SI Thermo 8e Chap 4 Lecture

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Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach

8th Edition in SI Units


Yunus A. engel, Michael A. Boles
McGraw-Hill, 2015

CHAPTER 4
ENERGY ANALYSIS OF
CLOSED SYSTEMS

Lecture slides by
Mehmet Kanoglu

Copyright 2015 The McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Objectives
Examine the moving boundary work or P dV work commonly
encountered in reciprocating devices such as automotive engines
and compressors.
Identify the first law of thermodynamics as simply a statement of
the conservation of energy principle for closed (fixed mass)
systems.
Develop the general energy balance applied to closed systems.
Define the specific heat at constant volume and the specific heat at
constant pressure.
Relate the specific heats to the calculation of the changes in
internal energy and enthalpy of ideal gases.
Describe incompressible substances and determine the changes in
their internal energy and enthalpy.
Solve energy balance problems for closed (fixed mass) systems
that involve heat and work interactions for general pure
substances, ideal gases, and incompressible substances.
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MOVING BOUNDARY WORK
Moving boundary work (P dV work): Quasi-equilibrium process:
The expansion and compression work A process during which the system
in a piston-cylinder device. remains nearly in equilibrium at all
times.
Wb is positive for expansion
Wb is negative for compression

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The boundary
work done
during a process
depends on the
path followed as
well as the end
states.

The area under the process curve on a P-V


diagram is equal, in magnitude, to the work
done during a quasi-equilibrium expansion or
compression process of a closed system. 4
Boundary Work for a Constant-Pressure Process

5 kPa
400 kPa

P,
kPa

400

v, m3/kg
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Boundary Work for a Constant-Volume Process
What is the boundary
work for a constant-
volume process?

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Boundary Work for an Isothermal Compression Process

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Boundary Work for a Polytropic Process

For ideal gas

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Expansion of a Gas against a Spring

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ENERGY BALANCE FOR CLOSED SYSTEMS
Energy balance for any system
undergoing any process

Energy balance
in the rate form

The total quantities are related to the quantities per unit time is

Energy balance per


unit mass basis
Energy balance in
differential form

Energy balance
for a cycle

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Energy balance when sign convention is used: (i.e., heat input and
work output are positive; heat output and work input are negative).

Various forms of the first-law relation


for closed systems when sign
convention is used.

The first law cannot be proven mathematically, but no process in nature is known
to have violated the first law, and this should be taken as sufficient proof.
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Energy balance for a constant-pressure
expansion or compression process
General analysis for a closed system For a constant-pressure expansion
undergoing a quasi-equilibrium or compression process:

U Wb H
constant-pressure process. Q is to the
system and W is from the system.

An example of constant-pressure process

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13
Unrestrained Expansion
of Water

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SPECIFIC HEATS
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.

Constant-
volume and
constant-
pressure specific
heats cv and cp
(values are for
helium gas). 15
True or False?
cp is always greater than cv

The equations are valid for any


substance undergoing any process.
cv and cp are properties.
cv is related to the changes in internal
energy and cp to the changes in
enthalpy.
A common unit for specific heats is
kJ/kgC or kJ/kgK. Are these units Formal definitions of cv and 16
c p.
identical?
INTERNAL ENERGY, ENTHALPY,
AND SPECIFIC HEATS OF IDEAL GASES

Joule showed
Internal energy and
using this For ideal gases,
enthalpy change of
experimental u, h, cv, and cp
an ideal gas
apparatus that vary with
u=u(T) temperature only.
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At low pressures, all real gases approach u and h data for a number of
ideal-gas behavior, and therefore their gases have been tabulated.
specific heats depend on temperature only. These tables are obtained by
The specific heats of real gases at low choosing an arbitrary reference
pressures are called ideal-gas specific point and performing the
heats, or zero-pressure specific heats, and integrations by treating state 1
are often denoted cp0 and cv0. as the reference state.

Ideal-gas
constant-
pressure specific
heats for some
gases (see In the preparation of ideal-gas
Table A2c for cp tables, 0 K is chosen as the
equations). reference temperature.
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Internal energy and enthalpy change
when specific heat is taken constant
at an average value

(kJ/kg)

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Three ways of calculating u and h
1. By using the tabulated u and h data.
This is the easiest and most
accurate way when tables are readily
available.
2. By using the cv or cp relations (Table
A-2c) as a function of temperature
and performing the integrations. This
is very inconvenient for hand
calculations but quite desirable for
computerized calculations. The
results obtained are very accurate.
3. By using average specific heats. This
is very simple and certainly very
convenient when property tables are Three ways of calculating u.
not available. The results obtained are
reasonably accurate if the
temperature interval is not very large.
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Specific Heat Relations of Ideal Gases
The relationship between cp, cv and R

dh = cpdT and du = cvdT On a molar basis

Specific
heat ratio

The specific ratio varies with


temperature, but this variation is
very mild.
For monatomic gases (helium,
argon, etc.), its value is essentially
constant at 1.667.
Many diatomic gases, including air,
The cp of an ideal gas can be determined have a specific heat ratio of about
from a knowledge of cv and R. 1.4 at room temperature.
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Heating of a Gas in a Tank by Stirring

P,
kPa

He
0.7 kg
27C
350 kPa
350

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Heating of a Gas by a Resistance Heater

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Heating of a Gas at Constant Pressure

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INTERNAL ENERGY, ENTHALPY, AND
SPECIFIC HEATS OF SOLIDS AND LIQUIDS
Incompressible substance: A substance whose specific volume (or
density) is constant. Solids and liquids are incompressible substances.

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Internal Energy Changes

Enthalpy Changes

The enthalpy of a
compressed liquid
Usually amore accurate relation than 26
Cooling of an Iron Block by Water

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Heating of Aluminum Rods in a Furnace

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Summary
Moving boundary work
Wb for an isothermal process
Wb for a constant-pressure process
Wb for a polytropic process
Energy balance for closed systems
Energy balance for a constant-pressure expansion
or compression process
Specific heats
Constant-pressure specific heat, cp
Constant-volume specific heat, cv
Internal energy, enthalpy, and specific heats of
ideal gases
Specific heat relations of ideal gases
Internal energy, enthalpy, and specific heats of
incompressible substances (solids and liquids)
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