Introduction and Basic Concepts: Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach, 6 Edition
Introduction and Basic Concepts: Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach, 6 Edition
Introduction and Basic Concepts: Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach, 6 Edition
Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION AND
BASIC CONCEPTS
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Objectives
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THERMODYNAMICS AND ENERGY
Thermodynamics: The science of
energy.
Energy: The ability to cause changes.
The name thermodynamics stems from
the Greek words therme (heat) and
dynamis (power).
Conservation of energy principle:
During an interaction, energy can change
from one form to another but the total
amount of energy remains constant.
Energy cannot be created or destroyed.
The first law of thermodynamics: An
expression of the conservation of energy
principle. Energy cannot be created
The first law asserts that energy is a or destroyed; it can only
thermodynamic property. change forms (the first law).
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The second law of thermodynamics:
It asserts that energy has quality as well
as quantity, and actual processes occur
in the direction of decreasing quality of
energy.
Classical thermodynamics: A
macroscopic approach to the study of
thermodynamics that does not require a
knowledge of the behavior of individual Conservation of energy
particles. principle for the human body.
To be dimensionally
homogeneous, all the
Unity conversion ratios are identically equal to 1 and terms in an equation
are unitless, and thus such ratios (or their inverses) must have the same unit.
can be inserted conveniently into any calculation to
properly convert units.
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SYSTEMS AND CONTROL VOLUMES
System: A quantity of matter or a region in
space chosen for study.
Surroundings: The mass or region outside
the system
Boundary: The real or imaginary surface that
separates the system from its surroundings.
The boundary of a system can be fixed or
movable.
Systems may be considered to be closed or
open.
Closed system
(Control mass):
A fixed
amount of mass,
and no mass
can cross its
boundary.
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Open system (control volume): A properly
selected region in space.
It usually encloses a device that involves
mass flow such as a compressor, turbine, or
nozzle.
Both mass and energy can cross the
boundary of a control volume.
Control surface: The boundaries of a
control volume. It can be real or imaginary.
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An open system (a
control volume) with one
inlet and one exit.
PROPERTIES
OF A SYSTEM
Property: Any characteristic of a
system.
Some familiar properties are
pressure P, temperature T, volume
V, and mass m.
Properties are considered to be
either intensive or extensive.
Intensive properties: Those that
are independent of the mass of a
system, such as temperature,
pressure, and density.
Extensive properties: Those
whose values depend on the size
or extentof the system.
Criterion to differentiate intensive
Specific properties: Extensive
and extensive properties.
properties per unit mass.http://www.ktustudents.in
Continuum
Matter is made up of atoms that are
widely spaced in the gas phase. Yet
it is very convenient to disregard the
atomic nature of a substance and
view it as a continuous,
homogeneous matter with no holes,
that is, a continuum.
The continuum idealization allows us
to treat properties as point functions
and to assume the properties vary
continually in space with no jump
discontinuities.
This idealization is valid as long as
the size of the system we deal with Despite the large gaps between
is large relative to the space
between the molecules. molecules, a substance can be treated as
a continuum because of the very large
This is the case in practically all number of molecules even in an
problems.
extremely small volume.
In this text we will limit our
consideration to substances that can
be modeled as a continuum.
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DENSITY AND SPECIFIC GRAVITY
Density Specific gravity: The ratio
of the density of a
substance to the density of
some standard substance at
Specific volume a specified temperature
(usually water at 4C).
Density is
mass per unit
volume;
specific volume
is volume per
unit mass.
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STATE AND EQUILIBRIUM
Thermodynamics deals with
equilibrium states.
Equilibrium: A state of balance.
In an equilibrium state there are no
unbalanced potentials (or driving
forces) within the system.
Thermal equilibrium: If the
temperature is the same throughout
the entire system. A system at two different states.
Mechanical equilibrium: If there is
no change in pressure at any point of
the system with time.
Phase equilibrium: If a system
involves two phases and when the
mass of each phase reaches an
equilibrium level and stays there.
