive wh巳 n the system gains heat and is done by the system and negativ巳 when The fìrst law of thermodynamics is the and the change in the internal 巳 nergy. (15 .1) Ex. 1, 14 W negativ巳 when it loses hea t. W is positive work is done on the system. cons巳rvation-of-energy wh巳n work principle applied to heat , work , .c F- XC h a n g e Vi e y The int巳mal en巳rgy is called a function of state because it depends only on and not on th巳 method by which the system cam巳 to b巳 in a given state. Quasi-static process 15.4 THERMAL PROCESSES A thermal process is quasi-static when it occurs slowly enough that a uniform pressure and temperature exist throughout th巳 system at all times. nu旷 』H" snu ar nu o au s 『 pb ed 『 ρb 『 nu旷 LnH ρU Isobaric work l snuE E ou acseo Isothermal process th巳 state An isobaric process is one that occurs at constant pressur巳 The work W don巳 chang巳s at a constant pressure P from an initial volum巳 Vj to a fìna l volume Vr is of the system Ex. 2 when a system (1 5.2) EX.3 W= P ilV= P(Vr - V;) An isochoric process is one that takes place at constant volume, and no work is done in such a process An isothermal process is on巳 that takes place at constant temperature. plac巳 without the transfer of hea t. Adiabalic process An adiabatic process is one that takes Work done as the area under a pressure-volume graph The work done in any kind of quasi-static process is giv巳 n by th巳 area under the corresponding Ex. 4 pressure-versus-volum巳 graph. 、、 ,, 飞飞 ,,, E, E‘E , RT n 一 W vi门v 15.5 THERMAL PROCESSES USING AN IDEAL GAS Wh巳 n n moles of an id巳al gas change quasistatically from an initial volume Vj to a fìnal vo lum巳 Vf at a constant Kelvin temperature T , the work done is Work done during an isolhermal process \ Ill-- EX.5 (15.3) / iiw 15.1 When n moles of a monatomic id巳 al gas change quasi-statically and adiabatically from an initial temperature T j to a fìnal temperature 鸟, the work done is Work done during an adiabalic process W = ~ nR(贝一刊 (1 5 .4) During an adiabatic process , and in addition to the ideal gas law, an Adiabalic change in pressure and volume id巳a l gas ob巳ys th巳 relation PjVj =PrV/ γ wh巳r巳 γ = cp/cv h巳 at is the ratio of the specifìc (1 5.5) IS 15.27 capacities at constant press Ul巳 and constant volume. 15.6 SPECIFIC HEAT CAPACITIES Th巳 molar specifìc heat capacity C of a substance determin巳s how much heat Q is added or r巳moved when the temper创ure of n moles of the substance changes by an amou nt ilT: Q = CnilT For a monatomic id巳al gas , volum巳 are, respectively , th巳 molar Specilic heal capacities 01 a monatomic ideal gas (15.6) IS 15.97 specifìc heat capacities at constant pr巳ssure and constant Cp = %R (15.7) Cv = ~ R ( 15.8) wh巳re R is the ideal gas constan t. For a diatomic ideal gas at moderat巳 temp巳ratur巳 s that do not allow vibration to occ叽 these valu巳s ar 巳 Cp = ~ R and C v = ~ R. For any type of ideal gas , the diff巳rence between Cp and C v is Cp The second law 。1 Ihermodynamics (heat flow slalemenl) - Cv = R (15 .10) 15.7 THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS The second law of thermodynamics can be stated in a number of equivalent forms. In terms of heat fiow , th巳 s巳cond law declares that h巳at fiows spontaneollsly from a substance at a higher temperatur巳 to a substance at a lower temp巳 ra ture and does not fiow spontaneously in the reverse direction. 15.8 HEAT ENGINES A heat engine produc巳s work (magnitud巳= 1W 1) from input h巳at (magn i- tl由= IQHI) that is extracted from a heat res巳rvoir at a relatively 1吨h temperatur巳 . The 巳ngine rejects heat (magnitud巳= IQ cI) into a reservoir at a relatively low temperatur巳. The 巳ffìci 巳 ncy Efficiency 01 a heat engine Conservation 01 energy lor a heal engine e of a heat engine is e Work done Inp川 heat 1 1 wl The cons巳rvation of en巳rgy requires that IQHI must be equal to IQHI = Iwl + IQcI (15.11) QH 1 Iwl plus IQcI: ( 15.12) Ex.6 k lic .d o m w o c Function 01 state c u -tr C m o . ack to bu y bu to k lic C Learning Aids w w .d o Di scussion Topic w w w w N O W THERMODYNAMICS N 15 ! CHAPTER O W w er 464 PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c h a n g e Vi ew C h a n g e Vie w O W N y bu to k lic .c By combining Equation 15.12 with Equation 15 .11 , wntten as e= w ,、" 『 "" lB "u旷 "u ρLb 'ψ 、。 『 a ""Bt, nb o tnunu nur nuES 『 -- nnnuuwnur th e 巳 fficiency of a heat engine can also IQcl .d o (1 5.13) I -~工 15.9 CARNOT'S PRINCIPLE AND THE CARNOT ENGINE A r巳V巳 rs ibl e process is on巳 in which both the system and its environment can be retllrned to exactly the states they were in before the process occllrred Carnot's principle is an alternative statement of the second law of thermodynamics. It states that no irreversible engin巳 operating between two reSerVOiIS at constant te mpera仙 res can have a greater efiìciency than a reversible engine operating between the same t巳 mperatll res. FlIlthermore , all reversib le engines operating between the same temperatures have the same efficiency , A Carnot engine is a rev巳rsible engine in which all inpllt heat (magn itude = IQ d) orψnates from a hot reservoir at a single Kelvin temperatllre TH and all rejected heat (magnitllde = IQ c!) goes into a cold reservoir at a single Kelvin temperatur巳 Tc . For a Carnot engine ACarnot engine IQc l TC IQI-II T1_1 The efficiency eCarnot of a Carnot engine is the maximllm tween two fixed t巳 mperatures can have: Elficiency 01 a Carnot engine (1 5.14) effic i 巳 ncy that an engine operating be Tc eCamo( (1 5.15) 'H Ex. 7. 8. 15 CS 牛j 15.10 REFRIGERATORS, AIR CONDITIONERS, AND HEAT PUMPS Refrigerators, air conditioners , and heat pllmps ar巳 devices that lI tilize work (magnitllde = IWI) to make heat (magnitllde = IQ c!) f1 0w from a lower Kelvin temperature Tc to a higher Kelv in temperature TH. ln the process (th巳 EX.9 refrigeration process) they deposit heat (magn itude = IQHI) at the hi gher temperature. Th巳 princi- ILW 15.2 ple of the cons巳川tion of en巳rgy 叫 lI ires that IQHI = Iw l + IQ c! If the refrigeration process is ideal , in the sense that it occllrs revers ibl y, the devices are called EX.10 Carnot devices and the r巳lation IQcl/ IQHI =几 /TH (Eqllation 15.14) holds. The coefficient of performance of a refrigerator or an air conditioner is Coelficient 01 pe时日 rmance (relrigerator 日 r air conditioner) Coefficient of pe巾rmance IQc I I wl ( 15. 