Convection Answers
Convection Answers
There are three basic ways in which heat is transferred: convection, conduction and radiation. In gases and liquids,
heat is usually transferred by convection, in which the motion of the gas or liquid itself carries heat from one place
to another. Another way to transfer heat is by conduction, which does not involve any motion of a substance, but
rather is a transfer of energy within a substance (or between substances in contact). The third way to transfer
energy is by radiation, which involves absorbing or giving off electromagnetic waves. As long as there is a
temperature difference in a system, heat will always move from higher to lower temperatures.
A campfire is a perfect example of the different kinds of heat transfer. If you boil water in a
kettle, the heat is transferred through convection from the fire to the pot. Heat is conducted
along the handle of the pot, which is why you need to be careful picking the pot up, and why
most pots don't have metal handles. In the water in the pot, convection currents are set up,
helping to heat the water uniformly. While watching the campfire you feel the heat of the
glowing fire via radiation.
CONVECTION
Heat transfer in fluids generally takes place via convection. Convection currents are set up in
the fluid because the hotter part of the fluid is not as dense as the cooler part, so there is an
upward buoyant force on the hotter fluid, making it rise while the cooler, denser, fluid sinks.
Birds and gliders make use of upward convection currents to rise, and we also rely on
convection to remove ground-level pollution.
Faster moving Slower moving
CONDUCTION hot particles cold particles
If one end of a solid object, a piece of metal for example, is heated, the heat
will pass through to the cooler end. The faster molecules, which are hotter
and have a greater kinetic energy collide with the slower moving cooler
molecules that have a lower kinetic energy. The transfer of kinetic energy
causes the cooler molecules to heat up (speed up), while in turn the faster
molecules slow down and become cooler.
Direction of heat flow
RADIATION
Radiation, in this context means light (visible or not). Heat is transferred, for example, from the sun to the earth
through mostly empty space - such a transfer cannot occur via convection nor conduction, which requires the
movement of material from one place to another or the collisions of molecules within the material.
Often the energy of heat can go into making light, such as that coming from a hot
campfire. This light, being a wave, carries energy, so it can move from one place to
another without requiring a medium. When this light reaches you, part of the energy of
the wave gets converted back into heat, which is why you feel warm sitting beside a
campfire. Some of the light can be in the form of visible light that we can see, but a great
deal of the light emitted is infrared light, whose longer wavelength is detectable only with
special infrared detectors. The hotter the object is, the less infrared light is emitted, and the
more visible light. For example, human beings, at a temperature of about 37 o Celsius,
emit almost exclusively infrared light, which is why we don't see each other glowing in the
dark. On other hand, the hot filament of a light bulb emits considerably more visible light.
Hot (high KE) skin molecules collide with and transfer KE to glass molecules; high KE glass molecules
collide with and transfer KE to air molecules. High KE air molecules collide with the orange liquid
molecules and the liquid evaporates. When a liquid evaporates there is a large increase in volume as it
changes to a gas. As the volume increases the pressure inside the pulse bulb increases, forcing the
orange liquid to the other side. Since evaporation is a cooling process, putting a drop of alcohol on the
glass causes the glass molecules to lose KE which causes the air molecules to lose KE which causes the
vapors of the orange liquid to condense. As the gas condenses to a liquid on the cooler side, a decrease
in pressure occurs. Since the opposite side of the pulse bulb in higher in temperature and higher in
pressure, the orange liquid is pushed from the high pressure side to the cooler low pressure side of the
pulse bulb.
Heat is not a substance, it is a property of a substance. When an object moves in response to a change
in temperature, something must be pushing or pulling the object causing it to move. Heat cannot move
an object.
• Plunge the ball in the heated water and watch the reading on the pressure gauge change.
• Now place the ball into the ice water. What happens to the reading of the pressure gauge?
Explain your results.
• Place the flask with the inflated balloon into the ice water. What changes are occuring to the air
molecules in the flask to explain the changes in the balloon?
• Place the flask into the hot water. What is happening at the molecular level to the air in the
flask to explain the changes in the balloon?
Inside the metal ball are air molecules; the KE of these air molecules determine the reading of the
pressure scale. Placing the ball in hot water causes (through collisions) the transfer of KE from the water
molecules to the metal molecules. (The last sentence can be more efficiently written as: KE is conducted
from the hot water to the metal ball.) Then KE is conducted from the metal ball to the air. As the KE of
the air molecules increases, the pressure gauge goes higher and higher. Pressure of a gas is determined
by the number of collisions taking place within the metal sphere. As the temperature increases, the KE
of the air particles increase and the number of collisions increases, increasing the pressure. As the
temperature decreases, so does the KE and so does the number of collisions inside the sphere.
The air molecules over the candle flame have increased KE, increased volume and decreased density so
they rise through the cooler, more dense air molecules above them. The cooler, denser air molecules under
the other chimney move into the vacated area and ultimately a macroscopic convection current is
created: air molecules rise over the flame and fall down the other chimney toward the flame.