PHYS 2-Course Materials Fall-2019 Upto MidT.
PHYS 2-Course Materials Fall-2019 Upto MidT.
PHYS 2-Course Materials Fall-2019 Upto MidT.
Text book: Fundamentals of Physics (10th edition, Extended): David Halliday, Robert Resnick and
Jearl Walker (John Wiley & Sons)
Midterm Examination [40%]: Heat and thermodynamics [12 lectures (18 hours)]
Chapter 18: Temperature, heat and the first law of thermodynamics [4 lectures (6 hours), 1st quiz]
18-1: Temperature (temperature, the zeroth law of thermodynamics), 18-4: Absorption of heat
(temperature and heat), The absorption of heat by solids and liquids (heat capacity, specific heat, molar
specific heat, heat of transformation), 18-5: The first law of thermodynamics (a closer look at heat and
work, the first law of thermodynamics), Some special cases of the first law of thermodynamics (adiabatic
processes, constant-volume processes, cyclical processes, free expansions)
24. A certain substance has a mass per mole of 50.0 g/mol. When 314 J is added as heat to a 30.0 g
sample, the sample’s temperature rises from 25.0 0C to 45.0 0C. What are the (a) specific heat and (b)
molar specific heat of this substance? (c) How many moles are in the sample?
27. Calculate the minimum amount of energy, in joules, required to completely melt 130 g of silver initially
at 15.0 0C.
28. How much water remains unfrozen after 50.2 kJ is transferred as heat from 260 g of liquid water
initially at its freezing point?
46. Suppose 200 J of work is done on a system and 70.0 cal is extracted from the system as heat. In the
sense of the first law of thermodynamics, what are the values (including algebraic signs) of (a) W, (b) Q,
and (c) ΔEint?
48. As a gas is held within a closed chamber, it passes through the cycle shown in Fig. Determine the
energy transferred by the system as heat during constant-pressure process CA if the energy added as
heat QAB during constant-volume process AB is 20.0 J, no energy is transferred as heat during adiabatic
process BC, and the net work done during the cycle is 15.0 J.
Chapter 19: The kinetic theory of gases [4 lectures (6 hours), 2nd quiz]
19-2: Ideal gases (ideal gases, work done by an ideal gas at constant temperature, work done at constant
volume and at constant pressure), 19-3: Pressure, Temperature, and RMS speed, 19-4: Translational
kinetic energy, 19-7: The molar specific heats of an ideal gas (internal energy, molar specific heat at
constant volume, molar specific heat at constant pressure), 19-9: The adiabatic expansion of an ideal gas
7. Suppose 1.80 mol of an ideal gas is taken from a volume of 3.00 m 3 to a volume of 1.50 m 3 via an
isothermal compression at 30 0C. (a) How much energy is transferred as heat during the compression,
and (b) is the transfer to or from the gas?
23. A beam of hydrogen molecules (H2) is directed toward a wall, at an angle of 550 with the normal to the
wall. Each molecule in the beam has a speed of 1.0 km/s and a mass of 3.3x10-24 g. The beam strikes the
wall over an area of 2.0 cm2, at the rate of 1023 molecules per second. What is the beam’s pressure on
the wall?
26. What is the average translational kinetic energy of nitrogen molecules at 1600 K?
48. When 20.9 J was added as heat to a particular ideal gas, the volume of the gas changed from 50.0
cm3 to 100 cm3 while the pressure remained at 1.00 atm. (a) By how much did the internal energy of the
gas change? If the quantity of gas present was 2.00x10-3 mol, find (b) Cp and (c) CV.
Module 19-9 The Adiabatic Expansion of an Ideal Gas
54. We know that for an adiabatic process pVγ = a constant. Evaluate “a constant” for an adiabatic
process involving exactly 2.0 mol of an ideal gas passing through the state having exactly p = 1.0 atm and
T = 300 K. Assume a diatomic gas whose molecules rotate but do not oscillate.
55. A certain gas occupies a volume of 4.3 L at a pressure of 1.2 atm and a temperature of 310 K. It is
compressed adiabatically to a volume of 0.76 L. Determine (a) the final pressure and (b) the final
temperature, assuming the gas to be an ideal gas for which γ = 1.4.
Chapter 20: Entropy and the second law of thermodynamics [4 lectures (6 hours)]
20-1: Entropy (irreversible processes and entropy, change in entropy, the second law of
thermodynamics), 20-2: Entropy in the real world: Engines (a Carnot engine, efficiency of a Carnot
engine) 20-3: Refrigerators and real engines (entropy in the real world: refrigerators)
3. A 2.50 mol sample of an ideal gas expands reversibly and isothermally at 360 K until its volume is
doubled. What is the increase in entropy of the gas?
4. How much energy must be transferred as heat for a reversible isothermal expansion of an ideal gas at
132 0C if the entropy of the gas increases by 46.0 J/K?
24. A Carnot engine absorbs 52 kJ as heat and exhausts 36 kJ as heat in each cycle. Calculate (a) the
engine’s efficiency and (b) the work done per cycle in kilojoules.
25. A Carnot engine has an efficiency of 22.0%. It operates between constant-temperature reservoirs
differing in temperature by 75.0 C0 .What is the temperature of the (a) lower-temperature and (b) higher-
temperature reservoir?
27. A Carnot engine operates between 235 0C and 115 0C, absorbing 6.30x104 J per cycle at the higher
temperature. (a) What is the efficiency of the engine? (b) How much work per cycle is this engine capable
of performing?
40. To make ice, a freezer that is a reverse Carnot engine extracts 42 kJ as heat at -15 0C during each
cycle, with coefficient of performance 5.7. The room temperature is 30.3 0C. How much (a) energy per
cycle is delivered as heat to the room and (b) work per cycle is required to run the freezer?