16) The coefficient of performance of a heat pllmp is Coelficient 01 performance (heat pump) Co 巳ffi口 k比 ωωi ci巳创n川 1t of I QH川| ( 15.17) 严E p 町 阳,巾 rf foα111 盯阳 T 15.11 ENTROPY The change in entropy /:,. S for a proc巳ss in which heat Q ent巳rs or leaves a system reversibly at a constant Kelvin temperature T is Change in entropy /:,. S= (手t (15. 18) Ex. 11 , 13 where the sllbscript R stands for "reversible." The second law 01 thermodynamics (entropy statement) The second law of thermodynamics can be stated in a nllmber of eqll ivalent forms. ln terms of en- IS 15.79 tropy , the second law states that the total entropy of the lI nivers巳 doe s not change when a reversible proc巳s s occurs (/:"Sunivcrse = 0 J/K) and increases when an irreversible process occurs (/:"Sunivcrsc > 0 J/K) Irreversible processes callse energy to be degraded in the sense that part of the energy becomes Ex. 12 unavailable for the p巳rforman ce of work. The en巳 rgy W'IIl川 ilablc that is lI navailab le for doing work becallse of an irreversible process is Unavailable work (15. 19) Wunav仙 where /:"Sun附rsc is the total entropy change of the lI ni verse and To is the Ke lvin temperature of the coldest res巳 rvoir into which heat can be rejected Entropy and disorder lncreased entropy is associated with a greater degree of disorder and lesser degree of disorder (more order). The third law 01 \hermodynamics 15.12 THE THIRD LAW OFTHERMODYNAMICS The third law ofthermodynamics states that it is not possible to lower the temperature of any system to absolute zero (T = 0 K) in a finite number of steps decr巳ased entropy with a m w b巳 o m o c u -tr a c k C to k lic C Learning Aids w w .d o 日 iscussion Topic w w w ! PD bu y N O W -X CONCEPT SUMMARY F 465 er ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k .c h a n g e Vi ew XC h a n g e Vi ew y bu to .d o No/e /0 lllstruc/ors: Th e nllmbering of/he ques/ions shown here reflec/s /h efac//ha//h ey are only a replωentative subse/ (扩 /he /o/al llu l1/ ber /ha/ ω E available online. HOWeVel; all of /h e qllω/io川 are avαilable for assig l1l nen/ via an online homework managemel1 t program such as Wi leyPLUS 01 陆bAssigll Section 15.3 The First Law of Thermodynamics Section 15.8 1. The 自 rst law of thermodynamics states that the change /1 U in the Q- W, where Q is internal energy of a system is given by /1 U the heat and W is 由巳 work. Both Q and W can be positive or negative numbers. Q is a positive number if 一一一一一, and W is a positive number if 一一一一一. (a) the syst巳 m loses heat; work is don巳 by the system (b) the system loses heat; work is done 011 the system (c) the system g ains heat; work is done by th巳 sys tem (d) the system gains heat; work is done 011 the system Section 15.4 Thermal Processes , I飞 A 一~ 飞 A B B A C Volume ω』2的的ω』且 10. A monatomic ideaJ gas is thennaIJy insulated , so no heat can f1 0w between it and its surroundings. 1s it possible for the temperature of the gas ωrise? (a) Yes. The temperature can rise if work is don巳 by the gas. (b) No. The only way 由 at the temperature can rise is if heat is added to th巳 gas. (c) Yes. The tempera阳re can rise if work is done 011 由e gas. /0 15. The three C缸ηot engines shown in the drawing operate with hot and cold reservoirs whose temperature di.ffeJ 巳nces are J00 K. Rank the efficiencies of the engines , largest to s mall巳st. (a) All engines have th巳 same efficiency. (b) A, B , C (c) B , A, C (d) C , B , A (e) C, A, B Volume 8. An ideal monatomic gas expands isothermall y from A to B , as the graph shows. What can be said about this process? (a) The gas do巳S no work. (b) No heat enters or leaves A the gas. (c) The first law of thermodynamics does not apply to an isothermal process. (d) The ideal gas law is B not valid during an isothermal process. (e) Ther 巳 is no change in the interna l Volume energy of th巳 gas No/e Carnot's Principle and the Carnot Engine / Thermal Processes Using an Ideal Gas Section 15.5 Heat Engines ωL2山的ω』且 6. The pressure-volume graph shows three pa由 s in whlch a gas expands from an inüiaJ state A to a fina l state B. The change /1 UA • B in internaJ energy is the same for each of the paths. Rank the paths accord ing to the heat Q added to the gas , larg巳st to smallest. (a) 1, 2, 3 (b) 1, 3 , 2 (c) 2, 1, 3 (d) 3, 1, 2 (e) 3, 2 , l C c u -tr a c k 13. A heat e ngin巳 takes heat QH from a hot reservoir and uses part of this energy to perform work W. Assuming that QH cannot be changed, how can the 巳伍 ciency of the engine be improved? (a) 1ncrease the work W; the heat Qc rejected to the cold reservoir increases as a resul t. (b) 1ncreas巳 the work W; the heat Qc rejected to 由e cold reservoir remains unchanged. (c) 1ncrease the work W; the heat Qc r句 ected to the cold reservoir decreas巳s as a resul t. (d) Decrease 由e work W; the heat Qc rejected to the cold res巳rvoir remains unchanged (e) Decrease the work W; the heat Qc rejected to the cold reservoir decreases as a res ul t. Section 15.9 ω」3的的由ι 」 4. The drawing shows th巳 ex pansion of three ideal gases. Rank th巳 gases according to the work they do , largest to smalles t. (a) A , B , C (b) A and B (a tie) , C (c) B and C (a tie) , A (d) B , C , A (e) C, A, B m w .c o m c u -tr a c k C lic k FOCUS ON CONCEPTS o .d o w w w w w C lic k to bu y N O W ! PD F- N O W CHAPTER 15 THERMODYNAMICS er 466 ! XC er PD F- lnstruc/ors: Mos/ 旷 /h e hOlllework problems in /his chap/er 0/在 Section 15.10 Refrigerators , Air Conditioners , and Heat Pumps 17. A refrigerator operates for a certain time , and the work done by the electricaJ energy during thls time is W = 1000 J. What can be said about the heat d eliver巳d to the room contai ning the refrigerator? (a) The heat d巳 liv巳red to the room is less than 1000 J. (b) The heat de li vered to the room is equal to 1000 J. (c) The heat delivered to the room is greater than 1000 J. Section 15.11 Entropy 19. Heat is transf,巳rred from the sun to the earth via e l巳ctromagnetic waves (see Chapter 24). Because of this transfer, the entropy of the sun 一一一一一一一, the entropy of the earth _一一一一一一, and the entropy of 由e sun-e arth system 一一一一一 (a) increases , decreases , decreases (b) decreases , increases , increas巳s (c) increases , increases , increases (d) increases , decreases , increases (e) decreases , increases , decreases available fo r assignmen/ via an online homework manageme 凹 e l1/ plV η g ra 削 川 11n 川 s IIch ht αωS 川州 川il均 w l ey e 凡 P 川 山 U S ω o , 陆b 协 'As 叫 s 川 tυ ll1era 曰lC/I.