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Chapters 19, 20 Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics Temperature • Thermodynamics – branch of physics studying thermal energy of systems • Temperature (T), a scalar – measure of the thermal (internal) energy of a system • SI unit: K (Kelvin) • Kelvin scale has a lower limit (absolute zero) and has no upper limit William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) (1824 - 1907) Kelvin scale • Kelvin scale is defined by the temperature of the triple point of pure water • Triple point – set of pressure and temperature values at which solid, liquid, and gas phases can coexist • International convention: T of the triple point of water is T3 273.16 K The zeroth law of thermodynamics • If two (or more) bodies in contact don’t change their internal energy with time, they are in thermal equilibrium • 0th law of thermodynamics: if bodies are in thermal equilibrium, their temperatures are equal Measuring temperature • Temperature measurement principle: if bodies A and B are each in thermal equilibrium with a third body C, then A and B are in thermal equilibrium with each other (and their temperatures are equal) • The standard temperature for the Kelvin scale is measured by the constant-volume gas thermometer Constant-volume gas thermometer P P0 gh T CP T3 CP3 P T T3 P3 P 273.16 K P3 Celsius and Fahrenheit scales • Celsius scale: TC T 273.15 • Fahrenheit scale: 9 TF TC 32 5 Anders Cornelius Celsius (1701 - 1744) Gabriel Daniel Fahrenheit (1686 - 1736) Thermal expansion • Thermal expansion: increase in size with an increase of a temperature • Linear expansion: L T L • Volume expansion: V T V 3 Thermal expansion Chapter 19 Problem 5 A copper telephone wire has essentially no sag between poles 35.0 m apart on a winter day when the temperature is – 20.0°C. How much longer is the wire on a summer day when T = 35.0°C? Temperature and heat • Heat (Q): energy transferred between a system and its environment because of a temperature difference that exists between them • SI Unit: Joule • Alternative unit: calorie (cal): 1 cal 4.1868 J Absorption of heat Q cmT cm(T f Ti ) • Specific heat (c): heat capacity per unit mass • Common states (phases) of matter: solid, liquid, gas Q Lm • Latenet heat (L): the amount of energy per unit mass transferred during a phase change (boiling, condensation, melting, freezing, etc.) Q Q Absorption of heat Q Q Absorption of heat Absorption of heat Chapter 20 Problem 17 A 1.00-kg block of copper at 20.0°C is dropped into a large vessel of liquid nitrogen at 77.3 K. How many kilograms of nitrogen boil away by the time the copper reaches 77.3 K? (The specific heat of copper is 0.0920 cal/g °C. The latent heat of vaporization of nitrogen is 48.0 cal/g.) Avogadro’s number • Mole – amount of substance containing a number of atoms (molecules) equal to the number of atoms in a 12 g sample of 12C • This number is known as Avogadro’s number (NA): NA = 6.02 x 1023 mol -1 • The number of moles in a sample N m m n N A m0 N A M Amedeo Avogadro (1776 -1856) N – total number of atoms (molecules) m – total mass of a sample, m0 – mass of a single atom (molecule); M – molar mass Ideal gases • Ideal gas – a gas obeying the ideal gas law: PV nRT R – gas constant R = 8.31 J/mol ∙ K Ludwig Eduard Boltzmann (1844-1906) PV nRT ( N / N A ) RT N ( R / N A ) T NkBT kB – Boltzmann constant kB = 1.38 x 1023 J/K PV NkBT Heat and work dW F ds ( PA) ds P( Ads) PdV Vf W PdV Vi Thermodynamic cycle Heat and work • Work is done by the system: Vf W PdV Vi • Work is done on the system : Vf W PdV Vi The first law of thermodynamics • Work and heat are path-dependent quantities • Quantity Q + W = ΔEint (change of internal energy) is path-independent • 1st law of thermodynamics: the internal energy of a system increases if heat is added to the system or work is done on the system Eint Eint, f Eint,i Q W The first law of thermodynamics • Adiabatic process: no heat transfer between the system and the environment Eint 0 W W • Isochoric (constant volume) process Eint Q 0 Q • Free expansion: Eint 0 0 0 • Cyclical process: Eint Q W 0 Q W Chapter 20 Problem 29 Consider the cyclic process depicted in the figure. If Q is negative for the process BC and ΔEint is negative for the process CA, what are the signs of Q, W, and that are associated with each process? Heat transfer mechanisms • Thermal conduction • Conduction rate: Pcond • Thermal resistance: Th Tc Q kA t L L R k Thermal conductivity • Conduction through a composite rod: Pcond ATh Tc L1 / k1 L2 / k 2 ATh Tc R1 R2 Heat transfer mechanisms • Thermal radiation • Radiation rate: Emissivity Prad eAT • Stefan-Boltzmann constant: • Absorption rate: 4 5.67 10 8W / m 2 K 4 Pabs eAT 4 env Pnet Pabs Prad eA(T 4 env Josef Stefan (1835-1893) T ) 4 Chapter 20 Problem 46 At high noon, the Sun delivers 1000 W to each square meter of a blacktop road. If the hot asphalt loses energy only by radiation, what is its steady-state temperature? Heat transfer mechanisms • Convection Heat transfer mechanisms Questions? Answers to the even-numbered problems Chapter 19 Problem 2 (a) 810°F (b) 450 K Answers to the even-numbered problems Chapter 19 Problem 6 1.20 cm Answers to the even-numbered problems Chapter 19 Problem 18 (a) 2.99 mol (b) 1.80 × 1024 molecules Answers to the even-numbered problems Chapter 20 Problem 26 (a) 12.0 kJ (b) –12.0 kJ