Energy Is Defined As The Capacity To Do Work or Transfer Heat. For Us To Understand The
Energy Is Defined As The Capacity To Do Work or Transfer Heat. For Us To Understand The
2020-2021
DISTANCE EDUCATION COURSE GUIDE USING OBTL DESIGN v1
Energy is defined as the capacity to do work or transfer heat. For us to understand the
concept of energy better, we must first define work and heat. Work is the energy used
to cause an object to move against a force, and heat is the energy used to cause the
temperature of an object to increase. The main forms of energy are heat (energy in
transit because of a temperature difference), mechanical energy, chemical energy,
electromagnetic energy and nuclear energy.
Work
Work is a scalar quantity that is defined and measured by the product of the net
force exerted and the distance through which that force moves. To calculate for
work, the following formula is used:
W = F x d x cos q
Where W = work
F = force
d = displacement
q = angle between the force and the direction of motion
The common unit for work is joule (J). 1 joule (or 1 J) is equivalent to 1 N•m or
1 kg•m/m•s2. Work may also be expressed in calorie (1 cal = 4.186 J).
Sample Problem:
1. A person pushes a box 15 m along the ground using a force of 100 N. How
much work has been done on the box?
Given: d = 15 m
F = 100 N
q = 0o
Required: W=?
Solution:
W = F x d x cosq
= (100 N)(15 m)(cos 0o)
W = 1,500 Nm or 1,500 J
2. Find the work done by a 45.0-N force in pulling the suitcase in the figure
at an angle 50o for a distance d = 75.0 m.
Given: d = 75.0 m
F = 45.0 N
q = 50o
Required: W=?
Solution:
W = F x d x cosq
= (45.0 N)(75.0 m)(cos 50o)
W = 2169.41 Nm 0r 2169.41 J
Mechanical Energy
KE = ½ mv2
The kinetic energy of a body increases as its speed increases. A ball rolling at
10 m/s has greater kinetic energy than it does at 5 m/s. For a given speed, the
kinetic energy increases with increasing mass. For example, a large truck
traveling at 50 km/h has greater kinetic energy than a small car traveling at the
same speed because the truck has the greater mass. Commonly, kinetic energy
is expressed in terms of joule (J).
Potential energy, on the other hand, is also known as “energy due to position” An
object has potential energy by virtue of its position relative to other objects.
Potential energy is, in essence, the “stored” energy that arises from the
attractions and repulsions an object experiences in relation to other objects.
PE = mgh
m = mass
g = gravitational acceleration (9.8 m/s2)
h = height
Potential energy may be converted into kinetic energy and vice versa. For
example, think of a cyclist poised at the top of a hill. Because of the attractive force
of gravity, the potential energy of the cyclist and her bicycle is greater at the top of
the hill than at the bottom. As a result, the bicycle easily moves down the hill with
increasing speed. As it does so, potential energy is converted into kinetic energy.
The potential energy decreases as the bicycle rolls down the hill, but its kinetic
energy increases as the speed increases. This example illustrates that forms of
energy are interconvertible.
Sample Problems:
Given: m = 2000 kg
V = 10 m/s
Required: KE = ?
Solution:
KE = ½ mv2
= ½ (2000 kg)(10 m/s)2
KE = 100,000 kg m2/s2 or 100,000 J
KE = 100 kJ
L
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DISTANCE EDUCATION COURSE GUIDE USING OBTL DESIGN v1
Required: PE = ?
Solution:
PE = mgh
3. A bowler lifts a 5.4 kg bowling ball from ground level to a height of 1.6 m and
then drops it. After the ball is dropped, it gains kinetic energy. If all the
potential energy has been converted to kinetic energy by the time the ball
strikes the ground, what is the ball’s speed just before it hits the ground?
Given: m = 5.4 kg
h = 1.6 m
Solution:
PE = KE
mgh = ½ mv2
(5.4 kg)(9.8 m/s2)(1.6 m) = ½ (5.4 kg)(v)2
v = 5.6 m/s
Chemical Energy
Chemical energy can also be viewed as energy that is stored in some kind of
chemical substance. The energy is released when these substances mix
together to cause a chemical reaction.
During photosynthesis, plants convert light energy coming from the sun into
chemical energy.