川川 vJ汀I~σ y. See Preface for additional details. ssm Solution is in the Student Solutions 岛1anua l. www Solution is available online at www.wiley.comJcollege/cutnell Section 15.3 The First Law of Thermodynamics 1. 1n moving out of a dormitory at the end of th巳 semester, a studen t does J. 6 X 104 J of work. 1n th 巳 proces s , his internal This icon represents a biomedical application. energy d 巳 creases by 4.2 X 10 4 J. Determine each of th 巳 fol lowing quantities (including the algebraic sign) : (a) W (b) /1 U (c) Q .c h a n g e Vi ew y bu ( A sy 川 F 日 ow s 川 i ntωot由 he sys 忧t 巳 m n a l 巳nerg y dllring 由 t h巳 of the system . pro ce s s. Find the chang巳 in the inter- 5. ssm When on巳 gallon of gaso line is bllrned in a car engine , 1.19 X 108 J of internal energy is released. S lI ppose that 1.00 x 108 J of this energy ftows directly into the sllrrollndings (engine block and exhallst system) in the form of heat. If 6.0 x 105 J of work is reqll ired to make the car go one mi le , how many mi les can the car travel on one gallon of gas? 6. Three moles of an ideal monatomic gas are at a temperatur 巳 of 345 K. Then , 2438 J of heat is added to the gas , and 962 J of work is done o n it. What is the fin al temperatllre of the gas? *7. 电馨,. In exercising , a weight lifter loses 0.150 kg of wat巳r throllgh 巳va poration , the heat reqll 让ed to eva porat巳 the water coming from the weight lifter's body. The work done in lifting w巳 ights is l. 40 X 105 J. (a) Assllming that the latent heat of vaporization of perspiration is 2 .42 X 106 J/kg , find the chan g巳 in the internal energy of the weight lifte r. (b) Determin巳 the minimllm nllmber of nlltrition al Calories of food (l nlltritional Calorie = 4186 J) that mllst be consllmed to replac巳 the loss of internal energy. Section 15.4 Thermal Processes 8. A gas lI ndergoes isochoric heating , dllrin g which it gains 5470 J of heat and attains a pressllre of 3 .45 X 105 Pa. Following this , it experiences an isobaric compression that is also adiabatic , in which its vol 3 3 Find the total change in the lI me decreases by 6. 84 X 10- m internal energy of the gas fo r th is two-step process. Be sure to inclllde the algebraic sign (+ or -) of the tota l change in the internal energy 9. ssm When a .22-calib巳r rifte is fired , the 巳xpanding gas from the bllrning gllnpowder creates a pressllre behind the bllllet. This pressllre callses the force that pllshes the bllllet throllgh the barrel. The barr巳 l has a length of 0.61 m and an opening whos巳 radills is 2.8 X 10- 3 m A bllllet (mass = 2.6 X 10- 3 kg) has a speed of 370 mls after passing throllgh thi s barre l. Ignore 白 i ctio n and determine the average pressur巳 of the expanding gas . 10. ( A system gains 2780 J of heat at a constant pressure of 1. 26 X 105 Pa , and its int巳rnal energy increases by 3990 J. What is the change in the volllme of the system , and is it an increase or a decrease? 11. A gas , whi le expanding lI nd巳 r isobaric conditions , does 480 J of work. The pressllre of the gas is 1.6 X 10 5 Pa , and its initial vo lllme is 1. 5 X 10 m3 What is the fina l volllme of the gas? • <lJ 二3 ν, vl <lJ .t 3.0 x 10 ~ lic v .d o m w / ~ L k 81 o m o 4. 7.0 x 10 5 C to k lic C w 3. ssm A system does 164 J of work on its 巳 nvironm巳 nt and gains 77 J of heat in the process. Find the change in the internal energy of (a) th巳 system and (b) the environme nt 13. The pressllre and vo llI me of a gas are changed alo ng the path ABCA. Using the data shown in the graph , determine the work done (inclllding the a lgebraic sig n) in each segment of the path: (a) A to B , (b) B to C , and (c) CtoA w 2. 嗖替,. In a game offootball olltdoors on a cold day, a play巳rwill b巳gin to feel ex hallsted after lI sing approximately 8.0 X 105 J .c .d o c u -tr a c k of internal energy. (a) One play巳 r, dressed too lightly for the weather, has to leave the ga me after losin g 6.8 x 100 J of heat. How mllch work has he done? (b) Another play巳 r, wearing clothes that offer better protection against heat loss , is ab le to remain in th巳 g a m巳 long enollgh to do 2.1 x 100 J of work. What is the magnitllde of the heat that he has lost? w w w to bu y N 467 ! PD O W XC N F- er PROBLEMS O W h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- c u -tr a c k 阵卡 14. R ef巳 r to M lI ltipl eConcept Exampl 巳 3 to se巳 2.0 x 10- 3 5.0 x 10- 3 how the concepts pertinent to thi s problem are lI sed. Volume , m3 The pressllre of a gas reProblem 13 mains constant while th巳 temperatllre , volllme , and internal energy of the gas increase by 53.0 C O , 1 .40 X 10- 3 m 3, and 939 J , respectively. The mass of the gas is 24.0 g , and its specifi c heat capacity is 1080 J/(kg. C O ). Determine th巳 pl 巳 ss ure. 15. ssm A system gains 1500 J of heat, while the internal energy of the sys tem increases by 4500 J and the volllme decreases by 0.010 m3 Assllme that the pressllre is co nstant and find its valll巳. *1 6. A piece of alllminllm has a volllm巳 of l. 4 X 10- 3 m 3 • The coefficient of volllme expansion for a llllllinllm is ß = 69 X 10- 6 (C O ) 斗 , The temperature of this object is raised from 20 to 320 o How mllch work is done by th巳 expanding alllminllm if the air pressllre is 1. 01 X 10 0 Pa? c. 。' 17 . ssm www A mon atomi c ideal gas 巳x pands isobarically. Using the first law of thermodynamics , prove that the heat Q is positive , so that it is impossible for heat to ftow Ollt of th巳 ga s "18. Refer to the drawing that accompanies Problem 9 l. When a system changes from A to B along the path shown on th巳 pressure- versll s volllm巳 graph , it gains 2700 J of heat. What is the change in the internal energy of the system ? !"" 