Defence Engineering College: Thermodynamics MV2011
Defence Engineering College: Thermodynamics MV2011
Defence Engineering College: Thermodynamics MV2011
THERMODYNAMICS
MV2011
1ST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS
Introduction
We are familiar with the conservation of energy principle,
which is an expression of the first law of thermodynamics.
Back from our high school years, We are told repeatedly
that energy cannot be created or destroyed during a
process; it can only change from one form to another.
Consider a room whose door and windows are tightly
closed, and whose walls are well-insulated so that heat
loss or gain through the walls is negligible. Now let’s place
a refrigerator in the middle of the room with its door open,
and plug it into a wall outlet.
Note that energy is conserved during the process of
operating the refrigerator placed in a room—the electrical
energy is converted into an equivalent amount of thermal
energy stored in the room air.
Forms of Energy
Energy can exist in numerous forms such as thermal, mechanical,
kinetic, potential, electric, magnetic, chemical, and nuclear, and
their sum constitutes the total energy E of a system.
The total energy of a system on a unit mass basis is denoted by e
and is expressed as
e = E/ m (kJ/kg)
In thermodynamic analysis, it is often helpful to consider the
various forms of energy that make up the total energy of a system
in two groups (macroscopic and microscopic).
The macroscopic forms of energy are those a system possesses as
a whole with respect to some outside reference frame, such as
kinetic and potential energies.
The microscopic forms of energy are those related to the
molecular structure of a system and the degree of the molecular
activity, and they are independent of outside reference frames.
The sum of all the microscopic forms of energy is called the internal
energy of a system and is denoted by U.
The macroscopic energy of a system is related to motion and the
influence of some external effects such as gravity, magnetism,
electricity, and surface tension.
The energy that a system possesses as a result of its motion relative
to some reference frame is called kinetic energy (KE).
When all parts of a system move with the same velocity, the kinetic
energy is expressed as
KE = mV2/2 (kJ)
or, on a unit mass basis,
ke = V2/2 (kJ/kg)
where V denotes the velocity of the system relative to some fixed
reference frame.
The energy that a system possesses as a result of its elevation in a
gravitational field is called potential energy (PE) and is expressed
as
PE = mgz (kJ)
The total area A under the process curve 1–2 (Fig. 3.2) is obtained
by adding these differential areas:
4. Polytropic Process
During actual expansion and compression processes of gases,
pressure and volume are often related by PVn = C, where n and
C are constants.
A process of this kind is called a polytropic process.
The pressure for a polytropic process can be expressed as
since
For an ideal gas (PV = mRT), this equation can also be written as
For a closed system undergoing a cycle, the initial and final states
are identical, and thus ∆Esystem = E2 - E1 = 0.
Then the energy balance for a cycle simplifies to Ein - Eout = 0 or
Ein = Eout
Noting that a closed system does not involve any mass flow across
its boundaries, the energy balance for a cycle can be expressed in
terms of heat and work interactions as:
That is, the net work output during a cycle is equal to net heat input
(Fig. 3.5).
Fig. 3.6. Specific heat is the
energy required to raise the
temperature of a unit mass of
Fig. 3.5. For a cycle
a substance by one degree in a
∆E = 0, thus Q = W. specified way
Specific Heats
• The specific heat is defined as the energy required to raise the
temperature of a unit mass of a substance by one degree (Fig. 3.6).
• In general, this energy depends on how the process is executed
and in thermodynamics, we are interested in two kinds of specific
heats: specific heat at constant volume cv and specific heat at
constant pressure cp.
• Physically, the specific heat at constant volume cv can be viewed as
the energy required to raise the temperature of the unit mass of a
substance by one degree as the volume is maintained constant.
• The energy required to do the same as the pressure is maintained
constant is the specific heat at constant pressure cp.
• The specific heat at constant pressure cp is always greater than cv
because at constant pressure the system is allowed to expand and
the energy for this expansion work must also be supplied to the
system.
Consider a fixed mass in a stationary closed system undergoing a
constant-volume process.
The conservation of energy principle ein - eout = esystem for this
process can be expressed in the differential form as:
or
or