Physcis Thermal
Physcis Thermal
Physcis Thermal
3.1 Thermal Concepts 3.2 Thermal Properties of Matter 3.3 Kinetic Model of an Ideal Gas
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Holding objects:
Some are hot and some are cold.
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The Mole
A mole of any material contains 6.022 X 1023 atoms or molecules. This number is known as Avogadros number. Compare Hydrogen and Carbon.
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Example #1
If a mole of carbon has a mass of 12
g, how many atoms of carbon are there in 2 g?
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Example #2
The density of aluminum is
2800 kg m-3 and the mass of a mole of aluminum is 26.98 g.
2. 9.635 X 10-6 m3
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Exercise 1
The mass of 1 mole of copper is 63.54 g and its density 8920 kg m-3.
Internal Energy
Ponder Mechanics:
Energy and Work
velocity
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1 Is any work being done on the block by the force F? 2 Is energy being transfered to the block? 3 Is the KE of the block increasing? 4 Where is the energy going?
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Work
Object
Example #3
A car of mass 1000 kg is travelling at
30 m s-1. If the brakes are applied, how much heat energy is transferred to the brakes?
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Answer: Example 3
The thermal energy transferred to
the brakes is 450 kJ.
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Temperature
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Hotness
coldness are
and
the
ways
objects.
we
percieve
between
differences
difference.
Temperature:
(T) is a measure of how hot or cold an object is. Determines the direction of heat flow.
Is a scalar quantity, and is measured in degrees Celsius (C) or kelvin (K).
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The Kelvin scale is based on the properties of a gas. To convert Celsius to Kelvin:
T(K) = T(C) + 273
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Thermometers
Temperature cannot be measured directly, so we have to find
something
changes when
that
the
temperature changes.
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Heat Transfer
Pulling a block of wood along a rough surface.
We can make a cold body hot by placing it next to a hot body. If the cold body gets hot, then it received energy: Heat or Thermal Energy.
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Thermal Equillibrium
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Some definitions:
Temperature: Is a macroscopic concept that is proportional to the average KE of the molecules of the substance. Heat: (Or thermal energy) is the energy that is exachanged between two bodies as a result of a temperature difference between them. Internal Energy: The sum of the total random KE
Exercises
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1.
A hot body is brought into contact with a colder body until their temperatures are the same. Assume that no other bodies are around.
A) Is the heat lost by one body equal to the heat gained by the other?
B) Is the temperature drop of one body equal to the temperature increase of the other?
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2.
A body at a given uniform temperature of 300 K and internal energy 8 X 106 J is split into two equal halves.
3.
The volume of 1 mol of hydrogen gas (molar mass 2 g mol-1) at stp (standard temperature and pressure) is 22.4 L. A) Find out how much volume corresponds to each molecule of hydrogen. B) Consider now 1 mol of lead (molar mass 207 g mol-1, density 11.3 X 103 kg m-3). How much volume corresponds to each molecule of lead?
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C) Find the ratio of these volumes (hydrogen and lead). D) Hence determine that the order of magnitude of the ratio:
Separation of hydrogen molecules Separation of lead molecules
is 10.
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Answers: Exercises
1. A) Yes, because of Energy Conservation. B) The changes in temperature are not necessarily equal.
Thermal Capacity
The actual increase depends in on temperature the body. The thermal capacity (C) of a body is the amount of heat needed to raise its temperature by 1C.
Units: J C-1
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Q C DT
C: Thermal Capacity (J C-1) Q: Heat (Joules) DT: Temperature change (C)
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Example #4
If the thermal capacity of a quantity
of water is 5000 J C-1, how much heat is required to raise its temperature from 20C to 100C?
Answer: 400 kJ
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Exercise 1
The thermal capacity of a 60 kg
human is 210 kJ C-1. How much heat is lost from a body if its temperature drops by 2C?
Answer: 420 kJ
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The specific heat capacity of a material is the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 kg of the material by 1C.
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Q c mDT
c: Specific Heat Capacity (J kg-1 C-1) Q: Heat (Joules) DT: Temperature change (C)
m: Mass (kg)
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Example #5
A metal block of mass 1.5 kg loses
20 kJ of heat. As this happens, its temperature 45C. What drops is from 60C to the specific heat
Exercise 2 (HW)
The density of water is 1000 kg m-3. A) What is the mass of 1 litre of water? B) How much energy will it take to raise the temperature of 1 litre of water from 20C to 100C? C) A water heater has a power rating of 1 kW. How many seconds will this heater take to boil 1 litre of water?
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Change of State
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Particle Model
Drawings 1. Molecules gain PE when the state changes. 2. A ball-in-a-box model of change of state.
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throughout
at the
the
same
temperatures.
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latent
heat
of
of
material
the
amount
heat
m: Mass (kg)
Q L m
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Example #6
The specific latent heat of fusion of
water is 3.35 X 105 J kg-1. How much energy is required to change 500 g of ice into water?
Exercise 5
Exercise 6
steam?
Latent heat of vaporization 2.27 X 106 J kg-1 Latent heat of fusion 3.35 X 105 J kg-1
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Homework
The ice covering a 1000 m2 lake is 2 cm thick. A) If the density of the ice is 920 kg m-3, what is the mass of the lake? B) How much energy is required to melt the ice? C) If the Sun melts the ice in 5 hours, what is the power delivered to the lake? D) How much power does the Sun deliver per m2 ?
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Answers to Homework
A) 1.84 X 104 kg
B) 6.16 X 109 J C) 3.42 X 105 W
D) 342 W m-2
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Assumptions
The molecules are:
Perfectly elastic. Spheres.
Identical.
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Assumptions
No forces between the molecules.
Constant velocity.
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Temperature of a Gas
Temperature of a gas is directly related to the average KE of the molecules. If temperature increases:
Pressure of a Gas
Let us apply what we know about particles to one molecule of gas. Consider a single gas molecule in a box (perfectly elastic sphere bouncing off the sides).
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Pressure of a Gas
Change in:
Direction and Velocity. Newtons First Law of Motion:
Particle at rest or moving with constant velocity. The particle is experiencing a Force.
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Pressure of a Gas
Newtons Second Law:
The force is equal to the rate change of momentum.
Pressure of a Gas
Newtons Third Law:
FAB = -FBA
Pressure of a Gas
If we add more molecules,
Then the particles exert a continuous force, F, on the walls of the container.
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Pressure of a Gas
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Properties of a Gas
Interactive Simulation
http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/gasproperties
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