The document discusses different types of systems and processes in thermodynamics. A system is the part of the universe being studied, while a process describes changes within the system. The surroundings are everything outside the system boundary. Systems can be homogeneous, with uniform properties throughout, or heterogeneous with distinct phases and discontinuities at boundaries. Closed systems exchange energy but not matter, while open systems exchange both. Isolated systems are unaffected by their environment.
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Systems and Processes
The document discusses different types of systems and processes in thermodynamics. A system is the part of the universe being studied, while a process describes changes within the system. The surroundings are everything outside the system boundary. Systems can be homogeneous, with uniform properties throughout, or heterogeneous with distinct phases and discontinuities at boundaries. Closed systems exchange energy but not matter, while open systems exchange both. Isolated systems are unaffected by their environment.
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Systems and Processes
System. In thermodynamics, a substance or group of
substances in which we have special interest is called a system. It is that part of the universe which is set apart for our special consideration. It may be a reaction vessel, a distillation column, or a heat engine. Process. The changes taking place within the system is referred to as a process. Thus, hydrocarbon fuel and oxygen in a combustion chamber constitute the system and the combustion of fuel to form water and carbon dioxide constitutes a process. Surroundings. The part of the universe outside the system and separated from the system by boundaries is called surroundings. The boundaries may be either physical or imaginary; they may be rigid or movable. For practical reasons, the surroundings are usually restricted to that portion of the universe which is in the immediate vicinity of the system and are affected by changes occurring in the system. For example, when the steam condensing in a shelland-tube heat exchanger is treated as the system, the cooling water to which the latent heat of vaporisation is transferred may be treated as the surroundings.
Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Systems
Homogeneous system. This system is also called a phase.
Here the properties are the same throughout or the properties vary smoothly without showing any surface of discontinuity. Liquid water in a beaker and a column of dustfree air above the earths surface are examples of homogeneous system. Heterogeneous system. This is a system which consists of two or more distinct homogeneous regions or phases. There is a sudden change in properties at the phase boundaries. A liquid mixture of benzene and water forms a heterogeneous system made up of two immiscible liquid phases. Water and water vapour taken in a closed container is another example of a heterogeneous system. Systems consisting of only gases
and vapours are always homogeneous. With liquids, two
phases are common, and with solids any number of different phases are possible.
Closed and Open Systems
Closed system and open system. Systems that can
exchange energy with the surroundings but which cannot transfer matter across the boundaries are known as closed systems. Open systems, on the other hand, can exchange both energy and matter with their environment. In a multiphase system, each phase is open since material is free to enter and leave each phase, although the system as a whole may be closed to the flow of matter. A batch reactor is a closed system while a tubular flow reactor is an open system. Cyclical processes, like power and refrigeration cycles are closed systems when considered as a whole, whereas each component of the cycle such as compressor, pump, and heat exchanger is open. Isolated system. This is a system, which is totally unaffected by the changes in its environment. Neither energy nor matter can cross the boundaries of an isolated system. A closed system is thermally isolated, when the enclosing walls are impervious to the flow of heat; it is mechanically isolated, when enclosed by rigid walls, and is completely isolated, when neither material nor energy in any form can be added to it or removed from it. A perfectly isolated system is an ideal concept that cannot be attained in practice. The system and surroundings considered together constitute an isolated system. Thus, the universe can be treated as an isolated system.