Lecture 13. The Second Law

Similar documents
THERMODYNAMICS. Topic: 4 Spontaneous processes and criteria for spontaneity, entropy as a state function. VERY SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS

12 The Laws of Thermodynamics

Chapter 16 The Second Law of Thermodynamics

Lecture 21: Introducing the Second Law, Irreversibilities

MAHALAKSHMI ENGINEERING COLLEGE

1. Second Law of Thermodynamics

Lecture Notes 2014March 13 on Thermodynamics A. First Law: based upon conservation of energy

Thermodynamic Systems, States, and Processes

ESCI 341 Atmospheric Thermodynamics Lesson 12 The Energy Minimum Principle

Chapter 12 Thermodynamics

Chapter 12. The Laws of Thermodynamics. First Law of Thermodynamics

Lecture Outline Chapter 18. Physics, 4 th Edition James S. Walker. Copyright 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Department: Machines and equipments. Stage: First Stage Title: Thermodynamic week: 19

Lecture 2 Entropy and Second Law

Chap. 3. The Second Law. Law of Spontaneity, world gets more random

Examples Clausius uncertainty Carnot cycle Asymmetry of heat and work Perpetual mobile Heat pump 10 version of 2 nd law

1. Second Law of Thermodynamics

Chapter 1: FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS OF THERMODYNAMICS AND VARIOUS THERMODYMIC PROCESSES

Chapter 12. The Laws of Thermodynamics

Thermodynamic Third class Dr. Arkan J. Hadi

October 18, 2011 Carnot cycle - 1

Second Law of Thermodynamics

Basic Thermodynamics. Prof. S. K. Som. Department of Mechanical Engineering. Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur.

8 Lecture 8: Thermodynamics: Principles


Lecture 26. Second law of thermodynamics. Heat engines and refrigerators.

Atkins / Paula Physical Chemistry, 8th Edition. Chapter 3. The Second Law

Thermodynamics: Reversibility and Carnot

Lecture 15. Available Work and Free Energy. Lecture 15, p 1

Reversible Processes. Furthermore, there must be no friction (i.e. mechanical energy loss) or turbulence i.e. it must be infinitely slow.

I.D The Second Law Q C

Lecture Ch. 2a. Lord Kelvin (a.k.a William Thomson) James P. Joule. Other Kinds of Energy What is the difference between E and U? Exact Differentials

Chapter Notes Subject: Chemistry Class: XI Chapter: Thermodynamics Top concepts

Chapter 3. The Second Law Fall Semester Physical Chemistry 1 (CHM2201)

Introduction to Aerospace Propulsion. Prof. Bhaskar Roy. Prof. A. M. Pradeep. Department of Aerospace Engineering

CARNOT CYCLE = T = S ( U,V )

Reversibility. Processes in nature are always irreversible: far from equilibrium

THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS. Professor Benjamin G. Levine CEM 182H Lecture 5

ME6301- ENGINEERING THERMODYNAMICS UNIT I BASIC CONCEPT AND FIRST LAW PART-A

THERMODYNAMICS Lecture 5: Second Law of Thermodynamics

MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY SPRING 2007

Chemistry 163B Refrigerators and Generalization of Ideal Gas Carnot (four steps to exactitude) E&R pp 86-91, Raff pp.

Identify the intensive quantities from the following: (a) enthalpy (b) volume (c) refractive index (d) none of these

MARIA COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY

Entropy in Macroscopic Systems

Entropy and the Second and Third Laws of Thermodynamics

2. Under conditions of constant pressure and entropy, what thermodynamic state function reaches an extremum? i

Free expansion (Joule); Constant U Forced expansion (Joule-Kelvin); Constant H. Joule-Kelvin coefficient - heating or cooling on JK expansion?

Chapter 11 Heat Engines and The Second Law of Thermodynamics

Second Law of Thermodynamics -

Thermodynamics. AP Physics B

Examples. Fire Piston (demo) Example (Comparison of processes)

The Physics of Energy

More Thermodynamics. Specific Specific Heats of a Gas Equipartition of Energy Reversible and Irreversible Processes

Chapter 20. Heat Engines, Entropy and the Second Law of Thermodynamics. Dr. Armen Kocharian

Lecture 44: Review Thermodynamics I

Thermodynamics & Statistical Mechanics SCQF Level 9, U03272, PHY-3-ThermStat. Thursday 24th April, a.m p.m.

Physics 150. Thermodynamics. Chapter 15

Thermodynamics 1 Lecture Note 2

Physics Nov Cooling by Expansion

Chem Lecture Notes 6 Fall 2013 Second law

Chapter 19. Heat Engines

DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING ME6301-ENGINEERING THERMODYNAMICS

Irreversible Processes

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON

Physics 111. Lecture 42 (Walker: 18.9) Entropy & Disorder Final Review. May 15, 2009

Chapter 6: Forms of the Second Law

Types of Energy Calorimetry q = mc T Thermochemical Equations Hess s Law Spontaneity, Entropy, Gibb s Free energy

OCN 623: Thermodynamic Laws & Gibbs Free Energy. or how to predict chemical reactions without doing experiments

Entropy Changes & Processes

Chapter Two. Basic Thermodynamics, Fluid Mechanics: Definitions of Efficiency. Laith Batarseh

Cover Page: Entropy Summary

CHAPTER 2 THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS Instructor: Prof. Dr. Uğur Atikol

ME 2202 ENGINEERING THERMODYNAMICS TWO MARKS QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS UNIT I BASIC CONCEPTS AND FIRST LAW

First Law showed the equivalence of work and heat. Suggests engine can run in a cycle and convert heat into useful work.

