1 / 44

Thermal Energy and Matter

Thermal Energy and Matter. Section 16.1. Hmmm…. Why aren’t machines 100% efficient? Where does that energy go? Why do most things generate heat?. FRICTION. How does heat flow? Quick lab. I will give you two different temperatures of water. They have the same volume

bowen
Download Presentation

Thermal Energy and Matter

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Thermal Energy and Matter Section 16.1

  2. Hmmm… • Why aren’t machines 100% efficient? • Where does that energy go? • Why do most things generate heat? FRICTION

  3. How does heat flow? Quick lab • I will give you two different temperatures of water. They have the same volume • Find their initial temperatures • Mix them together in the Styrofoam cup • KEEP THE LID ON! • After 2 minutes, take the final temperature

  4. What is heat? • Heat is the transfer of thermal energy from one object to another • Heat flows spontaneously from hot objects to cold objects

  5. How is heat different from temperature? • Temperature is a measure of how hot or cold an object is compared to a reference point • Temperatures is really the average kinetic energy of particles in a substance

  6. How does heat flow? • Via collisions! • As molecules collide, energy can be transferred (high to low) • We’re looking at the AVERAGE amount of energy

  7. What was thermal energy again? • Total potential and kinetic energy of the particles of an object • Depends on… • Mass • Temperature • Phase (solid, liquid, gas, etc) or an object

  8. Which has more thermal energy? • Coffee or chocolate milk? • Why?

  9. Which has more thermal energy? • Glass or pitcher of lemonade? • Why?

  10. Which has more thermal energy? • Frozen ice pop or melted ice pop? • Why?

  11. Which has more thermal energy? • Cup of coffee or pitcher of lemonade? • Why?

  12. What’s happening here?

  13. Thermal Contraction and Expansion • As the temp drops, the particles… • Thermal contraction!

  14. Thermal Contraction and Expansion • As the temp raises, the particles… • Thermal expansion

  15. Specific Heat • Which part of this pan would you rather touch? Why?

  16. Specific heat • Specific heat is the amount of heat needed to raise one gram of a material 1° Celsius • So does the wood or the metal have a lower specific heat?

  17. Highest?

  18. Q = heat (J) • m = mass (g) • c = specific heat (J/g·°C ) • ΔT = change in temperature (°C)

  19. Problem • An iron skillet has a mass of 500.0 grams. The specific heat of iron is 0.449 J/g·°C. How much heat must be absorbed to raise the skillet's temperature by 95.0°C? • How much heat is needed to raise the temperature of 100.0 g of water by 85.0°C?

  20. Problem • How much heat is absorbed by a 750-g iron skillet when its temperature rises from 25°C to 125°C? • In setting up an aquarium, the heater transfers 1200 kJ of heat to 75,000 g of water. What is the increase in the water's temperature? (Hint: Rearrange the specific heat formula to solve for ΔT.)

  21. To release a diamond from its setting, a jeweler heats a 10.0-g silver ring by adding 23.5 J of heat. How much does the temperature of the silver increase? • What mass of water will change its temperature by 3.0°C when 525 J of heat is added to it?

  22. How do we measure changes in heat?

  23. A calorimeter? • A calorimeter is a device used to measure changes in thermal energy • A calorimeter uses the principle that heat flows from a hotter object to a colder object until both reach the same temperature. • These devices are sealed to prevent heat from escaping

  24. How is it used? • Have a mass of water at a certain temperature • Have an unknown item massed at a different temperature • Drop it in the water • Find the change in temperature of water

  25. Reviewing Concepts • In what direction does heat flow on its own? • How is the temperature of an object related to the average kinetic energy of its particles? • Name two variables that affect thermal energy. • What causes thermal expansion of an object when it is heated? • How do the temperature increases of different materials depend on their specific heats? • What principle explains how a calorimeter is used to measure the specific heat of a sample material?

  26. Heat and Thermodynamics Section 16.2

  27. Heat transfer • There are three different ways that thermal energy (heat) can transfer from substance to another • Conduction • Convection • Radiation

  28. Conduction • Conduction is the transfer of thermal energy with no overall transfer of matter • Within one substance • Between substances in contact • EX: Newton’s cradle • Solids v. liquids v. gases

  29. Which would you rather grab?

  30. Thermal conductors v. Insulators • Thermal conductors are materials that conduct thermal energy well • Metal • Tile • Thermal insulators are materials that conduct thermal energy poorly • Air • Wood • Wool • Styrofoam

  31. Convection • Convection is the transfer of thermal energy when particles of a fluid move from one place to another • Liquid or gas • Convection current happens when a fluid circulates in a loop as it heats and cools.

  32. Oceans, weather systems, magma in earth’s interior… …and food

  33. Radiation • Radiation is the transfer of energy by waves moving through space • Does not need matter to transfer through • Hotter something is, faster it radiates

  34. All together!

  35. Thermodynamics • Whole branch of science • Thermodynamics studies conversion between thermal energy and other forms of energy • Three supporting laws

  36. First Law of Thermodynamics • The first law of thermodynamics states that energy is conserved • Can’t create nor destroy • AKA law of conservation of energy

  37. Second Law of Thermodynamics • The second law of thermodynamics states that thermal energy can flow from cold to hot ONLY if work is done to the system • Natural flow pattern: warm objects to cold objects

  38. Heat engines and the second law • A heat engine is a device that converts heat into work • Will never be 100% because… • Energy not converted into work? Waste heat • Overall, disorder of universe is always increasing

  39. Third Law of Thermodynamics • The third law of thermodynamics states that absolute zero can never be reached • Molecules always moving somewhat…why efficiency can never be zero

  40. Facts about Absolute zero • The average temperature of the universe today is approximately 2.73 K • The current world record was set in 1999 at 100 picokelvins (pK), or 0.0000000001K, by cooling the nuclear spins in a piece of rhodium metal. • In February 2003, the Boomerang Nebula was observed to have the lowest natural temperature ever recorded (~1K)

  41. Reviewing Concepts • Why is conduction in gases slower than conduction in liquids or solids? • Give three examples of convection currents that occur in natural cycles • What happens to radiation from an object as its temperature increases? • State the first law of thermodynamics • In your own words, what is the second law of thermodynamics? • State the third law of thermodynamics

More Related