19. Water is heated in an open pan where the air pressllre is one atmo sp h巳 re. The water remain s a liqllid , which 巳xpands by a small amollnt as it is heated. D etermin e the ratio of the work done by th巳 wat巳 r to the heat absorb巳d by the wate r. Section 15.5 Thermal Processes Using an Ideal Gas 20. Five moles of a monatomic ideal gas expand adiabatically, and its temperatllre decreases from 370 to 290 K. Determine (a) the work done (i nclllding the algebraic sign) by the gas , and (b) the change in its internal energy. 2 1. ssm Three moles of an ideal gas are compressed from 5.5 X 10- 2 to 2.5 X 10- 2 m 3 . D lI ring the compression , 6 .1 X 103 J of work is done on the gas , and heat is r巳 mo v巳d to keep the telllperature of th巳 gas constant at all times . Find (a) I1 U, (b) Q, and (c) the temperature of the gas 22. ( Three moles of neo n 巳xpand i sotherm均 to 0.250 from 0.100 m 3 . Into the gas ftow s 4.75 X 103 J of heat. Assllming 由 at neon is an ideal gas , find its temperatllre. 23. The temperatllre of a monatolllic ideal gas remains constant during a process in which 4700 J of heat ftow s Ollt of the gas. How mllch work (inclllding the prop巳 r + or - sign) is done? 24. The pressure of a monato mic ideal gas (γ= ~) dOllbles dllring an adiabatic co mpres sion. What is the ratio of the final volllme to the initi al volllme? .c XC h a n g e Vi e ! F- y bu y bu c. A岱 刷川 m 山 u Ime 5臼lon ratJo 叽, which 比 iS 白 th巳 ratio of 由 th巳 ml凶 ti 创 a 1 volum 丑1巳 to the fìn al volume. 创. ② An ideal gas i s 时巳n 山叫h th巳巾ee processes • • • (A B, B C , and C A) shown in the draw ing. In genB 巳ral , for each process the int巳rnal enenrv U of the !!:as can 主 vl change because heat Q can be 0.. added to or removed fro m the gas and work W can be done by the gas or on the gas. For the three processes shown in the draw in σfìll in the fìve missin!!: b entries in the C followin σ tabl巳. Process !:!.U Q W A 一c> B (b) +561 J (a) B• C +4303 J (c) 十 3740 C 一兮 A (d) (e) +2867 J !:!. U A to B • B to C o J W Q fectly insulated cylinder that is fìtted with a movable piston. The ini tial pressure of the gas is 1. 50 X 10 5 Pa. The piston is pushed so as to compress the gas , with the result that the Kelvin temperature doubles. What is the fìnal pressure of the gas? m m ι -ω 』2的的ω 』且 × 斗 A nUn u - O to k "4 1. Suppose that 3 1.4 J of heat is added to an idea1 gas. The gas expands at a constant pressure of 1.40 X 10 4 Pa while changing its vo lume 仕um 3.00 X 10- 4 to 8.00 X LO- 4 m3 The gas is not monatomic , so the r在 lati on Cp = ~ R do巳s not apply. (a) Detennine 出巳 chang巳 in the intemal energy of the gas. (b) Calculate its molar specifìc heat capacity Cp . • 0.200 0 .4 00 Vo lume , m3 '*43. One mole of neon, a monatomic gas , starts out at co nditions of standard temperature and pressure. The gas is heated at constant volume until its pressure is tripled , then further heated at constant pressure until its volum巳 is doubled . Assume that neon behaves as an ideal gas . For the entire process , fìnd the heat added to the gas m lic (a) What percentage of the heat being suppli ed to the gas is used to increase the internal energy of the gas? (b) What percentage is used for doing the work of expansion? *42. A monatomic ideal gas is heated while at a constant volume of 1. 00 X 10 m 3, usi ng a ten-watt heater. The pressure of the gas increases by 5.0 X 104 Pa. How long was the heater on? Rd O 38. ( Under constant-volume con出ions, 3500 J of hωis added to 1.6 moles of an ideal gas. As a result , the t巳 m peratu re of the gas in creases by 75 K. How much heat would be required to cause the same temperature change under co n s tant-press Ul 巳 conditio n s? Do not assume anythin g about whether the gas is monatomic , diatomic , etc. 1'40. A monatomic ideal gas expands at co nstant pressure. D to A 斗 30. ~ A monatomic ideal gas ( γ= ~) is contained within a per- *3 1. The pressure and volume of an ideal monatomic gas change fro m A to B to C, as th巳 drawing shows. The curved line between A and C is an isotherm. (a) Deter mine the total heat for the process and (b) state whether the flow of heat is into or out of the gas. 37. ssm Heat is added to two identical samples of a monatomic ideal gas . In the fìrst sample the heat is added while the volum巳 of the gas is kept constant , and the h巳at causes the temperature to rise by 75 K. In the second sample , an identical amount of heat is added while th巳 pr巳 ssure (but not the vo lume) of the gas is kept conSlan t. By how much does the temperature of this sample increase? 39. Heat Q is added to a monatomic ideal gas at constant pressure. As a res ult , the gas does work W. Find the ratio QI W. C ωD Vo lume Specific Heat Capacities 。 ω isotherm '"V ,..,. ... - -ñ↑电芝F寸---- 400.0-K isotherm 01 } \ 2OO .O-K isotherm Section 15.6 36. A monatomic ideal σas m a nσid container is heated from 217 K to 279 K by adding 8500 J of h巳 at. How many moles of gas are th巳 re in the container? ssm The drawing refers to one mole of a monatomic ideal gas and shows a proc巳 ss that has fo ur steps , two isobaric (A to B , C to D ) and two isochoric (B to C, D to A). Complete the following table by calculating !:!.U, W, and Q (including th巳 a l geb rai c signs) for each of the four steps. 吐\ + \ 800 . 0-K \f 三\ l r ~~~.~" 525 K on the and 275 K on the righ t. The partition is then allowed to move slowly (i .e. , qu as i-staticall y) to the right , unti l th巳 pressures on each sid巳 of the partition are the same. Find the 自 nal temperatures on the (a) left and (b) right. 35. ssm The temperature of 2.5 mol of a monatomic ideal gas is 350 K. The internal energy of this gas is doubled by the add ition of hea t. How much heat is needed when it is added at (a) constant volume and (b) constant pressure? Volume 巧 29. 的 ll l口 ml凶 ti 剖 a1 怡 t emp巳ratωur陀 巳 be 创in g l怆 efl 白t 。 Q) 剖-- 导+主B mona 削 挝tω a 阳 削删 Oαm 口肌 l 34. Three moles of a monatomic ideal !!:as are heated at a constant volume of 1.50 m3 . The amount of heat added is 5.24 X 103 J. (a) What is the change in the temperature of th巳 gas? (b) Find the c han g巳 m its internal energy. (c) Determine the change in press ure. 