Title: First and Second Laws of Thermodynamics
1First and Second Laws of Thermodynamics
2Class Objectives
- Understand the definitions of
- temperature, pressure, density, amount of
substance - states of matter and phase diagrams
- gas laws
- Understand and apply
- work, energy, reversibility, heat capacity
- First and Second Laws of Thermodynamics
3Reversibility
- Reversibility is the ability to run a process
back and forth (backwards and forwards)
infinitely without losses. - Money analogy Currency conversion
- no service fee 100 ? 40, and one hour later at
the same place, 40 ? 100 - with service fees 100 ? 38, and one hour later
at the same place, 38 ? 90
4Reversibility and Energy
- If irreversibilities were eliminated, these
systems would run forever. - Perpetual machines
5Example Popping a Balloon
- A reversible process can go in either
direction, but these processes are rare. - Generally, the irreversibility shows up as waste
heat
6Sources of Irreversibilities
- Friction (force drops)
- Voltage drops
- Pressure drops
- Temperature drops
- Concentration drops
7Basic Laws of Thermodynamics
- First Law of Thermodynamics
- energy can neither be created nor destroyed
- Second Law of Thermodynamics
- naturally occurring processes are directional
8First Law of Thermodynamics
- One form of work may be converted into another,
- Or, work may be converted to heat,
- Or, heat may be converted to work,
- But, final energy initial energy
92nd Law of Thermodynamics
- We intuitively know that heat flows from higher
to lower temperatures and NOT the other
direction. - i.e., heat flows downhill just like water
- You cannot raise the temperature in this room by
adding ice cubes. - Thus processes that employ heat are inherently
irreversible.
10Heat/Work Conversions
- Heat transfer is inherently irreversible. This
places limits on the amount of work that can be
produced from heat. - Heat can be converted to work using heat engines
- Jet engines (planes), steam engines (trains),
internal combustion engines (automobiles)
11Heat into Work
- A heat engine takes in an amount of heat, Qhot,
and produces work, W, and waste heat Qcold. - Nicolas Carnot (kar no) derived the limits of
converting heat into work.
12Carnot Equation Efficiency
- Given the heat engine on the previous slide, the
maximum work that can be produced is governed by - where the temperatures are absolute
temperatures. - Thus, as Thot ?Tcold, Wmax ? 0.
- This ratio is also called the efficiency, h.
13Pairs Exercise (5 min)
- Use Excel to create a graph showing the trend of
work per unit heat for a heat engine whose the
source temperature is increases from 300 K to
3000 K and the waste heat is rejected to an
ambient temperature of 300 K.
14Work into Heat
- Although there are limits on the amount of heat
converted to work, work may be converted to heat
with 100 efficiency. - This is shown by Joules Experiment
15Joules Experiment
Joules Mechanical Equivalent of Heat
This proved 1 kcal 4,184 J
DT 1oC
m
F
Dx
1 kg H2O
E FDx 4,184 J
16Where did the energy go?
- By the First Law of Thermodynamics, the energy we
put into the water (either work or heat) cannot
be destroyed. - The heat or work added increased the internal
energy of the water. - This is the energy stored in the atoms and
molecules that make up the water they move faster
17Heat Capacity
- An increase in internal energy causes a rise in
the temperature of the medium. - Different mediums require different amounts of
energy to produce a given temperature change.
18Heat Capacity Defined
- Heat capacity the ratio of heat, Q, needed to
change the temperature of a mass, m, by an amount
DT - Sometimes called specific heat
19Heat Capacity for Constant Volume Processes (Cv)
insulation
DT
Heat, Q added
m
m
- Heat is added to a substance of mass m in a fixed
volume enclosure, which causes a change in
internal energy, U. Thus, - Q U2 - U1 DU m Cv DT
- The v subscript implies constant volume
20Heat Capacity for Constant Pressure Processes (Cp)
- Heat is added to a substance of mass m held at a
fixed pressure, which causes a change in internal
energy, U, AND some PV work.
21 Cp Defined
- Thus,
- Q DU PDV DH m Cp DT
- The p subscript implies constant pressure
- H, enthalpy. is defined as U PV,
- so DH D(UPV) DU VDP PDV DU PDV
- Experimentally, it is easier to add heat at
constant pressure than constant volume, thus you
will typically see tables reporting Cp for
various materials (Table 22.2 in your text).
22Individual Exercises (5 min.)
- Calculate the change in enthalpy per unit lbm of
nitrogen gas as its temperature decreases from
1000 oR to 700 oR. - Two kg of water (Cv4.2 kJ/kg K) is heated by 200
BTU of energy. What is the change in temperature
in K? In oF?
23Assignment 17 (Team Assignment)
- FOUNDATIONS 11.9, 11.11, 11.12
- Due1st class of week 13