Laws of Thermodynamics

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Chapter 15

Laws of Thermodynamics
Thermodynamics
 Study processes where energy is
transferred as heat, work
 Heat: transfer energy due to T0
 Work: transfer energy when T=0
Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics

 If objects A and B are separately in


thermal equilibrium with a third object, C,
then A and B are in thermal equilibrium
with each other.
 Allows a definition of temperature
Internal Energy
 Internal Energy, U, is the energy
associated with the microscopic
components of the system
• Includes kinetic and potential energy
associated with the random
translational, rotational and vibrational
motion of the atoms or molecules
• Also includes any potential energy
bonding the particles together
First Law of Thermodynamics
 The First Law of Thermodynamics
tells us that the internal energy of a
system can be increased by
• Adding energy to the system
• Doing work on the system
 There are many processes through
which these could be accomplished
• As long as energy is conserved
First Law of Thermodynamics
 Energy conservation law
 Relates changes in internal energy to
energy transfers due to heat and
work
 Applicable to all types of processes
 Provides a connection between
microscopic and macroscopic worlds
First Law, cont.

 Energy transfers occur due to


• By doing work
 Requires a macroscopic displacement of
an object through the application of a
force
• By heat
 Occurs through the random molecular
collisions
 Both result in a change in the
internal energy, U, of the system
First Law, Equation
 If a system undergoes a change from
an initial state to a final state, then
U = Uf – Ui = Q - W
• Q is the energy transferred to the
system by heat
• W is the work done by the system
• U is the change in internal energy
First Law – Signs
 Signs of the terms in the equation
•Q
 Positive if energy is transferred to the system by heat
 Negative if energy is transferred out of the system by
heat
•W
 Positive if work is done by the system
 Negative if work is done on the system
• U
 Positive if the temperature increases
 Negative if the temperature decreases
Results of U
 Changes in the internal energy result
in changes in the measurable
macroscopic variables of the system
• These include
 Pressure
 Temperature
 Volume
Notes About Work
 Positive work decreases the internal
energy of the system
 Negative work increases the internal
energy of the system
 This is consistent with the definition
of mechanical work
Second Law of
Thermodynamics
 Heat flows naturally from hot to
cold objects. Heat will not flow
spontaneously from cold object to
hot object.
Heat Engine
 A heat engine takes in energy by
heat and partially converts it to other
forms
 In general, a heat engine carries
some working substance through a
cyclic process
Heat Engine, cont.
 Energy is
transferred from a
source at a high
temperature (Qh)
 Work is done by
the engine (Weng)
 Energy is expelled
to a source at a
lower temperature
(Qc)
Thermal Efficiency of a Heat
Engine
 Thermal efficiency is defined as the ratio
of the work done by the engine to the
energy absorbed at the higher
temperature
WengQh  Ql Ql
e   1
Qh Qh Qh
 e = 1 (100% efficiency) only if Qc = 0
• No energy expelled to cold reservoir
Maximum efficiency
 Depends only on the temperature of the
hot and cold sources.
work output
max efficiency 
heat input
TL
emax  1 
TH
 TH and TL are in Kelvin
 Carnot Cycle
Sadi Carnot
 1796 – 1832
 French Engineer
 Founder of the
science of
thermodynamics
 First to recognize
the relationship
between work and
heat
Carnot Engine
 A theoretical engine developed by Sadi
Carnot
 A heat engine operating in an ideal,
reversible cycle (now called a Carnot
Cycle) between two reservoirs is the most
efficient engine possible
 Carnot’s Theorem: No real engine
operating between two energy reservoirs
can be more efficient than a Carnot engine
operating between the same two
reservoirs
Carnot Cycle
Example
A heat engine works between 400 C
and 200 C. What is its maximum
efficiency? If the engine uses 10Mcal
in a hour and operates at maximum
efficiency, what is the work output?
Power output? How about at 80% of
maximum efficiency?
Heat Pumps and Refrigerators

 Heat engines can run in reverse


• Energy is injected
• Energy is extracted from the cold reservoir
• Energy is transferred to the hot reservoir
 This process means the heat engine is
running as a heat pump
• A refrigerator is a common type of heat
pump
• An air conditioner is another example of a
heat pump
Heat Pump, cont
 The work is what
you pay for
 The Qc is the
desired benefit
 The coefficient of
performance (COP)
measures the
performance of the
heat pump running
in cooling mode
Heat Pump, COP
 In cooling mode, Qc
COP 
W
 The higher the number, the better
 A good refrigerator or air conditioner
typically has a COP of 5 or 6

TL
COPmax 
TH  TL
Heat Pump, COP
 In heating mode, QH
COP 
W
 The heat pump warms the inside of
the house by extracting heat from
the colder outside air
 Typical values are greater than one
TH
COPmax 
TH  TL
Example
A gasoline engine takes in 2500 J of
heat and delivers 500 J of
mechanical work per cycle. Heat is
obtained by burning gasoline with a
heat of combustion of 5.0x104 J/g.
Determine thermal efficiency, heat
lost, gas used during each cycle,
power output with 100 cycles/s,
amount of gasoline used in one hour.

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