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Thermal Physics IB Physics

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Thermal Physics IB Physics Topic 3 & Option C ... Alf Cliff State the relation between Kelvin & Celsius Scales. 212 F, 373.15K 32 F, 273.15K -460 F, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Thermal Physics IB Physics


1
Thermal PhysicsIB Physics
  • Topic 3 Option C

2
Thermodynamics
  • Understanding the words
  • Temperature
  • Heat
  • Heat capacity
  • The 0, 1, 2 laws of thermodynamics
  • (one of) Kelvins legacys

WilliamThompson (Lord Kelvin)
3
What is Heat?
  • Perception as to hot and cold defined relative to
    our own body temperature, i.e. object is hotter
    or colder than oneself
  • Objective measurement of temperature
  • Macroscopic, display of temperature gauge
  • Microscopic behaviour of atoms and molecules

4
Measuring temperature
  • Properties of materials change with temperature
  • Length
  • Volume
  • Resistance

5
Hotter things become longer
  • All(?) solids get bigger when they get hot
  • A 1 metre long bar heated by 1 degree gets bigger
    by
  • Steel 0.01 mm
  • Glass 0.001 mm
  • Zerodur 0.0001mm

Rails expand and may buckle on a hot summer day
6
A bimetallic strip
  • Join two metals with different coefficient of
    thermal expansion

e.g. fire alarm
7
Hotter things take up more volume -1
  • Most materials get bigger when they get hot (but
    not water 0C -gt 4C gets smaller!)
  • Thermometer relies on a thermal expansion of a
    liquid (e.g.mercury)

Thin tube (Gives big length change for small
increase in volume)
Large volume of reservoir
8
Hotter things take up more volume -2
  • Gases (as we will see) can behave near perfectly

Hotter
9
Hotter things change their resistance
  • All hotter metals have a higher electrical
    resistance or conductivity
  • Digital thermometer
  • All hotter semiconductors have a lower electrical
    resistance
  • key definition between to distinguish metals and
    insulators!

10
Example
  • You have a (glass) jar and you cant get the
    metal lid off.
  • What should you do

a) ask your girlfriend
b) run the jar lid under cold water
c) run the jar lid under hot water
11
Solution
a) ask your girlfriend
b) run the jar lid under cold water
c) run the jar lid under hot water
Because the metal has a substantially higher
coefficient of thermal expansion than the glass,
heating them will make both of them bigger, but
the metal will be more bigger.
12
How long do you have to leave a thermometer in
your mouth?
  • Hot things stay hot if you insulate them, e.g.
  • coffee in a vacuum flask (keeps things cold too)
  • an explorer in a fur coat
  • The mercury in the thermometer must reach the
    same temperature as you Thermal Equilibrium!!

13
Insulation
  • Example of good (thermal) insulators
  • A vacuum, polystyrene, fibreglass, plastic, wood,
    brick
  • (low density/foam structure, poor electrical
    conductors)
  • Examples of poor insulators, i.e. good conductors
  • Most metals (but stainless steel better than
    copper) e.g. gold contact used within IC chips
    to prevent heating
  • Gases, liquids
  • (high density, mobile, good electrical
    conductors)

14
Ask a friend if its cool enough to eat
  • Your friend eats the hot loaf and says it cool
    enough to eat (i.e it is close enough to their
    own temperature that it does not burn)
  • Is it safe for you to eat too
  • If it is safe for him, its safe for you!

15
The 0th law of thermodynamics
  • If A and B are each in thermal equilibrium with C
    then A and B are in thermal equilibrium with each
    other
  • If Alfred and the Bread are the same temperature
    as Cliff then Alf is the same temperature as the
    Bread.

Temp
Temp?
Temp
Cliff
Alf
16
Temperature and scales
  • Temperature scales (melting boiling of water)
  • Degrees Celsius (MP 0C 100C)
  • Degrees Kelvin (MP 273.15 K BP 373.15 K)
  • Degree Fahrenheit (MP 32 F BP 212F)
  • Explain how a temperature scale is constructed.

