Entropy, thermal engines - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 9
About This Presentation
Title:

Entropy, thermal engines

Description:

We can easily tell the direction of the 'arrow of time' in irreversible ... T =Q/T = mLf/T for changes of phase Sw= 0.1kg*4190J/kgK*ln(285.39/293.15) = 11.24 J/K ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:93
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 10
Provided by: Gaby2
Category:
Tags: engines | entropy | mlf | thermal

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Entropy, thermal engines


1
Entropy, thermal engines
  • Phys 2101
  • Gabriela González

2
Irreversible processes
  • We can easily tell the direction of the arrow of
    time in irreversible processes which, if
    spontaneous, only happen one way
  • spilling fluids
  • gas expansion
  • breaking solids
  • Conservation of energy doesnt forbid these
    processes there is another quantity, entropy,
    which measures the degree of disorder
  • S k log W

3
Second Law of thermodynamics
  • If an irreversible process occurs in a closed
    system, the entropy S of the system always
    increases it never decreases.
  • If any process occurs in a closed system, the
    entropy of the system increases for irreversible
    processes and remains constant for reversible
    processes. It never decreases!
  • ??S 0

4
Entropy and heat
5
Example
  • An 8.0g ice cube at -10oC is put in a Thermos
    flask containing 100 cm3 of water at 20oC. The
    specific heat of ice is 2220 J/kgK, the specific
    heat of water is 4190 J/kgK, and the heat of
    fusion of ice-water is 330 kJ/kg.
  • Whats the final equilibrium temperature?
  • ?Q 0 cWmW(Tf-20oC) cice mice (0oC-(-10oC))
    mice Lf cW mice (Tf-0oC)
  • 0 cw(mwmice)Tf-cwmw20oC cice mice10oC mice
    Lf
  • 41900.108Tf - 41900.120
    22200.008100.008330000
  • 452.5Tf-8380177.62640 ?Tf 12.24oC 285.39 K
  • What is the change in entropy of the ice-water
    system?
  • Use ?S ?dQ/T ?mcdT/T mc ln(Tf/Ti) for
    changes in temperature, and
  • ?S ?dQ/T Q/T mLf/T for changes of phase
  • ?Sw 0.1kg4190J/kgKln(285.39/293.15) ?11.24
    J/K
  • ???Sice 8g(4.19J/gKln(285.39/273.15)
    2.22J/gKln(273.15/263.15) 330J/g/273.15K)
    11.88 J/K
  • ???S 0.64 J/K

6
Change in Entropy
  • Isothermal process
  • ?S ?dQ/T (1/T) ?dQ ?Q/TAdiabatic process
    ?Q0, so ?S0
  • Any reversible process,
  • dQ dEint dW
  • nCV dT p dV
  • dQ/T nCV dT/T pdV/T
  • nCV dT/T pdV/(pV/nR)
  • nCV dT/T nRdV/V
  • ?S ?dQ/T
  • nCV ln (Tf/Ti) nR ln (Vf/Vi)
  • Eint (f/2)nRT n CV T
  • W ? p dV
  • pV nRT

7
Ideal heat engines
  • Ideal heat engines use a cycle of reversible
    thermodynamic processes. A heat engine
    transforms energy extracted as heat from thermal
    reservoirs, into mechanical work.
  • Consider a Carnot engine a cycle with two
    isothermal processes at a high temperature TH
    (a?b) and and a low temperature TL (c ?d), and
    two adiabatic processes (b?c, d?a).
  • ?Eint 0 Q W ? W
    Q QH-QL
  • ?S 0
    QH/TH - QL/TL

8
Thermal efficiency
  • We use the heat QH to get work W done, so
    efficiency is defined as
  • ? W/QH
  • For a Carnot engine,
  • W QH-QL
  • QH/TH QL/TL
  • so ?C (QH-QL)/ QH 1- QL/QH
    1- TL/TH lt 1

9
Example
  • Three ideal Carnot engines operate between (a)
    400K and 500K, (b) 500K and 600K, and (c) 400K
    and 600K.
  • Rank them according to their efficiencies,
    greatest first.
  • If they all extract the same amount of energy
    per cycle from the high temperature reservoir,
    rank them according to the work per cycle done by
    the engines, greatest first.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com