Title: Energy: Mysterious and Amazing, Conserved and Conserving
1Energy Mysterious and Amazing, Conserved and
Conserving
- R. Stephen Berry
- The University of Chicago
- Nerenberg Lecture
- The University of Western Ontario
- 21 March 2006
2An Outline
- The mystery and history of energy
- Thermodynamics Not quite what we were taught it
is, in unusual regimes - Going beyond, to more efficient ways to use energy
3Easy Question What is Energy?
4Easy Question? Oh, is it? What is Energy?
5Can you say, tersely, what energy is?
- Energy is one of the most incredible concepts to
emerge from the human mind - Is it a discovery or an invention?
6Energy is an abstract concept that ties together
a remarkable range of dissimilar human experiences
- And does it in a way with astounding quantitative
predictability!
7It seems an obvious concept, even to science
students today
- But it wasnt obvious at all for a long, long
time - Bacon, Galileo heat is motion
- Rumford mechanical work converts into heat
- But is heat a fluid, caloric, or is it matter
in motion?
8Commonality of heat and light
- Scheele (1777) identified radiant heat to
establish an equivalence between heat and light - But he recognized two kinds of transfer,
essentially radiation and convection - Lavoisier Laplace (1783) whether caloric or
motion, there is a conservation of heat
9An indication of the problems A controversy
- What is the measure of motion?
- Is it mass x velocity, or mass x
(velocity)2 ? - This was the conflict between the Leibnitzians
and Cartesians - At that time, it was inconceivable that both
could be valid!
10How to account for heat that doesnt change
temperature
- Recognize latent heats of phase changes, and role
of heat in changing densities - Rumford heat has no weight
- Young heat and light are related
- Leslie (1804) distinguishes conduction,
convection and radiation and uses the term
energy without defining it
11Fourier Quantifies Heat
- Heat capacity
- Internal conductivity
- External conductivity (radiation, convection)
- Quantification of heat flow and transfer, with
differential eqns.
12The Steam Engine Watt
- The external condenser
- The direct measure of pressure as a function of
volume, to determine efficiency (the Indicator
Diagram, p vs. V) - The use of high pressures and therefore of high
temperatures
13Carnot The Breakthrough, stimulated by
applications
- Heat is motive power that has changed its form
- The quantity of motive power in nature is
invariable - In effect, Energy is conserved!
14More from Carnot
- The invention of the reversible engine and the
demonstration that it is the most efficient
engine possible - The determination of that maximum efficiency, and
that no engine can do better
15Aha! Conservation of Energy!
- J. R. Mayer (1842-48) stated the principle
explicitly, and included energy from
gravitational acceleration - Quantified the mechanical equivalent of heat
- Included living organisms
16Joule, of course! (1840s,50s)
- Brought electromagnetic energy into the picture
- Measured mechanical equivalent of heat
- Showed that expansion of a gas into a vacuum does
no work
17Creation of Thermodynamics
- Motivation How little fuel must I burn, in order
to pump the water out of my tin mine? - Carnot confronted and solved this problem, but
the great generalization came later
18The First Law
- Two kinds of variables State variables, e.g.
pressure p, volume V, temperature T - Process variables, energy transferred either as
heat Q, or as work W. - The Law the change of energy, ?E Q W,
whatever the path
19This law states conservation of energy
- Whatever the path, only the end points determine
the energy change - If the final and initial states are the same, the
energy of the system is unchanged
20The Second Law
- The randomness--or entropy--or the number of
microstates the system can explore--never
decreases spontaneously - Decreasing entropy requires input of work
- Corollary Max efficiency is
(ThighTlow)/Thigh
21The Third Law
- There is an absolute zero of temperature, 0o K or
273o C - You can never get there it is as unreachable as
infinitely high temperature - But we can now get pretty cold, as low as 108 o K
22Einstein Thermodynamics is, among all sciences,
the one most likely to be valid
- Hence we can think of thermodynamics as the
epitome of general scientific law - But we sometimes lose sight of what is truly
general and what is applicable for only certain
kinds of systems or conditions
23A common, elegant presentation
- Thermodynamics has two kinds of state variables
- Intensive, independent of amount, e.g.