的 .t **33. ' ssm The drawi ng shows an adiabatically isolated cylinder that is dωivid ed ini汹 ti 剖 a 11忖 y into two identical part岱s by an adi旧 abatic par川ti让tlωon. Both 剖 s id巳 s contam o n巳 m o l e of a o m o "27. Refer to Interactive Solution 15.27 at www.wiley.co mJcollege/ cutnell for help in solving this problem. A dies巳l 巳 ngine does not use spark plugs to ignite the fuel and air in the cylinders. Instead , the temperature required to ignite the fuel occurs because the pistons comt ha 创t air at an ini凶 ti 创 a1 臼 t 巳 mperaωr陀 e press the air in the cylinders. Suppose 由 of 21 oC 沁 i s compressed adiab 剖 a tl比 cally tωo a 忧 t emp巳ratur巳 of 688 o C to k lic C w 26. Heat is Ç1 dded isothermally to 2.5 mol of a monatomic ideal gas Th巳 temperature of the gas is 430 K. How much heat must b巳 ad ded tomak,巳 the volume of th巳 gas double? "*32. Beginning with a pressure of 2.20 x 105 Pa and a vo lume of 6.34 X 10 - 3 此 an ideal monatomic gas (γ= ~) undergoes an adiaw .c .d o c ack batic expansion such that its fìnal pressure is 8.15 X 104 Pa. An alter- u - t r native process leading to the same fìnal state begins with an isochoric cooling to the fìnal pressure , fo llowed by an isobari c expansion to the fìnal volume. How mu ch more work does the gas do in the ad iabatic process than in the alternative process? w 25. ssm A monatomic id巳al gas has an initial temperature of 405 K This gas expands and does the same amount of work whether the .c .d o c u -tr a c k 巳xpansion is adiabatic or isotherma l. When the expansion is adiabatic , the fìn al temp巳rature of the gas is 245 K. What is the ratio of the fìnal to the initial volum巳 when the expansion is isothermal? w w w w N O W CHAPTER 15 THERMODYNAMICS N O W w er 468 PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi ew 469 O W N y bu y bu to 悦 ③ Carnot eng ine A has an e ffi ciency of 0. 60, 川 Carnot en- to 44. gine B has an effici ency o f 0.80. Both engines utili ze the sawme . d o hot k . c c u -tr a c rese rvoir, whi ch has a te mperature of 650 K and de livers 1200 J of h 巳a t to eac h e ng ine. Find th e magni tude of the work produ ced by eac h eng ine and th e te mperatures of the co ld reservo irs that they use. 哩害,. Heat engines take input energy in the form of heat, use ~ so me of th at energy to do work , and ex haust the re m a ind e l二 Similarly, a person can be viewed as a heat e ngine that takes an input of internal energy, uses so me of it to do work , and gives 0仔 th e rest as heat. Suppose that a trained athl巳te can fun cti on as a heat eng ine with an effi ciency of 0. 11 . (a) What is the magnitude of the intern al 巳nergy that the athlete uses in order to do 5 .1 X 104 J of work? (b) Determine 出巳 mag nitu d巳 of the h巳 at the athl ete gives o1'f. c u -tr a c 57. Concept Simulation 15.1 at wwwλviley. comJcollege/cutnell illustrates the co n c巳 pts pertinent to thi s problem. A Carnot engine operates between temperatures of 650 and 350 K. To improv巳 th巳 efficiency of the engine , it is d ec id ed 巳 i t h er to raise the temperature of the hot reservo ir by 40 K or to lower th巳 te mpe ratu re of th巳 co ld reservo ir by 40 K. Wh ich change gives the greatest improve ment? Justify your answer by calcul atin g the ef白 c i e n cy in eac h cas巳 45. ssm Multiple-Concept Exa ll1 ple 6 deals with the concepts that ar巳 i ll1 po rta nt in this proble ll1 . ln doing 16 600 ] of work , an engine 叫 ects 9700 ] of hea t. Wh at is the effi ciency of the engine? with an effi c i 巳 ncy of 0.22 rejects 9900 ] of What is the magnitude of the work th at the engine does in one second ? 46. A l awnm ow e r 巳n gin e h eat 巳very s巳co nd . 47. Due to a tune-up , the effi ciency of an automobile eng ine increases by 5.0%. For an input heat of 1300 J , how much more wo rk does the engine produce after the tune-up th an befo re? *咱 4咄8. Y ~ 叼 A 5旦2-1 均 E鸣g 川 盯m1ω 肌川 ωou川l川I川 O饥 B 叼 v 巳r忧t 比 i ca 刽1 distance of 730 m. At 由 t h巳 tω op , she 比 is ag ,引 a山 in 挝 a tl陀巳s创t. In t h巳 process趴, h巳r body generates 4. 1 X 106 ] o f 巳 ne rgy vla mη巳 tabo li c ln fac t, her body acts like a heat engine , the effi ciency 0 1' which is given by Equati on 15.1 I as e = IwI/IQHI , where Iwl is the magn 山de of the work she does and IQHI is the magnitude 01' the in put hea t. F ind her efficiency as a heat eng ine 严ro P 町 c巳 郎ss臼巳 s. 不 49. ssm www Due to design changes , the efficiency of an engine inar creases fro m 0.23 to 0 .42. For th巳 s 创me inc αreas巳 t由 h巳 work don巳 by the mη1 α0I 巳巳f白 cωie n t 巳 n ♂ g in e and 1 巳du c巳 th e amount of h巳 at r巳句'J ect优巳d tωo the cold 1 巳s巳r vo ir. Find 巾 t h巳 ratiω o oft由 h巳 h巳 a t r陀 巳J庐 ec αt巳 e d tω o 由 t h巳 cold 陀 res巳 创rv 刊 0町 1 r fo r the ill1 proved engine to that for the original engi ne. "*50. An engine has aI1 efficiency e\ . The engine takes input heat of magnitude IQHI fro m a hot res巳rvo ir and d巳li vers wo rk of magnitude Iw\l. The heat 叫 ected by thi s 巳叩 ne is used as input heat fo r a s巳c ond engine , whi ch has an effi ciency e2 and deli vers work of mag ni tude Iw2 1. The overall efficiency of this two-e 叩 ne device i s 由e magnitude of the total work deliver巳d (lw\1 + IW2 1) div id巳d by the magnitude IQHI of the input hea t. Find an ex pression fo r the overaII efficiency e in terlllS of e\ and e2' Section 15.9 Carnot's Principle and the Ca rnot E ngine 5 1. A Carnot engine operates w ith an efficiency of 27 .0% when the temperature of its cold reservoir is 275 K. Ass ullling that the temperature of the hot reservoir remains the same , what must b巳 the temperature of the cold reservoir in order to increase the e ffi c i巳 n cy to 32.0%? r. 58. The hot reservo ir fo r a Carnot eng ine has a t巳 mpe ra tu re of 890 K , while the cold reservo ir has a te mperature of 670 K. The heat input fo r this engine is 4800 J. The 670-K reservo ir also serves as the hot reservoir fo r a second Carnot e n σ in e. This second engine uses the rejected heat of the first engine as input and ex tracts additi onal work from it. The I吗 ec ted heat from the seco nd engine goes into a r巳 se r vo ir that has a te mperature of 420 K. Find th巳 to ta l work d e li v巳red by the two engines. 。 