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Chapter 6
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Temperature ◦ Is something hot or cold? ◦ Relative measure
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Temperature ◦ Molecules of all substances are in constant motion ◦ Depends on the kinetic energy of molecules in a substance
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Temperature ◦ Greater the temperature ◦ Greater the motion of its molecules ◦ Measure of the average kinetic energy of the molecules of a substance
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Thermometer ◦ Measuring instrument Utilizes the physical properties of materials to accurately determine temperature ◦ Thermal expansion Expand with increasing temperature Contract with decreasing temperature
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Temperature scales ◦ Reference points ◦ Ice points Freezing point of water ◦ Steam point Boiling point of water
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Temperature scales ◦ Fahrenheit Ice point 32 Steam point 212 ◦ Celsius Ice point 0 Steam point 100
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Temperature scales ◦ Kelvin Absolute temperature scale Zero temperature is the absolute lower limit Absolute zero
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Heat ◦ Flows from higher to lower temperature ◦ Energy in transit because of a temperature difference ◦ When heat is added to a body, internal energy increases
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Heat ◦ SI unit Joule (J) ◦ Common unit calorie (cal) Heat necessary to raise one gram of pure water by one Celsius degree
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Kilocalorie ◦ Food calorie (Cal) is equal to one kilocalorie
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British thermal unit (BTU) ◦ British system unit of heat ◦ Heat necessary to raise one pound of water one Fahrenheit degree
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Nearly all matter expands when heated and contracts when cooled Water is an important exception ◦ Expands when frozen
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Specific heat ◦ Heat necessary to raise the temperature of one kilogram of a substance one Celsius degree ◦ Specific to a particular substance ◦ Greater the specific heat ◦ Greater its capacity for heat
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Recall: heat will flow from Hot to Cold ie: from high heat content to low heat content Until they reach thermal equilibrium Thermal Equilibrium Heat energy lost = heat energy gained
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hot substance cold substance
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hot substance cold substance
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hot substance cold substance
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hot substance cold substance
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(hot) (cold)
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(hot) (cold)
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(hot) (cold)
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What’s going to happen to the temperature of the small block?
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What’s going to happen to the temperature of the large block? What’s going to happen to the temperature of the small block?
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(warm)
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Heat is a form of energy that flows from one object to another (warm)
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(always from hot to cold) (warm)
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Heat transfer occurs in mixtures too. Consider mixing hot and cold water
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By mixing together, the energy from one is gained by the other. The result is an increase in T for one and a decrease for the other
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Heat gained = heat lost Heat gained Heat lost mc∆T = QQ= mc∆T mc∆T = mc∆T
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Practice 500. g of water at 35 ºC is added to 400. g of water at 85 ºC. What is the temperature of the resulting mixture once equilibrium has been reached?
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Phases of matter ◦ Solids ◦ Liquids ◦ Gases Latent heat ◦ Heat associated with a phase change
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Latent heat of fusion ◦ Heat required to change solid into liquid
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Latent heat of vaporization ◦ Heat necessary to change a liquid into a gas
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Sublimation ◦ Changing directly from the solid to the gaseous phase Deposition ◦ Changing directly from the gaseous to the solid phase
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Boiling ◦ Process by which energetic molecules escape from liquid ◦ Energy is gained from heating ◦ Increasing pressure increases the boiling point of water
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At mountain altitudes ◦ Decreased air pressure ◦ Boiling point of water lower that at sea level
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Evaporation ◦ Slow phase change of liquid to gas ◦ Major cooling mechanism Evaporation of perspiration has a cooling effect Energy is lost
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Evaporation ◦ Moving air promotes evaporation by carrying away water molecules ◦ Cooling effect
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Relative humidity ◦ Amount of moisture in the air ◦ Humid environment ◦ Little evaporation of perspiration ◦ Hot feeling
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Methods of heat transfer ◦ Conduction ◦ Convection ◦ Radiation
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Conduction ◦ Transfer of heat by molecular collisions ◦ Kinetic energy of molecules is transferred from one molecule
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Thermal conductivity ◦ Measure of a substance’s ability to conduct heat Metals ◦ Good conductors Liquids and gases ◦ Poor conductors ◦ Molecules farther apart ◦ Less collisions
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Convection ◦ Transfer of heat by the movement of a substance, or mass, from one position to another ◦ Movement of heated air or water
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Radiation ◦ Process of transferring energy by means of electromagnetic waves ◦ Dark colors absorb radiation better than light colors
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Three common phases of matter ◦ Solid ◦ Liquid ◦ Gas
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Solid ◦ Definite shape and volume ◦ Crystalline solid Molecules arranged in a particular repeating pattern
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Heating ◦ Molecules gain kinetic energy ◦ Vibrate about their positions in the lattice ◦ Move farther apart ◦ Lattice becomes distorted
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Liquid ◦ Slight lattice structure ◦ Molecules relatively free to move ◦ Definite volume but no definite shape
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Liquid ◦ Individual molecules gain kinetic energy when heated ◦ Liquid expands as a result ◦ Gas phase Occurs when molecules are completely free from each other
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Gas ◦ Rapidly-moving molecules ◦ Exert little or no force on another except when they collide
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Continued heating of a gas ◦ Molecules and atoms ripped apart by collisions with one another Plasma ◦ Hot gas of electrically charged particles ◦ Ionosphere ◦ Lightning strikes ◦ Neon and fluorescent lamps
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Kinetic theory ◦ Pressure rises as temperature increases ◦ Gases diffuse in air
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Kinetic theory ◦ A gas consists of molecules moving independently in all directions at high speeds ◦ Higher the temperature, the higher the average speed
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Ideal gas ◦ Molecules are point particles (have no size at all) ◦ Interact only by collision Collisions exert only a tiny force on the wall
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Pressure ◦ Force per unit area, p = F/A ◦ SI unit is N/m 2 or pascal (Pa)
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Pressure ◦ Directly proportional to number of gas molecules present ◦ Directly proportional to the Kelvin temperature ◦ Inversely proportional to volume
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The ideal gas law
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Thermodynamics ◦ Dynamics of heat Production Flow Conversion to work
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Heat added to a closed system ◦ Internal energy ◦ Doing work
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First law of thermodynamics ◦ Positive heat values (heat is added to the system) ◦ Positive work values (work done by the system) ◦ Negative values indicate the opposite
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Heat engine ◦ Converts heat into work ◦ Some input energy is lost or wasted
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Second law of thermodynamics ◦ Impossible for heat to flow spontaneously from a colder body to a hotter body ◦ No heat engine operating in a cycle can convert thermal energy completely into work
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Third law of thermodynamics ◦ It is impossible to attain a temperature of absolute zero ◦ Would require all of the heat to be taken from an object
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Heat Pump ◦ Uses work input to transfer heat ◦ Low temperature to high temperature ◦ Reverse of a heat engine
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Entropy ◦ Does a process take place naturally? ◦ The entropy of an isolated system never decreases ◦ Measure of the disorder of a system
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Entropy ◦ Disorder increases as natural processes take place ◦ Total entropy of the universe increases in every natural process
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