Chemical equilibrium: If the
chemical composition of a system
does not change with time, that is, no
chemical reactions occur. A closed system reaching thermal
equilibrium.
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The State Postulate
The number of properties
required to fix the state of a
system is given by the state
postulate:
The state of a simple
compressible system is
completely specified by
two independent,
intensive properties.
Simple compressible
system: If a system involves The state of nitrogen is
no electrical, magnetic, fixed by two independent,
gravitational, motion, and intensive properties.
surface tension effects.
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PROCESSES AND CYCLES
Process: Any change that a system undergoes from one equilibrium state to another.
Path: The series of states through which a system passes during a process.
To describe a process completely, one should specify the initial and final states, as
well as the path it follows, and the interactions with the surroundings.
Quasistatic or quasi-equilibrium process: When a process proceeds in such a
manner that the system remains infinitesimally close to an equilibrium state at all
times.
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Process diagrams plotted by
employing thermodynamic properties
as coordinates are very useful in
visualizing the processes.
Some common properties that are
used as coordinates are temperature
T, pressure P, and volume V (or
specific volume v).
The prefix iso- is often used to
designate a process for which a
particularproperty remains constant.
Isothermal process: A process
during which the temperature T
remains constant.
Isobaric process: A process during
which the pressure P remains
constant.
Isochoric (or isometric) process: A The P-V diagram of a compression
process during which the specific process.
volume v remains constant.
Cycle: A process during which the
initial and final states are identical.
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The Steady-Flow Process
The term steady implies no
change with time. The
opposite of steady is
unsteady, or transient.
A large number of During a steady-
engineering devices operate flow process, fluid
for long periods of time properties within
under the same conditions, the control
and they are classified as volume may
steady-flow devices. change with
Steady-flow process: A position but not
process during which a fluid with time.
flows through a control
volume steadily.
Steady-flow conditions can
be closely approximated by
devices that are intended for
continuous operation such
as turbines, pumps, boilers,
condensers, and heat
exchangers or power plants Under steady-flow conditions, the mass
or refrigeration systems. and energy contents of a control volume
remain constant. http://www.ktustudents.in
TEMPERATURE AND THE ZEROTH LAW OF
THERMODYNAMICS
The zeroth law of thermodynamics: If two bodies are in thermal
equilibrium with a third body, they are also in thermal equilibrium with
each other.
By replacing the third body with a thermometer, the zeroth law can be
restated as two bodies are in thermal equilibrium if both have the same
temperature reading even if they are not in contact.
Comparison of
magnitudes of
various
temperature
units.
The reference temperature in the original Kelvin scale was the ice point,
273.15 K, which is the temperature at which water freezes (or ice melts).
The reference point was changed to a much more precisely reproducible
point, the triple point of water (the state at which all three phases of water
coexist in equilibrium), which is assigned the value 273.16 K.
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PRESSURE
68 kg 136 kg
Pressure: A normal force exerted
by a fluid per unit area
Afeet=300cm2
Some basic
pressure
gages.
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Absolute pressure: The actual pressure at a given position. It is
measured relative to absolute vacuum (i.e., absolute zero pressure).
Gage pressure: The difference between the absolute pressure and
the local atmospheric pressure. Most pressure-measuring devices are
calibrated to read zero in the atmosphere, and so they indicate gage
pressure.
Vacuum pressures: Pressures below atmospheric pressure.
Throughout
this text, the
pressure P
will denote
absolute
pressure
unless
specified
otherwise.
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Variation of Pressure with Depth
When the variation of density
with elevation is known
Pressure in a liquid
at rest increases
linearly with
distance from the
free surface.
The pressure is the
same at all points on
a horizontal plane in
a given fluid
regardless of
geometry, provided
that the points are
interconnected by the
same fluid.
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Pascals law: The pressure applied to a
confined fluid increases the pressure
throughout by the same amount.
The basic
manometer.