气 59 . ssm A power plant taps steam superheated by geothermal energy to 505 K (the te ll1 p巳 ra ture of the hot reservo ir) and uses the stearn to do work in turning th巳 turbin e of an electric generator. The stearn is then converted back into wat巳r in a condenser at 323 K (the temperature of the cold res巳rvo ir) , after which the water is pumped back dow n into the earth where it is h巳a ted again . Th巳 o utput power (work per uni t time) of the plant is 84 000 ki lowatts. De t巳 rllline (a) the max imum effi ciency at whi ch this plant can operate and (b) the min imum amount of rejected heat th at ll1 ust be 1 巳 moved from th巳 c onde n se r every twenty-four hours. 王 60. Suppose that the gasoline in a car engine burns at 63 1 oC , while exhaust temperature (th巳 temperature of the cold reservo ir) is 139 OC and the outdoor temperature is 27 o Ass ume that th巳 e n g in e ca n be t l 巳 a te d as a Ca rn o t 巳 n g in巳 (a gross oversimpl ifi cati on). ln an attempt to increase mil eage performance , an inventor builds a seco nd engine that fun ctions between the ex haust and outdoor te mp e ratur巳 s and uses the exhaust heat to produce additi ona l work. Ass ume th at the inventor's eng ine can also be treated as a Carnot eng ine. Determine the rati o of th e total work produ ced by both engines to that produ ced by the first engine a lone. 由e c. 位 "' 6 1. ssm The draw ing (not to scale) shows the way in which th巳 pres sure and vo lum巳 c h a n ge fo r an ideal gas that is used as the working substance in a Carnot e n g in巳 Th e gas begins at point a (pressure = P a, volum 52. Five thousand joules of heat is put into a Carn ot engine whose hot and cold reservoirs have te ll1 peratures of 500 and 200 K , respecti vely. How much h巳at is co nverted into work? 53. ssm A Carnot engine has an efficiency of 0.700 , and the temperature of its cold reservoir is 378 K. (a) De te rmin巳 th e temperature of its hot reservoir. (b) If 5230 ] of heat is rejec ted to th巳 co ld reservoir, what amount of heat is put into the eng ine? ll| ω』2山的ω』 ι 55. An engine does 18 500 J of work and rejects 6550] of heat into a cold reservoir whose temperature is 285 K. Wh at would be the sma Il est possible temperature of the hot res巳rvo ir ? A., 54. A Carnot engine operates with a large hot reservoir and a mu ch sll1 aIler cold reservoir. As a result , the temperature of the hot r巳servo lI remains constant while the t巳 mp e rature of the cold res巳 rvo ir slowl y increases. This te ll1 perature ch a n g巳 d ec reases the e ffi ciency 0 1' the engine to 0.70 fro m 0.75. F ind the ratio of th巳 fi n a l te mpe ratur巳 of the cold reservoir to its initi al temperature. m lic k Heat E ngines Isotherm temperature = c Volume 一- TH Isoth erm temperature = Tc o c k. C m o k lic C Section 15.8 w w .d o w w w ! XC N O W F- PROBLEMS er PD h a n g e Vi ew ! XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi e y bu to A nuclear-fu 巳 led e Iectric power plant uti Ii zes a so-called "boiling water reacto r." ln this type of reactor, nuclear energy causes wa ter under pressure to boil at 285 oC (the temp巳rature of the hot reservoir). After the steam does the work of turning the turbine of an electric generator, th巳 steam is converted back into water in a cond巳 nser at 40 oC (th巳 temperature of the cold reservoir). To keep the cond巳 nser at 40 oC , the rejected heat must be carried away by SO Ill巳 Ill eans-for example , by water frolll a rive r. The plant operat巳 s at three-fourths of its Carnot effici 巳 ncy, and the electrical output poweI of the plant is 1. 2 x 10 9 watts. A river with a water flow rate of 1. 0 X 10 5 kg/s is avai lable to relllove the rejected heat frolll the plan t. F ind the nUlllber of Celsius d巳grees by which th 巳 telllpe rature of the river rises. 喝 72. 63. ssm www The temperatures indoors and outdoors are 299 and 312 K , respectively. A Carnot air cond iti on巳r depo sits 6.12 X 105 J of h巳 at outdoors. How much heat is removed from the hou se? 64. ③ Thein础。fa Carnot 阶1gen阳山 maintain巳d at a temperature of 277 K , whi le th巳 temperature in the kitchen is 299 K. Using 2500 J of work , how much heat can this refrigerator remove from its inside compartment? 65. A refrigerator operates betwe巳 n t巳 mp巳ratures of 296 and 275 K. What wOllld be its maximllm coefficient of performance? 66. ( Two Carnot air c叫 tIOn叽 A and B ,也 e removing heat from different rooms. The olltside t巳 mperature is the sa me for both rooms , 309.0 K. Th巳 room serviced by unit A is kept at a temp巳rature of 294.0 K , while the room serviced by lI nit B is kept at 301.0 K. The heat remov巳d from either room is 4330 J. For both units , find th巳 magnitllde of th巳 work reqllired and the magnitude of the heat deposited olltside. 67. A Carnot refrigerator is lI sed in a kitchen in which the temperature is kept at 301 K. This refrigerator lI ses 241 J of work to remove 2561 J of heat from the food inside. What is th巳 temperature inside the refrigerator? 68. A heat pllmp removes 2090 J of h巳at from the outdoors and delivers 3140 J of heat to the inside of a hOlls巳 (a) How much work does the heat pump need? (b) What is the coefficient of performance of the heat pllmp? 69. A Carnot heat pump operates between an outdoor temperature of 265 K and an indoor temp巳 rature of 298 K. Find its co巳ffic i ent of performance lnteractive LearningWare 15.2 at www.wiley.comlcollege/cutnell explores one approach to problellls such as this. Two kilograms of liquid water at 0 oC is put into th巳 fre巳zer compartment of a Carnot re frigerator. Th巳 temperature of the compartment is -15 oC , and the temperatllre of the kitchen is 27 o If th 巳 cost of electrical energy is ten cents per kilowatt. hour, how much does it cost to make two kilograms of ice at 0 oC7 c. *73. ssm www A Carnot refrigerator transfers heat from its inside (6 .0 OC) to the room air outside (20.0 oc) . (a) Find the coeffici巳 nt of performance of the refrig巳 rator. (b) D巳termine the magnitude of th巳 ml I1l mllm work needed to cool 5.00 kg of water from 20.0 to 6.0 oC when it is placed in the refrigerato r. 