Electromagnetic Energy
A form of energy that is reflected or emitted from objects in the form of electrical
and magnetic waves that can travel through space. They may be viewed as
moving electric charges
Nuclear Energy
Nuclear energy is the energy released during nuclear fission or fusion of nuclear
energy. Fission happens when the nucleus splits, and nuclear energy is
released in the form of light and energy. Nuclear energy is also released during
fusion, that is when nuclei collide at high speeds and join.
The sun’s energy is produced from a nuclear fusion reaction in which hydrogen
nuclei fuse to form helium nuclei.
Law of Conservation of Energy
Energy cannot be created nor destroyed, it is simply transformed from one form
into another.
In 1905, Albert Einstein proposed that mass and energy can be converted into
each other. He showed that if matter is destroyed, energy is created and if
energy is destroyed, mass is created.
Heat
Heat is the transfer of thermal energy from one object to another because of a
temperature difference. Heat always flows spontaneously from hot objects to
cold objects. It must be noted that heat is not a form of matter.
Temperature and heat are not the same. Temperature is the average kinetic
energy of all the particles in a substance. Temperature tells us whether
something is hot or cold.
• Conversion Factors
• 1 kcal = 1000 cal
• 1 BTU = 252 cal
• 1 BTU = 778 ft – lbf
• 1 cal = 4.186 J
Kinds of Heat
Latent heat is the amount of heat required to change the phase of the substance
without changing its temperature. Under normal atmospheric conditions, water
freezes and ice melts at 0oC. Latent heat is involved when ice melts. During
melting, only the phase changes – from ice to liquid water, but the temperature
remains at 0oC.
Sensible Heat
Q = mCpDT
*Specific heat is the ratio of the heat transferred to the corresponding rise in its
temperature. Different substances have different capacities for storing heat.
Likewise, different materials require different quantities of heat to raise the
temperature through a specified number of degrees. The value of the specific
heat varies for different materials as different materials absorb energy in different
ways.
For water :
Cpice = 0.5 cal/g•C0 = 2.093 J/g•C0
Cpwater = 1.0 cal/g•C0 = 4.186 J/g•C0
Cpsteam = 0.498 cal/g•C0 = 2.085 J/g•C0
Sample Problem
Given: m = 15 g = 0.015 kg
Tinitial = 15oC = 288.15 K
Tfinal = 60.5oC = 333.65 K
Required: Q=?
Solution:
Q = mCpDT
DT = Tfinal – Tinitial
= 333.65 K – 288.15 K
DT = 45.5 K
(Note: DT in K = DT in Co)
Q = m mCpDT
= (0.015 kg)(4186 J/kg•K)(45.5 K)
Q = 2856.945 J
Latent Heat
Q = mH
where: Q = heat
m = mass
H = latent heat (depending on the process)
In symbols,
Qlost + Qgained = 0
When you mix two objects with different temperatures, heat flows from the
object of higher temperature to an object of lower temperature until they
reach equilibria, that is, when they are already at the same temperature.
During heat flow, heat is lost from the hotter object and is gained by the
colder object. Thus, the heat lost by the hotter object is also the heat
gained by the colder object. The heat lost and gained are equal in
magnitude but opposite in direction. As such, they result to 0 when
added.
Phase Diagram
The plateaus (red) on the curve mark the phase changes. The temperature
remains constant during these phase transitions. Sloping lines (green) indicate
temperature changes. The phase of the substance remains the same during
these temperature transitions.
Water has a high boiling point because of the strong hydrogen bonds between
the water molecules; it is both a strong hydrogen bond donor and acceptor.
The first change of phase is melting, during which the temperature stays the
same while water melts. The second change of phase is boiling, as the
temperature stays the same during the transition to gas.
Sample Problems
1. 175 grams of hot aluminum (1000C) is dropped into an insulated cup that
contains 40 mL of ice cold water (00C). If the specific heat capacity of
aluminum is 0.90 J/g-C0, what is the final temperature of the mixture?
Given:
Aluminum Water
m = 175 g V = 40 mL
Tinitial = 1000C Tinitial = 00C
Cp = 0.90 J/g•C0
Required: Tfinal = ?
Note: Tfinal, Aluminum = Tfinal, Water
Solution:
Tfinal = 28.73oC
2. What is the amount of heat required to convert 100 g ice at – 50C to steam at
1200C?
Given:
m = 100g
Solution:
120o
C
100o
C
0oC
-5oC
QTotal = Q1 + Q2 + Q3 + Q4 + Q5
QTotal = 250 cal + 8000 cal + 10,000 cal + 54,000 cal + 996 cal
QTotal = 73,246 cal