THERMAL PHYSICS. Temperature and the zeroth Law of Thermodynamics 2 objects are in thermal contact if energy can be exchange between them 2 objects are.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 16. Temperature and Expansion
Advertisements

MEASURING THE MOVEMENT OF MOLECULES
Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics
A third temperature scale has been developed, which relates the temperature changes to pressure changes for a fixed volume of gas. This scale is not based.
Chapter 10 Thermal Physics.
Physics: Principles with Applications, 6th edition
Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics
Temperature, Heat, and the Thermal Behavior of Matter
Temperature, Heat, and the Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics
Temperature Physics 202 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 12.
Thermal Physics Chapter 10. Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics If objects A and B are in thermal equilibrium with a third object, C, then A and B are in thermal.
Temperature Physics 202 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 12.
Fluid Flow and Continuity Imagine that a fluid flows with a speed v 1 through a cylindrical pip of cross-sectional area A 1. If the pipe narrows to a cross-
حرارة وديناميكا حرارية المحاضرة الأولى د/عبدالرحمن لاشين قسم الفيزياء - كلية العلوم التطبيقية – جامعة أم القرى - المملكة العربية السعودية قسم الفيزياء.
Thermal Physics Thermal physics is the study of Thermal physics is the study of TemperatureTemperature HeatHeat How these affect matterHow these affect.
Temperature Thermometer Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics Thermal Expansion.
Chapter 19 Temperature. We associate the concept of temperature with how hot or cold an object feels Our senses provide us with a qualitative indication.
Chapter 19 Temperature scales: Fahrenheit, Celsius (centigrade), Kelvin Thermal expansion The ideal gas law Part 3 Thermodynamics Chapter 19: Temperature.
© 2007 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Outline Chapter 16 Physics, 4 th Edition James S. Walker.
Temperature and Kinetic Theory. Atomic Theory  Atom – smallest piece of mater  Atomic Mass  unit – atomic mass unit – amu  1amu = 1.66 x kg.
Reference Book is. TEMPERATURE AND THE ZEROTH LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS TEMPERATURE AND THE ZEROTH LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS * Two objects are in Thermal contact.
CHAPTER 19: TEMPERATURE 19.1) Temperature and The Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics The concept of temperature – how hot or cold an object feels when is touched.
Chapter 18 Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics.
Physics I Basic Concepts of Thermodynamics Prof. WAN, Xin
Temperature. Microscopic Atoms  Solid Atoms vibrate in a nearly fixed positionAtoms vibrate in a nearly fixed position  Gas Atoms apart, freely moving.
Chapter 16 Temperature and the Kinetic Theory of Gases.
Chapter 10 Thermal Physics. Temperature Thermodynamics – branch of physics studying thermal energy of systems Temperature ( T ), a scalar – measure of.
Chapter 12 Temperature and Heat Temperature – Average kinetic energy of molecules. Heat – Transfer of energy due to temperature difference; flows from.
Chapter 21 Temperature Temperature and thermal equilibrium 1.Thermal equilibrium (a)Adiabatic( 绝热 ) ( thermally insulating ) Fig 21-1 shows two.
Kinetic Molecular Theory of Matter
Temperature and thermal equilibrium Hot Cold. Temperature is proportional to the kinetic energy of atoms and molecules: T~KE.
Constant-Volume Gas Thermometer
1 Thermal Physics Chapter Thermodynamics Concerned with the concepts of energy transfers between a system and its environment and the resulting.
Thermal Physics Thermal Physics is the study of temperature and heat and how they effect matter. Heat leads to change in internal energy which shows as.
Heat, Temperature, Heat Transfer, Thermal Expansion & Thermodynamics.
Chapter 10 Thermal Physics 1. Temperature and the zeroth Law of Thermodynamics 2. Thermometers and Temperature Scales 3. Thermal Expansion.
Chapter-18 Temperature, Heat and the First Law of Thermodynamics.
Chapter 10 Thermal Energy. Chapter Objectives Define Temperature Converting between the 3 temperature scales Identify Linear Expansion Utilize the Coefficient.
H. SAIBI December 10 th, A pilot, a hot air balloonist, and a scuba diver must all have a good working understanding of air and water temperatures.
Physics 1710—Warm-up Quiz What is the first audible harmonic that has a frequency above 20 Hz for a cable that has a mass of 1.0 kg, is 10.0 long, and.
Chapter 19 Temperature 19.1 Temperature and the Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics 19.2 Thermometers and the Celsius Temperature Scale 19.3 The Constant-Volume.
Chapter 19 Temperature. We associate the concept of temperature with how hot or cold an objects feels Our senses provide us with a qualitative indication.
Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics
Holt Physics, Chapter 10 Heat.
حرارة وديناميكا حرارية
Temperature and Heat. Definition of Temperature  Temperature is proportional to the kinetic energy of atoms and molecules.  For gases, we have translational.
Unit 6 : Part 2 Temperature and Kinetic Theory. Outline Temperature and Heat The Celsius and Fahrenheit Temperature Scales Gas Laws, Absolute Temperature,
Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics
Units of Chapter 15 Atomic Theory of Matter Temperature and Thermometers Thermal Equilibrium and the Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics Thermal Expansion Thermal.
© 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Temperature and Kinetic Theory Atomic Theory of Matter Temperature and Thermometers Thermal Equilibrium and the Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics Thermal Expansion.
Temperature. Temperature is the hotness or coldness of a material. It is also the property of a matter that determines where the heat should flow. Heat.
Temperature Thermometers Thermal Expansion
Chapter 10 Thermal Physics. Thermal physics is the study of Temperature Heat How these affect matter.
Temperature & the Laws of Thermodynamics Lecture Notes
Temperature and Heat Heat – the energy transferred between objects because of a temperature difference.
Dr.Salwa Al Saleh What is Temperature? AVERAGE It is the measurement of the AVERAGE kinetic energy of the particles of matter.
Thermodynamics I. Temperature 1. Thermal equilibrium. Zeroth law of thermodynamics a) We need a thermometer b) Thermal equilibrium c) Zeroth law: If C.
Thermal Physics Chapter 10. Thermodynamics Concerned with the concepts of energy transfers between a system and its environment and the resulting temperature.
States that if the volume and temperature of a fixed amount of gas do not change, the pressure also remains constant. The Ideal Gas Law.
Raymond A. Serway Chris Vuille Chapter Ten Thermal Physics.
Temperature.
Temperature, Heat and Thermal Expansion
Chapter 18 Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics
Overview 17 Zeroth Law and Equilibrium Temperature and Scales
Chapter 7: Thermal Properties of Matter
Chapter 16 Temperature and Heat.
Temperature, Heat and the First Law of Thermodynamics
Chapter 19: Temperature and the Ideal Gas Law
Presentation transcript:

THERMAL PHYSICS

Temperature and the zeroth Law of Thermodynamics 2 objects are in thermal contact if energy can be exchange between them 2 objects are in thermal equilibrium if they are in thermal contact and there is no net exchange of energy (ex: in fig) Zeroth law of thermodynamics (law of equilibrium) If objects A and B are separately in thermal equilibrium with a third object C, then A and B are in thermal equilibrium with each other. Two objects in thermal equilibrium with each other are the same temperature

Thermometers and temperature scale Review: - thermometers -Celsius temperature scale( freezing point, boiling point) The ct. Volume gas thermometer and the Kelvin scale In a gas thermometer, the temperature reading are independent of the substance used in the thermometer The behavior observed in this device is variation of pressure with temperature of a fixed volume of gas

If the temperatures are measured with various gas thermometers containing different gases, the readings are nearly independent of the type of gas used The pressure extrapolates to zero when temperature is o C P=0, T= o C –absolute zero

Absolute zero is used for the Kelvin temperature scale Tc =T The triple point of water, which is the single temperature and pressure at which water, water vapor and ice can coexist in equilibrium SI unit T = K Kelvin- define as 1/ of the temperature of the triple point of water

The Celsius, Kelvin and Fahrenheit Temperature Scale 0 o C=32oF; 100 o C= 212 o F T F =9/5 T C +32 T C =5/9(T F -32) ΔT F =9/5ΔT C