中" 74. A Carnot engine lI S 巳 s hot and cold r巳 servoirs that have temperatures of 1684 and 842 K , respectiv巳Iy . The input heat for thi s engine is IQHI. The work delivered by the engine is used to operate a Carnot heat pump. T he pump removes heat from the 842-K reservoir and puts it into a hot reservoir at a temperature T'. The amount of heat removed from the 842-K [巳servoir is also IQHI. Find th巳 t巳 mperature T' Section 15.11 Entropy 75. Consider three engines that each lI se 1650 J of heat from a hot re s巳 rvo ir (temperature = 550 K). These thr巳巳 engines reject heat to a cold re s巳 rvoir (temperature = 330 K). Engine 1 rej 巳cts 1120 J of heat Engi ne Il r巳J 巳cts 990 J of hea t. Engine III rejects 660 J of hea t. One of the 巳 ngin es operates reversibly, and two operate irreversibly. However, of th巳 two irreversible engines , one violat巳s the second law of thermodynamics and could not exis t. For each of the 巳 ngine s de termine the tota l entropy change of the universe , which is the sllm of the entropy changes of th巳 hot and cold reservoirs. On th巳 basi s of your calculations , identify which engine op巳rates reversibly , which operates irreversibly and cOllld exist , and which operates irr巳versibly and cOllld not 巳XIS t. 76. H巳 at Q ftows spontaneously from a reservoir at 394 K into a reservoir that has a low巳r temperature T. B 巳cause of the spontan 巳ous flow , thirty percent of Q is rendered unavailable for work when a Carnot engine operates betwe巳n the reservoir at temp巳rature T and a reservoir at 248 K. Find the temperature T. 77. s s m F ind the change in entropy of th 巳 H 2 0 molecules when (a) thre巳 ki l ograms of ice melts into wat巳 r at 273 K and (b) three ki lograllls of water changes into steam at 373 K. (c) On the basis of th巳 answers to parts (a) and (b) , discll ss which change creates more di sorder in the co ll 巳ction of H 20 molecules 78. On a cold day , 24 500 J of h 巳 at Ie aks out of a house. The inside t巳 mperature is 21 oC , and the outside temp巳 rature is 一 15 C What is th巳 Increas巳 in th巳 entropy of the universe that thi s heat loss prodllc巳 s7 0 *70. The wattage of a commerc ial ice Ill aker is 225 W and is the rate at which it does work. The ice maker operates jllst like a refrigerator or an air conditioner and has a coe仔icient of performance of 3.60. The water going into the unit has a temperature of 15.0 oC , and the ic巳 maker produces ic巳 cllbes at O.O o Ignoring th 巳 work needed to keep stored ice from melting , find the maximum alllount (i n kg) of ice that the lI nit can prodllce in one day of continuous operatIOn. c. *79. Refer to Interactlve Solutlon 15.79 at www.wiley.comlcoHege/ cutnell to review a method by which this probl巳 m can be solved. (a) After 6.00 kg of water at 85 .0 oC is rnixed in a perf巳ct thermos with 3.00 kg of ice at 0 .0 oC , the mixture is aIIowed to reach equilibrilllll. When heat is added to or removed from a solid or liqllid of m o C C m o Section 15.10 Refrigerators , Air Conditioners , and Heat Pumps w w k 伺 62. lic !'71. ssm Review Conceptual Example 9 before attempting this probw .c .d o lelll. A window air conditioner has an av巳rage coefficient of performc u -tr a c k ance of 2.0 . This unit has b巴巴 n placed on the ftoor by th巳 bed , in a futile attempt to cool th巳 b巳droom. During this attempt 7 .6 X 104 J of h巳at is pll Il ed in the 白 ont of the uni t. Th巳 room IS S巳 aIed and contains 3800 11101 of air. Assuming that the molar specific heat capacity of the 1 S C \I = ~R, d巳创t巳rm1l1巳 th巳 r门IS巳 111 忧肌 mp巳削Ir巳 caus巳d by op巳则 n alr 罔 t由 h巳 al町r co ndition巳 r in this mη1ann巳r lic reservoir of the 巳 ngine . Then , from point b to point c (pressur巳 = Pc, . c = Vç ) , the gas expands adiabatically. Next , the gas is volume c u -tr a c k compressed isothermally at temperature TC from point c to point d (pressure = Pd , volum巳= Vd ). During this compression , heat of magn山 de IQcI is r句巳ct巳d to the cold reservoir of the engin巳. Fina lI y, the gas is compress巳 d adiabatica lI y from point d to point a , where the gas is back in its initial stat巳 Th巳 overaIl proc巳 s s a to b to c to d is ca lI ed a Carnot cycle. Prove for this cycle that IQcI/ IQHI = Tc/TH .d o w w w w k k to bu y N O W ! XC N ! CHAPTER 15 THERMODYNAMICS F- er 470 w PD h a n g e Vi e O W XC er PD F- h a n g e Vi e w N to bu y N y bu to An irreversible engine operates between temperatures of "81. ( 852 and 314 K. 1t absorbs 1285 J of h巳 at from the hot reservoir and does 264 J of work. (a) What is the change I:!. Sunjvcrse in the entropy of the universe associated with the operation of this engine? (b) If the engine were rev巳 rsible , what would b 巳 the magnitude Iwl of the work it would have don巳, assuming that it op巳rated between th 巳 same temperatures and absorbed the same heat as the irreversible engine? (c) Using th巳 results of parts (a) and n叫 d 由 th 巳 d 副if 旺 f巳I 巳 nce b巳创tw巳巳 n 由 t h巳 work 严 p ro 刀 oduc巳 d by 巾 t h巳 陀r啕它 E (b) , fin阳 V巳rsibl巳 and in 巳V巳 rsibl 巳巳 ngm 巳s 出 80. Heat flows from a res巳 r voir at 373 K to a reservoir at Problem. 80 Af日 DITIONAL PROBLEMS 82. One-half mole of a monatomic ideal gas expands adiabatically and does 610 J of work. By how many kelvins does its temperature change? Specify whether the change is an increase or a decreas巳. 83. ssm One-h a1 f mole of a monatomic ide a1 gas absorbs 1200 J of heat whiJe 2500 J of work is done by the gas. (a) What is th巳 temp町, ature change of the gas? (b) 1s the change an increase or a decrease? 84. Multiple-Concept Examp l巳 6 deals with th巳 same concepts as this problem do巳s. What is the efficiency of a heat engine that uses an input heat of 5.6 X 104 J and rejects 1. 8 X 104 J of heat? 85. A gas is contained in a chamber such as that in Figure 15 .4 Suppose that the region outsid巳 the ch创nber is evacuated and the total mass of 出巳 block and the movable piston is 135 kg. When 2050 J of heat flows into the gas , the internal 巳 nergy of the gas increases by 1730 J. What is the distance s through which th巳 piston rises? 86. Engin巳 1 has an efficiency of 0.18 and requires 5500 J of input heat to perform a certain amount of work. Engine 2 has an efficiency of 0.26 and performs the sam巳 amount of work. How much input heat does the second engine require? 