17
The Common Temperature Scales
  • Fahrenheit Celsius
  • Celsius Fahrenheit

18
Absolute zero
  • Ideal gas has zero volume
  • Resistance of metal drops to zero (actually
    superconductivity cuts in above 0K)
  • Brownian motion ceases (kinetic energy due to
    thermal excitation)
  • But lowest temperature attained is 10-9K

19
Absolute zero, 0K
20
Lord Kelvin
  • William Thompson, born Belfast 1824
  • Student in Natural Philosophy
  • Professor at 22!
  • Baron Kelvin of Largs in 1897
  • A giant
  • Thermodynamics, Foams, Age of the Earth, Patents
    galore!

21
Converting between scales
State the relation between Kelvin Celsius
Scales.
  • Kelvin to Celsius
  • K C 273.15
  • C K - 273.15
  • Fahrenheit to Celsius (Not IB)
  • F C x (9/5) 32
  • C (F - 32) x (5/9)

22
Example
  • Convert the following temperatures into F and K
  • Boiling water, 100C
  • Freezing water, 0C
  • Absolute zero,
  • -273.15C

212F, 373.15K
32F, 273.15K
-460F, 0K
23
Type of thermometer
  • Change in electrical resistance (convenient but
    not very linear)
  • Change in length of a bar (bimetallic strip)
  • Change in volume of a liquid
  • Change in volume of gas (very accurate but slow
    and bulky)

24
Heat and internal energy
  • Can you describe the difference between the
    terms.
  • Temperature
  • Heat
  • Internal Energy

25
Temperature Absolute Temperature
  • Temperature is a property that determines the
    direction of thermal energy transfer between two
    bodies in thermal contact.
  • Absolute temperature is a measure of the average
    kinetic energy of the molecules of a substance.
  • Average kinetic energy is proportional to
    absolute temperature in Kelvin.

26
Example
  • What is the kinetic energy of an oxygen molecule
    at room temperature ( 21C)?
  • (k 1.38x10-23J/K)
  • Since we know the kinetic energy, how is it
    travelling?
  • This is called the root mean squared speed or rms
    speed.

KE 3/2 kT 3/2(1.38x10-23 x 294)
6.09 x 10-21 Joules
We could equate KE 1/2 mv2 KE 3/2 kT
and get v2 3kT/m mass must be in
kg!!!! Not u.
27
Heat (Energy)
  • Is the flow of energy in or out of a system.
  • Heat (energy) flows because of temperature
    difference
  • Bigger temperature difference bigger heat flow
  • Less insulation give more heat flow for the same
    temperature difference
  • Heat will not flow between two bodies of the same
    temperature

28
Equilibrium
  • Two objects of different temperature when placed
    in contact will reach the same temperature



Hot black coffee
Cold milk
Light brown coffee
29
Heat transfer energy transfer
  • Energy measured in Joules but heat often measured
    in Calories
  • One cal raises one gram of water from 14.5C to
    15.5C
  • 1 cal 4.186J
  • Doing work on something usually makes it hot
  • Joules Experiment!
  • 1st law of thermodynamics heat and work are both
    forms of energy

30
Sir James Joule
  • James Prescott Joule 1818-1889
  • Stirring water made it warm
  • Change in temperature proportional to work done
  • Showing equivalence of heat and mechanical energy
  • Also that electrical current flow through a
    resistor causes heating

31
Joules Experiment
32
Internal Energy
  • Is the total potential and kinetic energy of the
    molecules in a substance.
  • Potential energy is associated with
    intermolecular forces.
  • Kinetic energy includes both translational and
    rotational motion.

33
Three Phases Atomic Model
  • Three States of Ordinary Matter
  • Solid liquid
    gas

34
Atomic Model of Matter
  • Comparing Molecular Forces
  • Solid Largest molecular forces
  • Liquid
  • Gas Weakest molecular forces
  • When the kinetic energy of the molecules become
    comparable to the energy required for separation
    the molecules change there position and separate
    (PE increase). This is a phase transition
  • Melting or vaporizing

35
Avogadro constant
  • One mole a any substance is that quantity of the
    substance whose mass in grams is numerically
    equal to the substances molar mass, µ.
  • EX The moloar mass of O2 is 32 g mol-1
  • NA 6.02 x 1023 molecules mol-1

