Definitions [31]
A system that exchanges neither energy nor matter with its surroundings is called an isolated system.
The branch of science which deals with exchange of heat energy between bodies and conversion of heat energy into mechanical energy and vice versa is called thermodynamics.
A system that exchanges both energy and matter with its surroundings is called an open system.
Everything outside the system which has direct effect on the system is called its surrounding.
A part of the universe chosen for analysis, separated by boundaries, where energy and matter exchanges are observed, is called a thermodynamic system.
OR
An assembly of an extremely large number of particles (atoms or molecules) in solid, liquid, gaseous, or a combination of two or more phases is called a thermodynamic system.
A system that exchanges only energy (not matter) with its surroundings is called a closed system.
The state in which two objects are at the same temperature and there is no net flow of heat between them is called thermal equilibrium.
The state of a system in which its properties do not change as long as external conditions remain unchanged is called the thermodynamic equilibrium state.
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It satisfies: mechanical equilibrium (no unbalanced forces), thermal equilibrium (no temperature differences), and chemical equilibrium (no reaction).
The energy transferred to or from a system when an external force acts on the system's boundary, causing it to move, is called work.
The total energy possessed by any system due to molecular motion and molecular configuration is called internal energy.
OR
The energy possessed by a system due to molecular motion and molecular configuration is called internal energy.
where Uk = internal kinetic energy (due to molecular motion) and Up = internal potential energy (due to molecular configuration).
The energy transfer due to temperature difference between a system and its surroundings is called heat.
OR
The energy that exchanges between a system and its environment because of the temperature difference between them is called heat.
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SI unit: joule (J); CGS unit: calorie
Define heat capacity.
The heat capacity of a body is the quantity of heat required to raise its temperature by 1°C. It depends upon the mass and the nature of the body.
The specific heat capacity of a substance is the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of unit mass of that substance through 1°C (or 1 K).
OR
Heat capacity of a body when expressed for the unit mass is called the specific heat capacity of the substance of that body.
OR
The amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of a unit mass of an object by 1 °C is called the specific heat of that object.
OR
The amount of heat per unit mass absorbed or given out by a substance to change its temperature by one unit (one degree), i.e., 1°C or 1 K, is called specific heat capacity.
OR
The quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of a unit mass of a gas by one degree, whose exact value depends upon the mode of heating the gas and can range from zero to infinity or even be negative, is called the specific heat capacity of a gas.
The quantity of heat needed to raise the temperature of the whole body by 1°C (or 1 K) is called heat capacity.
OR
The amount of heat ΔQΔQ supplied to a substance to change its temperature from T to T + ΔT, per unit mass per unit degree change in temperature, is called specific heat:
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Unit: J kg⁻¹ K⁻¹
The amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one mole of a substance through a unit degree Celsius or Kelvin is called molar heat capacity.
The specific values of macroscopic variables that completely describe every equilibrium state of a thermodynamic system are called thermodynamic state variables.
The thermodynamic state variables that depend on the size of the system (e.g., internal energy, volume) are called extensive variables.
The thermodynamic state variables that do not depend on the size of the system (e.g., pressure, temperature) are called intensive variables.
A procedure by which the initial state of a system changes to the final state is called a thermodynamic process.
An idealised process in which at every stage the system is in equilibrium state (very slow process) is called a quasi-static process.
A process in which the temperature of the system is kept constant during the change in state (T = constant) is called an isothermal process.
OR
A thermodynamic process that takes place at constant temperature in which the internal energy of a system remains unchanged (ΔT = 0, ΔU =0) is called an isothermal process.
A process in which there is no exchange of heat between the system and its surroundings, and the system is perfectly insulated from its environment, is called an adiabatic process.
OR
The process during which the heat content of the system or certain quantity of the matter remains constant, i.e., there is no transfer of heat between the system and its surroundings (ΔQ = 0), is called an adiabatic process.
A process in which the volume is kept constant (V = constant) is called an isochoric process.
OR
A thermodynamic process in which the volume of the system remains constant (ΔV = 0) is called an isochoric process.
A process in which the pressure is kept constant (pp = constant) is called an isobaric process.
OR
A thermodynamic process in which the pressure of the system remains constant (ΔP = 0=) is called an isobaric process.
A process in which the system returns to its initial state is called a cyclic process.
A useful state variable that measures the change in heat divided by the temperature of the system, where the combined entropy of the system and its environment remains constant if the process approaches reversibility, is called entropy.
The thermodynamic quantity that combines internal energy with the pressure-volume product, defined as H = U + PV, is called enthalpy.
A process in which the changes cannot be retraced in the reverse direction (e.g., puncturing an inflated balloon, burning a candle) is called an irreversible process.
A process in which the changes can be retraced in the reverse direction (e.g., melting of ice, freezing of water, condensation of steam) is called a reversible process.
The wall which allows the flow of heat is called a diathermic wall.
A wall of a system which does not allow the flow of heat through it is called an adiabatic wall.
Formulae [7]
ΔU = \[\frac {3}{2}\]nRΔT
ΔQ = ms(T2 − T1)
Specific heat capacity c = \[\frac{\text{Heat capacity of body } C'}{\text{Mass of the body } m}\]
or
Specific heat capacity c = \[\frac{Q}{m\times\Delta t}\]
Write the mathematical equation of the first law of thermodynamics for an isochoric process.
By substituting equation W = −pex . ΔV in the equation ΔU = q + W, we get
ΔU = q − pex . ΔV ...(1)
If the reaction is carried out in a closed container so that the volume of the system is constant, then Δ = 0. In such a case, no work is involved.
