14 heat homework: problems: 3, 5, 13, 21, 33, 47, 49. internal energy heat capacity & specific...

Post on 13-Dec-2015

215 Views

Category:

Documents

1 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

14 Heat

• Homework:

• Problems: 3, 5, 13, 21, 33, 47, 49.

• Internal Energy

• Heat Capacity & Specific Heat

• Phase Transitions

• Thermal Conduction

1

2

Heat

• Heat is energy transferred due to temperature difference.

• Symbol, Q [J]

• Ex. 4186J heat needed to raise 1kg of water one degree C.

3

example c’s

• in J/(kg·°C)

• aluminum 920

• copper 390

• ice 2100

• water 4186

4

• c = Q/mT [J/(kg·K)]• heat to raise 1kg by 1 degree °C or K. • slope warming curve = T/Q = 1/(mc)• Q = mcT

specific heat

5

Calorimetry• Measure heat lost/gained:

6

Example Calorimetry

• 2kg of “substance-A” heated to 100C. Placed in 5kg of water at 20C. After five minutes the water temp. is 25C.

• heat lost by substance = heat gained water.

wA QQ

7

continued:

wwwAAA TcmTcm

)2025)()(5()25100)()(2( CCckgCCckg wA

wA QQ

))(25())(150( wA cCkgcCkg

Ckg

Jcc wA

6986

4186)(

6

1)(

8

• L = Q/m [J/(kg)]

• heat needed to melt (f) or vaporize (v) 1kg

Phase Transitions: Latent Heat

9

example L’s

• in J/kg:

• melting (f) vaporization (v)

• alcohol 100,000 850,000

• water 333,000 2,226,000

10

Example:

• How much heat must be added to 0.5kg of ice at 0C to melt it?

• Q = mL = (0.5kg)(333,000J/kg)

• = 167,000J

• same amount of heat must be removed from 0.5kg water at 0C to freeze it.

11

Heat Transfer

• Conduction

• Convection

• Radiation

12

Conduction

• Heat conduction is the transmission of heat through matter.

• dense substances are usually better conductors

• most metals are excellent conductors

13

conduction equation

• heat current = energy/time [watts]

• heat current = kAT/L

• k = thermal conductivity

• & T = temperature difference, L below

14

conduction example• some conductivities in J/(m-s-C°):

• silver 429 copper 401 aluminum 240

• Ex: Water in aluminum pot. bottom = 101°C, inside = 100°C, thickness = 3mm, area = 280sq.cm.

• Q/t = kA(Th-Tc)/L

• = (240)(0.028)(101-100)/(0.003)

• = 2,240 watts heat current

15

Heat transfer

• 2m x 1m window, 4mm thick, single pane glass.

• Assume temp. difference = 5°C

• Q/t = kA(T)/L = (0.84)(2)(5)/0.004

• About 2,000 watts

R-Factors and Thermal Resistance

16

units] SIin quoted[not factor-Rd

[K/W] R resistance thermalA

d

factor-R Current Heat

TA

17

Convection

• Convection – transfer through bulk motion of a fluid.

• Natural, e.g. warm air rises, cool falls

• Forced, e.g. water-cooled engine

18

Radiation

• Heat transfer by electromagnetic radiation, e.g. infrared.

• Examples:• space heaters with the shiny reflector use

radiation to heat. • If they add a fan, they use both radiation and

convection

19

Summary

•Definition of Internal Energy

•Heat Capacity

•Specific Heat

•Phase Transitions

•Latent Heat

•Phase Diagrams

•Energy Transport by Conduction, Convection, and Radiation

20

Example:

• A student wants to check “c” for an unknown substance. She adds 230J of heat to 0.50kg of the substance. The temperature rises 4.0K.

Kkg

J

Kkg

J

Tm

Qc

115

)0.4)(5.0(

230

21

Greenhouse Effect

• ‘dirtier’ air must be at higher temperature to radiate out as much as Earth receives

• higher temperature air is associated with higher surface temperatures, thus the term ‘global warming’

• very complicated model!

22

Phase Change

• freeze (liquid to solid)

• melt (solid to liquid)

• evaporate (liquid to gas)

• sublime (solid to gas)

• phase changes occur at constant temperature

23

Temperature vs. Heat (ice, water, water vapor)

24

Heat and Phase Change

• Latent Heat of Fusion – heat supplied to melt or the heat removed to freeze

• Latent Heat of Vaporization – heat supplied to vaporize or heat removed to liquify.

25

Newton’s Law of Cooling

• For a body cooling in a draft (i.e., by forced convection), the rate of heat loss is proportional to the difference in temperatures between the body and its surroundings

• rate of heat-loss ~ T

26

Real Greenhouse

• covering allows sunlight to enter, which warms the ground and air inside the greenhouse.

• the ‘house’ is mostly enclosed so the warm air cannot leave, thus keeping the greenhouse warm (a car in the sun does this very effectively!)

27

Solar Power

Solar Constant• Describes the Solar Radiation that falls on an

area above the atmosphere = 1.37 kW / m².

In space, solar radiation is practically constant; on earth it varies with the time of day and year as well as with the latitude and weather. The maximum value on earth is between 0.8 and 1.0 kW / m².

• see: solarserver.de

top related