CH3 - 1st Law of Thermodynamics Closed System
CH3 - 1st Law of Thermodynamics Closed System
CH3 - 1st Law of Thermodynamics Closed System
ENERGY, ENERGY
TRANSFER AND
GENERAL ENERGY
ANALYSIS
3-1-1 FORMS OF ENERGY
Energy can exist in numerous forms such as thermal, mechanical,
kinetic, potential, electric, magnetic, chemical, and nuclear, and
their sum constitutes the total energy, E of a system.
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Mass flow rate: Amount of mass flowing through a cross section per
unit time.
= density of fluid
= cross-sectional area of flow
= volume flow rate
= average flow velocity, normal
to the cross-sectional area
Energy flow rate
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Internal Energy
Internal energy, U: The sum of all the microscopic forms of energy.
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3-1-2 MECHANICAL ENERGY
Mechanical energy: The form of energy that can be converted to
mechanical work completely and directly by an ideal mechanical
device such as an ideal turbine.
The familiar forms of mechanical energy are kinetic energy and
potential energy.
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3-1-3 ENERGY TRANSFER BY HEAT
Heat: The form of energy that is transferred between two systems (or a
system and its surroundings) by virtue of a temperature difference.
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Heat Transfer Mechanism
Conduction: The transfer of energy
from the more energetic particles of
a substance to the adjacent less
energetic ones as a result of
interaction between particles.
Convection
where h = convection heat
transfer coefficient
Radiation
where = emissivity
= 5.67108 . 4
(Stefan-Boltzmann constant)
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3-1-4 ENERGY TRANSFER BY WORK
Work: The energy transfer associated with a force acting through a
distance. If energy crossing a boundary is not heat, it must be work.
E.g. A rising piston, a rotating shaft & electric wire crossing the
system boundaries.
Specifying the
directions of heat
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and work.
Work done per unit mass
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3-1-5 ENERGY
Energy Balance: The net change (increase or decrease) in the total
energy of the system during a process is equal to the difference between
the total energy entering and the total energy leaving the system during
that process.
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Mechanisms of Energy Transfer, Ein and Eout:
In rate form
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PROBLEM SOLVING TECHNIQUE
Step 1: Problem Statement
Step 2: Schematic
Step 3: Assumptions and Approximations
Step 4: Physical Laws
Step 5: Properties
Step 6: Calculations
Step 7: Reasoning, Verification, and Discussion
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Class exercise 1
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Class exercise 1 - Solution
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Class exercise 2
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Class exercise 2 - Solution
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Class exercise 3
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Class exercise 3 - Solution
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Chapter 3-2
THE FIRST LAW OF
THERMODYNAMICS:
CLOSED SYSTEMS
3-2-1 MOVING BOUNDARY WORK
Moving boundary work (P dV work): The expansion and compression
work in a piston-cylinder device.
A gas does a
differential amount
of work Wb as it
forces the piston to
move by a
differential amount
ds.
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Boundary work for a constant-pressure process
Example 1
A frictionless piston-cylinder device contains 5 kg of steam at 400 kPa
and 200 C. Heat is now transferred to the steam until the temperature
reaches 250 C. If the piston is not attached to a shaft and its mass is
constant, determine the work done by the steam during the process.
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Solution
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3-2-2 ENERGY BALANCE FOR A CLOSED SYSTEM
Energy balance when sign convention is used (i.e., heat input and work
output are positive; heat output and work input are negative).
In rate form
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For a cycle
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Class exercise 1
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3-2-3 SPECIFIC HEAT
Specific heat: The energy required to raise the temperature of the
unit mass of a substance by one degree.
Specific heat at constant volume, cv: The energy required to raise
the temperature of the unit mass of a substance by one degree as the
volume is maintained constant.
Specific heat at constant pressure, cp: The energy required to raise
the temperature of the unit mass of a substance by one degree as the
pressure is maintained constant.
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Change of enthalpy
The relation u = cv T is valid for any For small temperature intervals, the
kind of process, constant-volume or not. specific heats may be assumed to
vary linearly with temperature.
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Three ways of calculating
By using the tabulated u and h data. This is
the easiest and most accurate way when
tables are readily available.
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3-2-5 SPECIFIC HEAT RELATIONS OF IDEAL
GASES
The relationship
between cp, cv and R
On molar basis
Enthalpy changes
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Class exercise 5
In a partition system shown in figure below, 1 kg of water vapor at 200 kPa
occupies the right chamber of volume 3.39938 m3 . The left chamber is
initially evacuated and has 4.5 times the amount of volume of the right
chamber. The partition is then removed and the water vapor fills up the whole
system. Heat is transferred so that the temperature of water vapor becomes
35 C.
Determine
(a) The total volume of the system
(b) The final pressure of the water
(c) The quality of the mixture in final state
(d) The heat transferred
Water
Evacuated 1 kg
200 kPa
3.39938 m3
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Class exercise 6
A 0.2 m3 adiabatic rigid container has two partitions of equal volumes
separated by a thin membrane as shown in figure below. One partition
contains air at 200 kPa, 27 C while the other side has air at 100 kPa
and 7 C. When the membrane ruptures, compute
Air Air
200 kPa 100 kPa
27 C 7 C
0.1 m3 0.1 m3
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