Temperature, pressure - Extensive, directly proportional to amount, e.g.
mass, volume
24Also two kinds of relations
- General laws, the Laws of Thermodynamics
- Relations for specific systems, e.g. equations of
state, such as the ideal gas law, pV nRT,
giving a third quantity if two are known
(Remember that one?)
25Degrees of freedom
- How many variables can we control? For a pure
substance, we can change three, e.g. pressure,
temperature and amount of stuff - Fix the amount and we can vary only two
- The equation of state tells us everything else
26But Equations of State are usually not simple
- The equation of state for steam, used daily by
engineers concerned with real machines, requires
several pages to write in the form they use it! - Not at all like pVnRT!
27Generalize to find optimal performances
- Thermodynamic Potentials are the quantities that
tell us the most efficient possible energy use
for specific kinds of processes, different
potential for different processes - All use the infinitely slow limit, as Carnot did,
to do best
28Some jargon
- Names for some thermodynamic potentials are free
energy, availability, enthalpy, exergy,
and energy itself - The change in the appropriate potential is the
minimum work we must do, or the maximum we can
extract, for that process
29The subtle profundity of thermodynamics
- The Gibbs phase rule relates the number of
degrees of freedom, f, to the number of
components c (kinds of stuff) and the number of
phases present in equilibrium, p - f c p 2, the simplest equation in
thermodynamics, perhaps in all science
30A simple relation
- The amount of each component can be varied at
will - Each phase, e.g. liquid water, ice or water
vapor, has its own equation of state, implying a
constraint for each phase - One substance, one phase, yields two degrees of
freedom, as we saw
31Water vapor any T or p is okay
32But look now, if there is liquid also
33Whats profound about the Gibbs phase rule?
- The f comes by definition
- The c is obviously our choice
- The p is the number of constraints
- Hence all these are easy and obvious
- Its the 2 that is profound! Only experience with
nature tells us what that number is!
34The real generality of thermodynamics
- Very big systems--galaxy clusters--and very small
systems--atomic clusters--should all be
describable by thermodynamics - Whats the predominant energy of a galaxy
cluster? Gravitation, of course
35Whats the gravitational energy of two objects?
- Inversely proportional to distance of the
objects, - Directly proportional to the product of their
masses, m1 x m2 ! - This is not linear in the mass!
- Astronomers created nonextensive thermodynamics
to deal with this.
36Another case where thermodynamics holds, but not
as its usually taught
- Very small systems, e.g. nanoscale materials,
composed of thousands or even just hundreds of
atoms - The distinction between component and phase can
be lost, so the Gibbs phase rule loses meaning
37With very small systems,
- Two phases may coexist over a band of pressures
and temperatures, not just along a single
coexistence curve - More than two phases can exist in equilibrium
over a band of conditions - Phase changes are gradual, not sharp
38Can we do thermodynamics away from equilibrium?
- Close to equilibrium, Lars Onsager showed a fine
way to do it, back in the 1930s - Further away from equilibrium, one needs more
variables to describe the system - Can we guess what variables to use? Sometimes,
not always
39Create a thermodynamics for processes that must
operate in finite time
- We can, for many kinds of finite-time processes,
define quantities like traditional thermodynamic
potentials, whose changes give the most efficient
or effective possible use of the energy for those
processes
40Finite-time potentials
- It is possible to define and evaluate these, for
specific processes, to learn how well a process
can possibly perform - It is then possible to identify how, in practice,
we can design processes to approach the limits
that are those best performances
41Example the automobile engine
- The gas-air mix burns, the heat expands the gas,
driving the piston down, so the pistons go up and
down - The connecting rod links piston with driveshaft,
changing up-down motion into rotation - Does the piston, in an ordinary engine, follow
the best path to maximize work or power? NO!
42So how can we do better?
- Change the time path to make the piston move
fastest when the gas is at its highest
temperature!
43Changing the mechanical link would improve
performance about 15
- Red conventional time path of piston black
ideal, given a maximum piston speed
44One other example
- Distillation, a very energy-wasteful process
- But make the temperature profile along the column
a control variable and the energy waste goes way
down - One such column is going up now, in Mexico
45So what have we seen?
- Energy is an amazing concept, subtle, powerful,
elegant, general, - Isnt it incredible that we found it!
- Its quantitative, predictive power is perhaps the
epitome of what science is about! - It is important for all its aspects, from the
most basic to the most practical and applied
46Thank you!