87. ssm A process occurs in which the entropy of a system increases by 125 J/K. During the process , the energy that becomes unavailable for doing work is zero. (a) Is this process reversible or irreversible? Give your reasoning. (b) Determine the change in the entropy of the surroundings . 88. See Multiple-Concept Example 10 to review the concepts that 盯巳 important in this problem . The water in a deep underground well is used as the cold reservoir of a Carnot heat pump that maintains the temperature of a house at 301 K. To d巳 posit 14200 J of heat in the house , the heat pump requires 800 J of work. Determine the temp巳r ature of the well water 89. A Carnot air conditioner maintains the temperature in a house at 297 K on a day when the temperature outside is 311 K. What is the coefficient of performance of the air conditioner? 90. A Carnot engine has an efficiency of 0 .40. The Kelvin temperature of its hot reservoir is quadrupled , and the Kelv in temperature of its cold reservoir is doubled. What is the 巳fficiency that results from these changes? 9 1. ssm (a) Using the data presented in the accompanying pressure-versus-volume graph , estimate the magnitude of the work done wh巳 n the syst巳m changes 台om A to B to C along the path shown. (b) Determine whether the work is don巳 by the system or on the system and , henc巳, whether the work is posItrve or negatrve. *92. Refer to the drawing in Problem 12 , where th巳 curv巳 between A and B is now an i soth巳 rm. An ideal gas begins at A and is changed along the horizontalline from A to C and then along the vertical line from C to B. (a) Find the heat for the process ACB and (b) determine whether it flows into or out of the gas 写 93. ssm Suppo s巳 a monatomic ideal gas is contained within a vertical cylinder that is fitted with a movable piston . The piston is frictionless and has a negligible mass. The area of the piston is 3.14 X 10- 2 m2, and the pressure outside the cylinder is 1.01 X lO s Pa. H巳 at (2093 J) is removed from th巳 gas. Through what d i stanc巳 does the piston drop? ;'94. An air conditioner ke巳ps the inside of a house at a temp巳rature of 19.0 oC when the outdoor temp巳rature is 33.0 OC. Heat , leaking into the hous巳 at the rat巳 of 10 500 joules p巳r second , is removed by th巳 air conditioner. Assuming that the air conditioner is a Carnot air conditioner, what is the work p巳 r second that must be done by the electrical energy in order to keep the inside temperature constant? m o m C lic k 273 K through a 0.35-m copper rod with a cross-sectional ar巳 a of 9 .4 X 10- 4 m2 (see the drawing). The heat then leaves the w273-K .c .d o c u -tr a c k reservoir and 巳 nters a Carnot engine , which uses part of this h巳atto do work and r巳j 巳 cts the remainder to a third reservoir at 173 K. How much of the heat l eavinσthe 373-K reservoir is r巳 ndered unb available for doing work in a period of 2.0 min? o k lic C mass m and speci 白 c heat capacity c, the chang巳 in entropy .c c u -tr a c k can be shown to be I:!. S = mc In(Tf/Tj ) , where T j and T f are th巳 initial and final Kelvin t巳 mperatures. Using this expr巳ssion and the change in 巳n tropy for melting , find the change in entropy that occurs (b) Should the entropy of the u l1lvers巳 incr巳ase or decreas巳 as a result of the mixing process? Give your reasoning and state whether your answer in part (a) is consistent with your answer here. w w .d o w w w ! XC O W F- ADDITIONAL PROBLEMS 471 er O W w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F- y k 98. 吨,. Even at I 町, the human body ge n e刚es hea t. The heat arises 6.00 '" 0.. 飞 4 . 00 F • × ω ~ 2.00 <Il ω 口- O o 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.0 12.0 Vo lume, m3 "96. Th巳 s un is a sphere wi th a radius of 6.96 x 108 m and an average s 1I rface t巳 mperature of 5800 K. Determine th巳 amollnt by which the sun 's thermal radiation increases the 巳 ntropy of th巳 entlre 1I 111V巳 rse each second . Ass ume that th巳 slln is a perfect blackbody, and that the average t巳 mp巳 rature of th巳 rest of the uni vers巳 i s 2.73 K. Do not consider the therm a l radiation absorbed by the slln from th e l 巳 s t of the lI niverse. ij becalls巳 of the body 's m巳tabolism-that 岖 , the chemical reactions that 缸 e always occ urrin g in the body to generate energy. ln room s designed for use by large groups , adequate ve ntil ation 0 1' ail conditioning mllst be provid巳d to remov巳 thi s hea t. Consider a c1 ass ro0 1l1 containing 200 stlldents. As s llm 巳 that the llletabolic rate of gen 巳ratin g h巳at is 130 W for each stlldent and that the heat accumlllat巳S dllring a fiftY-lllinut巳 lectllre. ln addition , ass llme that the air has a mo lar specific heat of C v = ~R and 阳t the rOO Ill (volume = 1200 m3 , initial press ure = 1.01 X 105 Pa , and initial telllperature = 21 o c) is sealed Shll t. lf all the heat g巳 nerat巳d by th巳 stud e nts were absorbed by the air, by how lllllCh would the 创l' telllp巳ra ture ri se during a lecture? "*99. ssm Engine A receives thre巳 tlm巳 s lllore inpllt heat , prodllces 自 ve tillles more work , and rejects two times more heat than engin巳 B. Find the efl白 ciency of (a) engine A and (b) 巳n g in 巳 B 常 1' 100. The work don巳 b y one巳盯mo l 巳e of a lllona 川 创tω a 川 阳 O in expanding adiabaticaU飞ly 巴 i s 825 J. Th巳 initia 川 \1 忧t 巳 lllp巳 ra阳I 巳 and volullle of 由 t h巳 gas ar陀 巳 393 K and 0.100 m 3 • Obtain (a 创) 白 th巳白 n 创 a 1 忧t 巳 mp巳町r 创tu a 川l'巳 缸 an叫 d (仙 b) 由 t h巳 final volume of the gas m lic C m o to bu y bu to k lic C w "97. Interactive 5olution 15.97 at www.wiley.comlcollege/cutnell offers one approach to thi s problem. A lìfteen-watt h eat巳r is lI sed wto. d o .c c u -tr a c k heat a monatomic ideal gas at a co nstant pl 巳 ss ure of 7.60 x 105 Pa. During the process , the 1 .40 X 10- 3 m3 vo lume of the gas increases by 25.0%. How long was the heater on? w "95. A monatomic ideal gas expands from point A to point B along th 巳 path shown in the drawing. (a) Deterrnine the work done by the gas .c c u -tr a c k (b) The temperature of the gas at point A is 185 K. Wh at is its temP巳 rature at point B? (c) How much heat has been added to or removed from the gas during the process? .d o w w w w N O W ! h a n g e Vi e o O W THERMODYNAMICS XC N CHAPTER 15 F- er 472 w PD h a n g e Vi e ! XC er PD F-