H, T Thermal Expansion: Dr. Nerrie E. Malaluan
H, T Thermal Expansion: Dr. Nerrie E. Malaluan
H, T Thermal Expansion: Dr. Nerrie E. Malaluan
AND
THERMAL EXPANSION
Lecture 2
Dr. NERRIE E. MALALUAN
THE NATURE OF HEAT
Heat is defined as the transfer of
energy from one object to another
because of a temperature difference
between the objects.
It was believed that heat is an invisible
substance that passed from a hot body
to a cold body and that substance was
called caloric.
Caloric theory states that a hot body
SOURCES OF HEAT
Sun
Earth’s interior
Chemical action
Mechanical energy
Electrical energy
Nuclear energy
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN “HEAT” AND
“TEMPERATURE”
THERMAL ENERGY OF A BODY
It is the potential and kinetic energy of its particles that can be evolved
as heat.
What we call temperature is simply the “hotness or coldness” of an
object.
The quantity of thermal energy possessed by a different bodies,
however, does not give each the same temperature.
The relationship between temperature and thermal energy is different
for different materials.
Thermal energy which is being given up by a body, or being transferred
from one body to another is heat.
The temperature of a body is a measure of its ability to give up heat to,
or absorb heat from other bodies.
UNITS OF HEAT
In the CGS system, heat is expressed in
terms of calories.
A calorie is a quantity of heat needed
to raised the temperature of one gram
of water in one degree Celsius.
1 calorie = 4.18605 joules
In the MKS system, heat is expressed
in terms of kilocalories, that is the
amount of heat needed to raised the
HOW TO FIND THE NUMBER OF CALORIES?
To find the number of calories
necessary to heat water,
multiply the mass of water by the
number of degree rise in temperature.
= 0.00045 or 45 x 10-4
Law of Heat Exchange
Heat capacity = mass x specific heat
H = mass x specific heat x change in temperature
H= m x c x t
Sample :
How many calories will be needed to change the
temperature of 2 kg of water from 400C to 100oC?
Given: m = 2 kg or 2000 g
t1 = 40 oC
t2 = 100 0C
c = 1 cal/goC
H= ?
Formula: H = mc( t2 – t1)
2000g x 1cal/g0C x (100oC – 400C)
2000 x 60 cal
= 120,000 calories
The law of heat exchange could be
represented in the equation:
Heat gained by cold body =Heat lost by hot body
m c x cc x ( t ) c = m h x ch x ( t ) h
Sample Problem:
A 150 g metal is heated to 100 oC and then
immersed in an aluminum container of mass 200
g containing 450 g of water at 20 oC. If the final
temperature of the mixture is 23.1 OC, find the
specific heat of the metal.