The First Law of Thermodynamics: Closed System: Dr. Fadhli Bin Syahrial Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Utem
The First Law of Thermodynamics: Closed System: Dr. Fadhli Bin Syahrial Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Utem
Closed System
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Energy is neither
created nor destroyed
Macroscopic forms of energy:
• Kinetic energy, KE: Those a system possesses as a
whole with respect to some outside
The energy that a reference frame, such as kinetic
and potential energies.
system possesses as a
result of its motion
relative to some Microscopic forms of energy:
reference frame. Those related to the molecular
structure of a system and the
degree of the molecular activity.
Closed
V
Heat System
Work
z
Reference Plane, z = 0
For the closed system shown above, the conservation of energy principle
or the first law of thermodynamics is expressed as
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Ein Eout Esystem
E U KE PE
Qnet Wnet U
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The only two forms of energy interactions associated with
a closed system are heat transfer and work.
The difference between heat transfer and work: An
energy interaction is heat transfer if its driving force is a
temperature difference. Otherwise it is work.
System
Q W
WORK - energy transferred with force acting
through a distance.
A rising piston, a rotating shaft, an electric wire
crossing the system boundaries are all associated with
work interactions
• Formal sign convention: Q > 0 : heat transfer TO the system
Heat transfer to a system & Q < 0 : heat transfer FROM the system
w = W/m
kJ/kg
W
kJ/sec
kW
Power is the work done per unit time
(kW)
Electrical Work, W electrical VI
Mechanical Work, W = FS
Spring
Shaft
Gravitational
Acceleration
MOVING BOUNDARY
• Associated with elongation and contraction of
springs.
When the length of the spring changes by
a differential amount dx under the influence of a force F,
the work done is
Substituting and integrating yield
The displacement
of a linear spring
doubles when the
force is doubled.
• An applied torque is acting & the shaft turns in
response
A force F acting through a
moment arm r generates a
torque T
Shaft work
Energy transmission through rotating shafts is Shaft work is proportional to the torque
commonly encountered in practice. applied and the number of revolutions of
the shaft.
The area under the
curve is the work
Example 1
A rigid tank contain air at 400kPa and
150OC. As a result of heat transfer to the
surrounding the temperature and pressure
inside the tank drop to 65OC and 200kPa,
respectively. Determine the work done
during this process.
P 1
1 2
Wb PdV 0
1
2
V
Solution:
V is constant so…work=0
P 1 2
W
V
Wb PdV P dV PV2 V1
2 2
1 1
Example 2
A frictionless piston cylinder device
contain 5kg of steam at 400kPa and
100OC. At constant pressure, heat is now
transferred to the steam until the
temperature reaches 150oC. The mass is
constant, determine the work done by the
steam during this process
Solution…
PdV P dV PV2 V1 mP(v 2 v1)
2 2
Wb 1 1
2 2 mRT
2 Wb PdV dV
1 1 V
V V2
mRT ln
V1
Example 3
A piston cylinder device initially contain
0.5 m3 of air at 120kPa and 90OC. The air
is now compressed to 0.1 m3 at constant
temperature. Determine the work done
during this process.
Solution…
P 1
Assumed as ideal gas… WHY?
mRT
2 P
V
V
2 mRT 2
Wb PdV dV
1 1 V
mRT (ln V2 ln V1 )
V2
mRT ln
V
1
2. From the question we know that
V2
Wb P1V1 ln
V
1
0. 1
Wb 120(0.5) ln
0.5 Ans:-96.56 kJ
P 1 PV constant
n
2 2 dV
2 Wb PdV Const n
1 1 V
P2V2 P1V1
V , n 1
1 n
V2
PV ln , n 1
V1
PV C
n
C
P n CV n
V
2 2
Wb PdV CV dV n
1 1
n 1 2
V V2 n 1 V1 n 1
Wb C C
n 1
1
n 1
CV CV
Wb C V
n 1 n 1
2 V 1
2
n 1
V2n
V1
n 1
But… n 1
C C
P2 n And… P1 n
V2 V1
So…
Wb P2V2 P1V1
n 1
So far, we have not assumed an ideal
gas in this derivation, if we do, then…
PV mRT
mRT2 mRT1
Wb
1 n
mRT2 T1
Wb
1 n
• Work
• Heat
System
Q W
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Heatis defined as the form of energy that is
transferred between two systems by virtue of
a temperature difference.
A process with no heat transfer is adiabatic
Greek → not to be passed
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• Q
– Total heat transferred
– kJ or BTU
• q
– Heat/mass
– kJ/kg or BTU/lbm
• Q
– Rate of heat transfer
– kJ/sec = kW
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Conduction
Transfer of heat as a result of interactions
between particles
Convection
Heat transfer between a solid surface and a gas or
liquid that is in motion
Radiation
Does not require an intervening medium
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dT
Qcond A kt
dx
Integrating gives
Thermal
Conductivity
T
Qcond kA
x
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Material Thermal Conductivity
W/(m K)
Diamond 2300
Copper 401
Iron 80
Glass 1.4
Water 0.613
Air 0.026
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A plane wall constructed of solid iron with thermal
conductivity 70 W/moC, thickness 50 mm and with surface
area 1 m by 1 m, temperature 150 oC on one side and 80 oC
on the other.
Solution…
q = k A dT / s
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Convection heat transfer is the mode of energy transfer between
a solid surface and the adjacent liquid or gas that is in motion
and involves the combined effects of conduction and fluid
motion.
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Convective Heat Transfer Coefficient
Q conv h A (Ts Tf )
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Typical h W/(m2 K)
Free convection – gas 2 - 25
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A fluid flows over a plane surface 1 m by 1 m with a
bulk temperature of 50oC. The temperature of the
surface is 20oC. The convective heat transfer
coefficient is 2,000 W/m2oC.
Solution…
q = hc A dT
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Radiation is energy transfer from the surface of one
body to the surface of another due to
electromagnetic radiation.
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Q rad AT T
4 4
s surr
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Occurs in any transparent
medium (solid or fluid) but may
also even occur across vacuum
(as when the Sun heats the
Earth).
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Also called the heat capacity
Specific
heat at constant volume, cv: The
energy required to raise the temperature of the
unit mass of a substance by one degree as the
volume is maintained constant.
Specificheat at constant pressure, cp: The
energy required to raise the temperature of the
unit mass of a substance by one degree as the
pressure is maintained constant.
Units => kJ/(kg 0C) or kJ/(kg K)
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u
Cv
T v
E=U+KE +PE
E U
Constant-volume specific
dE dU mCvdT heats cv (values are for
helium gas).
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h
h includes the
Cp
internal energy and
T
the work required to
p expand the system
boundaries