Thermal Expansion of solids and liquids Thermal expansion: as temperature of the substance increase its volume increase If the thermal expansion of an object is sufficiently small compared with the object s initial dimensions, then the change in any dimenΔsion is proportional with the first power of the temperature change: ΔL =α L 0 ΔT; L 0 - initial length α- the coefficient of linear expansion for a given material SI unit ( o C) -1

Area: A 0 =L 0 2 L=L 0 +α L 0 ΔT A= L 2 =(L 0 +α L 0 ΔT)(L 0 +α L 0 ΔT)= =L α L 0 2 ΔT+ (α L 0 ΔT )2 αΔT<< 1, squaring it makes much smaller A = L α L 0 2 ΔT A=A 0 +2α A 0 ΔT ΔA =γ A 0 ΔT; γ =2α- coefficient of area expansion ΔV =β V 0 ΔT; β =3α – coefficient of volume expansion

Macroscopic description of an ideal gas Ideal gas – is a collection of atoms or molecules that move randomly and exert no long range forces on each other Each particle of the ideal gas is individually point- like, occupying a negligible volume (gas maintained at a low pressure or a low density) n-nr of moles- the amount of gas in a given volume N A =6.02x10 23 particle/mole- Avogadros number

The number of moles: n= m /molar mass, m-mass, molar mass- the mass of one mole of that substance One mole of any substance is that amount of the substance that contains as many particles as there are atoms in 12g of the isotope carbon-12 m atom = molar mass/NA

Supposed an ideal gas is confined to a cylinder container I Boyles law: when the gas is kept at a constant T, its P is inversely proportional to its V (T=ct., P~V) II Charles Law: P = ct., V~T III Gay Lussac's Law: V =ct, P~T Ideal gas Law: PV=nRT R-universal gas constant R = 8.31 J/mol K (in P=Pa and V=cm 3 ) R= L atm /mol K(1L = 10 3 cm 3 )

n = N / N A, n- nr. of molecules, N-nr. of the molecules in the gas PV = (N / N A )RT PV = N k B T k B - Boltzmann's constant k B = R / NA= 1.38 x J/K

The kinetic theory of gases 1. The number of molecules in the gas is large, and the average separtion between them is large compared with their dimensions 2. The molecules obey Newtons lows of motion, but as a whole they move randomly 3. The molecules interact only through short- range forces during elasstic collisions 4. The molecules make elastic collision with the walls 5. All molecules in the gas are identical

Molecular model for the pressure of an ideal Gas Δp x = m v x -(- mv x ) =2 mv x F1= Δp x /Δt = 2m v x / Δt Δt = 2d/v x F1= 2m v x / 2d/v x = m v x 2 /d For N molecules: v x 2 = (v 1x 2 + v 2x 2 +…+ v Nx 2 )/N F= (Nm/d) v x 2 v x 2 = 1/3 v 2 F= N/3(mv 2 /d) P = F/A =F/d 2 = 2/3(N/V)(1/2 mv 2 ) =P

P=2/3(N/V)(1/2 mv 2 ) – the pressure is proportional to the number of molecules per unit volume and to the average transitional kinetic energy of a molecule Molecular interpretation of Temperature PV= 2/3 N(1/2 mv 2 ) PV = N k B T T= 2/(3k B ) (1/2 mv 2 )- the temperature of gas is a direct measure of the average molecular kinetic energy of gas

1/2 mv 2 =3/2 k B T KE total = N(1/2 mv 2 ) =3/2 Nk B T k B = R / NA; n = N / N A KE total = 3/2 n RT –the total transitional KE of the system of molecules is proportional to the absolute temperature of the system The Internal energy U for a monatomic gas: U= 3/2 n RT The root-mean-square (rms) speed of the molecule v rms = v 2 = 3k B T/m= 3RT/M (M- molar mass)

Ex: if a gas in a vessel consists of a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen, the hydrogen molecules with a molar mass of 2.0x10 -2 kg/mol, move four time faster than oxygen molecules, with molar mass 32x10 -3 kg/mol. IF we calculate the rms speed for Hydrogen at room temperature(300K): v rms =3RT/M =3(8.31 j/mol K)(300K) /(2.0x10 -2 kg/mol)= 1.9 x 10 3 m/s This is 17% of escape speed for Earth