The equation (1) becomes ΔU = qv
Equation (1) suggests that the change in internal energy of the system is due to heat transfer. The subscript v indicates a constant volume process. As U is a state function, qv is also a state function. We see that an increase in the internal energy of a system is numerically equal to the heat absorbed by the system in a constant volume (isochoric) process.
C = M × c = Q/(nΔT)
Unit: J/mol · K
\[Q=mc\Delta T\]
ΔS = \[\frac {ΔQ}{T}\]
Theorems and Laws [5]
Statement: According to the Zeroth Law, when system A and B are in thermal equilibrium, and B and C are also in thermal equilibrium, then A and C will also be in thermal equilibrium.
- The Zeroth Law leads to the concept of temperature (T).
- Thermal equilibrium means when two bodies are brought into contact, separated by a barrier permeable to heat, there will be no transfer of heat from one to the other.
- This law defines temperature and makes thermometers possible to be made.
- For thermometers to be useful, they must first be calibrated.
- All three objects (A, B, C) at thermal equilibrium are at the same temperature — this forms the basis for comparison of temperatures.
Write the mathematical equation of the first law of thermodynamics for an isochoric process.
By substituting equation W = −pex . ΔV in the equation ΔU = q + W, we get
ΔU = q − pex . ΔV ...(1)
If the reaction is carried out in a closed container so that the volume of the system is constant, then Δ = 0. In such a case, no work is involved.
The equation (1) becomes ΔU = qv
Equation (1) suggests that the change in internal energy of the system is due to heat transfer. The subscript v indicates a constant volume process. As U is a state function, qv is also a state function. We see that an increase in the internal energy of a system is numerically equal to the heat absorbed by the system in a constant volume (isochoric) process.
Statement:
The net heat energy supplied to a system is equal to the sum of the change in internal energy of the system and the work done by the system. It is based on the law of conservation of energy.
Formula:
where Q = heat added, ΔU = change in internal energy, W = work done by the system.
Write statement of second law of thermodynamics.
The second law of thermodynamics states that the total entropy of a system and its surroundings increases in a spontaneous process.
Mathematically,
ΔStotal = `Delta S_"system" + Delta S_"surroundings" gt 0`
For an equilibrium:
ΔStotal = 0
Kelvin-Planck Statement: It is not feasible for any heat engine to utilise all the heat it receives from a source and convert it entirely into useful work. In other words, achieving 100% efficiency in converting heat into work is impossible.
Clausius Statement: Without any external assistance, a machine cannot transfer heat from a colder reservoir to a hotter one. In essence, heat cannot spontaneously move from a cooler object to a warmer one without external intervention or work being done.
Key Points
- Isothermal → P-V diagram: Hyperbolic curve (inverse relation); T-V: horizontal line; T-P: vertical line.
- Adiabatic → P-V diagram: Steeper curve than isothermal; T-V: exponential decay/growth; P-T: exponential decay/growth.
- Work done = area under the P-V curve.
- Adiabatic curve is steeper because γ > 1 (slope = −γP/V vs −P/V for isothermal).
- Heat energy absorbed (Q) depends on: mass (m), rise in temperature (Δt), and specific heat capacity (c), i.e., Q ∝ m × Δt × c.
- Heat capacity (C') and specific heat capacity (c) are related by: C′ = m × c.
First Law: Energy of system + surroundings remains constant → ΔU = q + W
ΔU: change in internal energy, q: heat, W: work done on system
Sign convention:
- Work by system (−)
- on system (+)
- Heat absorbed (+)
- released (−)
ΔU > 0: energy enters system; ΔU < 0: energy leaves system
- Isothermal: ΔU = 0 → q = −W
- Adiabatic: q = 0 → ΔU = W
- Isochoric: W = 0 → ΔU = q
- Isobaric: ΔU = q + W
Entropy (S): A thermodynamic property that measures the degree of randomness or disorder of a system.
\[\Delta S=\frac{q_{rev}}{T}\]
Second Law: The entropy of the universe always tends to increase during any spontaneous process.
Total entropy change:
| Condition | Process |
|---|---|
| ΔStotal = +ve | Spontaneous |
| ΔStotal = −ve | Non-spontaneous |
| ΔStotal = 0 | Equilibrium |
Entropy of mixing:
(ΔS for mixing is always positive, since ΔS is always fractional/positive)
- The Second Law states that there exists a useful state variable called entropy S.
- If a system's change in entropy ΔS = ΔQ/T, the combined entropy of the system and environment remains constant if the process is reversible.
- The Second Law shows: if a physical process is irreversible, the combined entropy of the system and environment increases.
- Final entropy must be greater than initial entropy for an irreversible process: Sf > Si
- For any process approaching reversibility: ΔStotal ≥ 0
- For an isolated system: ΔUsystem ≥ 0 and ΔStotal ≥ 0
- The Second Law is also known as the Law of Increased Entropy.
- No process is possible whose sole result is the absorption of heat from a reservoir and conversion of that heat entirely into work (Kelvin-Planck statement).
Concepts [17]
- Thermodynamics
- Thermal Equilibrium
- Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics
- Heat, Internal Energy and Work
- First Law of Thermodynamics
- Specific Heat Capacity
- Thermodynamic State Variables and Equation of State
- Thermodynamic Process
- Quasi-static process
- Isothermal Processes
- Adiabatic Processes
- Isochoric process
- Isobaric process
- Cyclic Process
- Entropy and Second Law of Thermodynamics
- Reversible and Irreversible Processes
- Carnot Engine
