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MS811Material Thermodynamics (3 Credit Hours Course) Prof. Nasir Ahmad Lecture 6-Mostly Revision for Exam: Wednesday, 25 November 2009 Lecture 7-Carnot Cycle: Wednesday, 2 nd December 2009 Contact: E-mail: nasir.ahmad-scme@nust.edu.pk Office Phone: +51+9085-5213nasir.ahmad-scme@nust.edu.pk ME –Material Thermodynamics-811-Lecture Notes-FALL2009- (Dr. Nasir Ahmad)
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MS 811 (3 CH) Material Thermodynamics Course Contents: Concepts of Helmholtz Free Energy and Gibbs Free Energy, Energy-Property relationships, Thermal Equilibria, Chemical Equilibria, Ellingham Diagrams, 1 st order and 2 nd order Transformations, Gibbs Helmholtz Relationships, Fugacity and Chemical activity, Equilibrium constant and its variation with temperature, Vant Hoff’s equation, Effect of temperature and pressure on phase transformations, Clapeyron equation, Thermodynamics of solutions, Gibbs- Duhem relationship, Thermodynamic properties and equilibrium phase diagrams, Mixing functions, Excess functions, Phase Rule, Gibbs free Energy and Entropy Calculations of Phase transformation, Typical Equilibrium Phase Diagrams, Statistical Methods in thermodynamics. Reading: Thermodynamics of Materials (David V. Ragone) Introduction to Thermodynamics of Materials (D. R. Gaskell) Thermodynamics, an Advanced Text for Material Scientists (J. Hudson) 3
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Equation of State From First Law We also know, 4
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Useful Approximation of of heat capcities of elemental gases at low pressure. For a monoatmic ideal gas, such as Helium R is a constant, equal to 8.314 joules per Kelvin or 1.985 calories per degree Celsius, that is the constant of proportionality (R) in the equation Pressure × Volume = n (number of moles) × (R) × Temperature, relating the pressure and volume of a quantity of gas to the absolute temperature. 5
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First Law of Thermodynamics Conservation of Energy Says Nothing About Direction of Energy Transfer
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Second Law of Thermodynamics Preferred (or Natural) Direction of Energy Transfer Determines Whether a Process Can Occur
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Second Law of Thermodynamics Three Types of Thermodynamic Processes Natural (or Irreversible) Impossible Reversible
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Natural (or Irreversible) Process Physical Processes That Proceed in One Direction But Not The Other Tends Towards Equilibrium Equilibrium Only At End of Process
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Natural (or Irreversible) Process Examples Free Expansion of Gas Valve Closed Vacuum Gas
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Natural (or Irreversible) Process Examples Free Expansion of Gas Valve Open Gas Increase in Entropy Equilibrium Gas
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Natural (or Irreversible) Process Examples Thermal Conduction HotCold dQ
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Natural (or Irreversible) Process Examples Thermal Conduction Warm Increase in Entropy Equilibrium
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Natural (or Irreversible) Process Examples Conversion of Potential & Kinetic into Internal Energy Steel Ball
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Natural (or Irreversible) Process Examples Conversion of Potential & Kinetic into Internal Energy Inelastic Collision Warmer
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Natural (or Irreversible) Process Examples Conversion of Potential & Kinetic into Internal Energy Inelastic Collision Tends Towards Equilibrium Increase in Entropy Warmer
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Natural (or Irreversible) Process Equilibrium Time independent Properties do not change with time Valve Open Gas Gas Warm Warmer
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Impossible Process Physical processes that do not occur naturally Process that takes system from equilibrium
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Impossible Process Examples Free Compression of Gas Valve Open Gas Gas
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Impossible Process Examples Free Compression of Gas Valve Open Vacuum Gas Decrease in Entropy
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Impossible Process Examples Thermal Conduction Warm
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Impossible Process Examples Thermal Conduction HotCold Decrease in Entropy
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Impossible Process Examples Conversion of Potential, Kinetic and Internal Energy Warmer
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Impossible Process Examples Conversion of Potential, Kinetic and Internal Energy Decrease in Entropy Warmer
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Impossible Process Cannot Occur without Input of Work dW
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Impossible Process System’s Entropy Decreases Total Entropy Increases dW Decrease in Entropy Increase in Entropy Environment
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Reversible Process Reversal in direction returns substance & environment to original states
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Reversible Process A conceptual process Idealized version of how things should be No processes are truly reversible
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Reversible Process Useful concept Helps investigate Second Law and Entropy
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Reversible Process Conditions that aid a reversible process Process occurs slow enough Each state of the system is in an equilibrium State variables reach equilibrium
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The Second Law of Thermodynamics and Entropy Distinction between a reversible and an irreversible process: reversible – one can reverse the process and cause the system and the environment both to return to their original condition irreversible – one can reverse the process and cause the system to return to its original condition, but the environment will have suffered a change from the original condition
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