36
Example
  • How many grams are there in a quantity of oxygen
    gas containing 1.2 x 1025 molecules?

The number of moles is (1.20 x 1025)/6.02 x 1023
19.93 mol
Since the molar mass is 32 g mol-1 The mass is
19.93 x 32 638 g or 0.638 kg
37
Example
  • So, how fast is that O2 molecule traveling?
  • O2 32 g/mole

v2 3kT/m (rms speed of a molecule) m
0.032/(6.023 x 1023) 5.3x10-26 kg v2 3(1.38
x 10-23J/K)(294)/(5.3x10-26 kg) v 479 m/sec
38
Transferring heat energy
  • 3 mechanisms
  • Conduction
  • Heat transfer through material
  • Convection
  • Heat transfer by movement of hot material
  • Radiation
  • Heat transfer by light

39
Conduction of heat
  • Conduction in solids
  • Heat energy causes atoms to vibrate, a vibrating
    atom passes this vibration to the next
  • Conduction in metal
  • Heat energy causes electrons to gain energy,
    electrons travel through metal (conduction) and
    carry heat energy with them
  • Metals are good conductors of both heat and
    electricity

40
Conduction of heat
  • The atoms at the bottom are at a higher
    temperature and will oscillating more strongly
    than those at the top.

41
Rate of heat flow
  • Heat flow (H) is energy transfer per unit time,
    depends on
  • Temperature difference
  • Thermal conductivity (k)
  • k (copper) 385 W/(m K)
  • k (glass) 0.8 W/(m K)
  • k (air) 0.02 W/(m K)

A
TH
TC
L
42
Example
  • Two rods of the same cross-sectional area are
    joined together. The right rod is a better
    conductor of heat than the rod at left. The ends
    are kept at fixed temperatures.
  • In which rod is the rate of heat transfer the
    largest?
  • Is the temperature at the joining point lower are
    higher than 54 C?

Heat entering the joint must equal the heat
leaving the joint. (Conservation of Energy).
Hence, the rate of heat transfer is the
same. Since the second conductor is poor a much
larger temperature gradient can be maintained.
Thus, the temperature at the junction will be
larger.
43
Thermal conduction vs thermal resistance
  • Also can use thermal resistance, cf
  • Can make equation of heat flow more general

44
Convection of heat
  • Hot air rises (and takes its heat with it!)
  • Radiators

45
Convection of heat
  • Hot air rises (and takes its heat with it!)
  • Cumulus clouds

46
Figure 16-11Alternating Land and Sea Breezes
47
Convection of heat
  • Hurricanes
  • Plate tectonics

48
Radiation of heat
  • Dont confuse with radioactivity
  • Instead realize that light carries heat (e.g. the
    sun heats the earth)
  • Anything above absolute zero radiates heat
  • P a AT4 Stefan-Boltzmann law.

49
Radiation of heat
  • involves the generation and absorption of
    photons. Unlike conduction or convection,
    however, radiation requires no intervening medium
    to transport the heat.
  • All objects radiate energy continuously in the
    form of electromagnetic waves
  • The hotter an object the more power it radiate
    sand the shorter the wavelength of the peak
    emission wavelength

50
Not all things emit heat the same
  • Heat emission from an object area A
  • P AesT4
  • s Stafans constant 5.6x10-8 W/(m2 K4)
  • e emissivity of a body, 0 -1
  • ecopper 0.3
  • ecarcoal 1

51
Example
  • Estimate the upper limit to the heat emission of
    the sun
  • Suns temperature 7000k
  • Suns radius 7x108m

Emission, P AesT4 Area 4pr2 6.2 x 1018 m2
Emissivity 1 H 6.2 x 1018 x 5.6x10-8 x
70004 Suns output 8.3 x 1026 W
52
Are heat emitter also good absorbers?
  • Black and dull on the surface
  • Best emitter/absorber
  • Charcoal
  • Blackbody radiators
  • perfect absorber emitter
  • White and polished/shiny
  • Good Reflectors
  • Stay cool in the summer

53
Figure 16-12The Thermos Bottle
Discuss the operation of a thermos making
reference to methods of heat exchange.
54
Assignment
  • Questions from Packet. 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 10, 11,
    12, 14, 18, 19.

55
The colour of heat
  • Peak wavelength of light emitted depends on
    temperature
  • Spectrum includes all wavelength longer than the
    peak but not many above
  • 20C - peak in infrared (need thermal imaging
    camera to see body heat)
  • 800C - peak in red (electric coil, fire glows
    reds)
  • 3000 - peak in blue (but includes green and red
    light hence appears white)
  • 2.7K peak in micro-wave (background emission in
    the universe left over from the Big Bang)
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