Chapter Four
Chapter Four
Chapter Four
• When air is heated, it expands and becomes less dense than the
surrounding air, which then exerts an (upward) force on the
hot air and makes steam and smoke rise, hot air balloons float,
and so forth.
1 Linear Thermal Expansion
Cont…
2 Areal Expansion
3 Volume Expansion
4.3. The Concept of Heat, Work and Internal Energy
Heat, symbol Q and unit Joule (J), is the spontaneous flow of
energy into or out of a system caused by a difference in
temperature between the system and its surroundings, or
between two objects whose temperatures are different.
A body never contains heat rather, heat can be identified only
as it crosses the boundary.
Thus, heat is a transient phenomenon.
Work, symbol W and unit Joule (J), is a non-spontaneous
energy transfer into or out of a system due to force acting
through a displacement.
Work takes many forms, moving a piston, or stirring, or
running an electrical current through a resistance.
Heat and work are two possible ways of transferring energy
from one system to another.
Cont…
Heat is a microscopic form of energy transfer involving large
number of particles; the exchange of energy occurs due to the
individual interactions of the particles.
No macroscopic displacement occurs when heat flows and no
macroscopic force is exerted by one object on the other.
A system cannot possess heat or work; these two are
energies that flow into or out of a system.
Heat transfer obeys the law of conservation of energy (if no
heat is lost to the surroundings)
Cont…
Internal Energy, symbol U, is defined as the energy
associated with the random, disordered motion of the
microscopic components-atoms and molecules.
Any bulk kinetic energy of the system due to its motion
through space is not included in its internal energy.
Internal energy includes kinetic energy of translation,
rotation, and vibration of molecules, potential energy within
molecules, and potential energy between molecules.
It is useful to relate internal energy to the temperature of an
object, but this relationship is limited, internal energy changes
can also occur in the absence of temperature changes.
4.4. Specific Heat and Latent Heat
Specific Heats:
Heat flowing into or out of a body (or system) changes the
temperature of the body (or system) except during phase
changes the temperature remains constant.
The quantity of heat, Q, required to change the temperature of
a body of mass m by is proportional to both the mass and the
change in temperature.
Mathematically,
c is a proportionality constant called specific heat capacity(or
in short specific heat) of the substance defined as the amount
of heat required to raise the temperature of a unit mass of any
substance through a unit degree.
Its SI unit is
Cont…
The amount of heat required to change the temperature of n
moles of a substance, usually for gases, by is :
Where is the change in internal energy of the system, is the work done on the
system (or by the system) and P and are the pressure and change in volume of the system.
The First Law for different thermodynamic systems:
Isochoric process
In a constant volume process, the volume of the system stays
constant. Consequently, W=0. From the first law we see that
All the heat entering the system goes into increasing the internal
energy.
Adiabatic Process
• In an adiabatic process, the system does not exchange heat with
its surroundings; that is, Q = 0.
• The first law for an adiabatic process takes the form
• Isothermal Process
It is a process which involves no change in the temperature
of the system.
If the process occurs at constant temperature then there is no
change in the internal energy of the system so .
Cont…
• The first law for an isothermal process takes the form