Physics 207 Lecture 27. Lecture 26. Chapters 18, entropy and second law of thermodynamics Chapter 19, heat engines and refrigerators

Handout 12: Thermodynamics. Zeroth law of thermodynamics

Classes at: - Topic: Thermodynamics. = E v. = G f T 1

CHEMISTRY: Chapter 10 Prep-Test

Lecture 17. Conditions of Equilibrium

Lecture. Polymer Thermodynamics 0331 L First and Second Law of Thermodynamics

Classification following properties of the system in Intensive and Extensive

The First Law of Thermodynamics

Section 3 Entropy and Classical Thermodynamics

1 st Law: du=dq+dw; u is exact Eq. 2.8 du=dq rev -pdv (expansion only) p. 56. (δp/δt) g =η/v Eq. 2.40

CHAPTER 7 ENTROPY. Copyright Hany A. Al-Ansary and S. I. Abdel-Khalik (2014) 1

IS A PARTICULAR PROCESS / REACTION FEASIBLE? TO WHAT EXTENT DOES THE PROCESS / REACTION PROCEED?

Lecture 3: Light and Temperature

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON

An introduction to thermodynamics applied to Organic Rankine Cycles

Chapter 6 Thermodynamic Properties of Fluids

Handout 12: Thermodynamics. Zeroth law of thermodynamics

Basic thermodynamics. heat to the high temperature reservoir.

Thermodynamics. AP Physics B

Spring_#7. Thermodynamics. Youngsuk Nam.

1. INTRODUCTION TO REFRIGERATION AND AIR CONDITION

Thermodynamics Second Law Heat Engines

Basic Thermodynamics Prof. S. K. Som Department of Mechanical Engineering Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur

The Story of Spontaneity and Energy Dispersal. You never get what you want: 100% return on investment

Introduction to thermodynamics

Transcription:

MIT 3.00 Fall 2002 c W.C Carter 88 Lecture 13 The Second Law Last Time Consequences of an Ideal Gas Internal Energy a Function of T Only A New State Function for Any System: Enthalpy H = U + PV A New State Function for an Ideal Gas System: Entropy Another State Function: Helmholtz Free Energy: F = U - TS Another and Friendly State Function: Gibbs Free Energy: G = U - TS + PV The Second Law of Thermodynamics Finally, the second law (it is really an axiom it has never been proved; only never disproved.) There are quite a few equivalent ways to state the second law. If the statements are correct, they are all equivalent. Some are harder to understand than others; some are included only for historical purposes. I think the following way of stating the second law is useful.

MIT 3.00 Fall 2002 c W.C Carter 89 A Every thermodynamic system possesses an extensive state function called the entropy which can be calculated by a reversible (that is, a quasi-static limit of a real process) path from an arbitrarily chosen Reference State by integrating the heat absorbed by the system divided by the absolute temperature of the system. In other words, Entropy, the state function, exists for every system... B During any observable process, the entropy of a system plus its surroundings (together defining an isolated system or universe) never decreases. And, in other words,...and it always increases for the universe An Illustrative Example Consider the passage of heat from a hot body to a cold one, with no other work being performed. Consider two very large bodies, one at T = 400K and the other at T = 300K (The bodies are so BIG that there temperatures are roughly constant for the passage of a small amount of heat between them.) Object A 400 K Object B 300 K Figure 13-1: A common process, one that you might see every day. Case 1 Suppose 400 joules of heat are transferred from the hot object A to the cooler object B.

MIT 3.00 Fall 2002 c W.C Carter 90 System A System B First Law U A = 400J U B = +400J Second Law S A = 400 J 400 K S B = +400 J 300 K S universe = S A + S B = 1 + 4 3 = 1 3 J K (13-1) Case 2 Suppose that, somehow, the same amount of heat (400 J) is transferred from the cooler to the hotter body. S universe = 1 3 J K (13-2) This is not observed. Suppose that the bodies in Figure 13-1 are not so BIG this time and that they have a finite heat capacity, but suppose that the thermal conductivity of each body alone is very large compared to the thermal conductivity of the stuff that allows heat to transfer between them. In other words, while heat flows between the bodies, we can consider the temperature of the bodies to be uniform at all times. Using the definition of entropy and the heat capacities of each body, how should the entropy change of the universe be calculated?

MIT 3.00 Fall 2002 c W.C Carter 91 Alternative Statements of the Second Law (There are many) Clausius Heat is not observed to pass spontaneously from a body at low temperature to a body at higher temperature. Kelvin It is impossible to continuously perform work by cooling a body to a temperature below that of the lowest temperature of its surroundings. Ostwald A perpetual motion machine of the second kind has never been observed. (A perpetual motion machine of the second kind runs forever. ) 15 Caretheodory This is the most elegant (and hardest to understand and apply, perhaps) as it requires the fewest underlying assumptions. In the neighborhood of every thermodynamic state that can be reached by a reversible path, there exists states which cannot be reached along a reversible adiabatic (isentropic) path; or, in other words, which can be reached either irreversibly or not at all. 15 A perpetual motion machine of the first kind has never been observed (first law, a perpetual motion machine is one that creates energy continuously)

MIT 3.00 Fall 2002 c W.C Carter 92 MIT 3.00 Entropy is a state function that exists for every physical system and has the property that, when all associated systems are considered footnote The universe of a process. the sum of all the entropy changes is greater than or equal to zero.