Physics 2c
Lecture 2
Heat capacity & specific heat Ideal Gas Law Kinetic Theory of the Ideal Gas Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution Real Gases
What is heat?
Heat = energy transferred between objects as a result of a temperature difference.
What is temperature?
temperature = Measure of average internal energy of a many body system.
Heat Capacity: C proportionality constant between heat Q and temperature T
"Q C= "T
Specific heat: c heat capacity per unit mass
1 1 "Q c= C= m m "T
Heat Transfer
Conduction: for things that touch Convection: for things that flow Radiation: for things that radiate
Chapter 20: Ideal and Real gases
Experimental observation
P T if V=const P 1/V if T=const V T if P=const
PV T
True for most real gases under typical conditions
How to keep V constant
Fix the piston Change T & P by putting flame underneath piston. Fire
How to keep P constant
Let piston move freely. Change T by putting flame underneath piston. Allow V to change freely.
Fire
How to keep T constant
Put piston in large thermal bath, e.g water.
If I push piston slowly in, gas and water remain in thermal Equilibrium while V decreases, and P increases.
Ideal Gas Law
PV = N kT = nRT
P = Pressure V = Volume N = number of gas molecules T = temperature k = 1.38 x 1e-23 Joule/Kelvin = Boltzmann constant n = number of moles of gas R = N-Avogadro k = 8.314 J/(K mol) Determined originally based on experimental observation.
Mental model for gas
T = temperature t = time P = pressure Nomeclature p = momentum I am using V = volume v = velocity N = number of particles n = density of particles = N/V
Use mechanics to derive ideal gas law
Momentum difference = 2 m vx Force = dp/dt dt = 2 length / vx Pressure = Force / Area You do an ensemble average, and multiply by the number of particles.
Consider a single particle
Momentum transfer to wall at bounce: Time between 2 bounces off same wall: Average force on that wall:
!p = 2 mvx 2l !t = vx
2 !p mvx F= = !t l 2 2 F mvx mvx P= = = A Al V
Pressure on that wall
For the pressure a single particle exerts on a confining wall in x-direction we thus get:
PV = m vx2
Now, extend this to N particles
vx2 becomes the average <vx2> averaged over all particles. This can then be compared to the average Ekin
<Ekin> = m < vx2 + vy2 + vz2 >
Next assume that there is no preferred direction:
<Ekin> = 3/2 m < vx2 >
Now compare:
Microscopic derivation:
PV = 2/3 N <Ekin>
Macroscopic measurement:
PV = N kT
We thus conclude that temperature is related to average kinetic energy of the ideal gas particles as:
<Ekin> = 3/2 kT
Kinetic Theory of Ideal Gas
Assumptions to derive Ideal Gas Law: 1. All collisions are elastic, conserving energy and momentum. 2. Movement of molecules is random. No preferred direction. 3. Large # of identical molecules of mass m, no structure, no size. 4. All energy in the gas exists in form of kinetic energy of its molecules. With this we derived the relationship between P,V, and <Ekin> for an ideal gas in a rectangular box: PV = 2/3 N <Ekin> by comparison with macroscopic definitions, we then concluded: <Ekin> = 3/2 kT
Maxwell-Boltzman Distribution
Real Gases (P + n2a/V2) (V - n b) = n R T Finite size of molecules -> b Intermolecular forces -> a For small densities, n, both effects are negligible!
Equipartition theorem
When a system is in thermodynamic equilibrium, the average energy per molecule is 1/2 kT for each degree of freedom.
Aside on Equipartition Theorem
Once you release the requirement of molecule being structureless you get:
<Einternal> = f/2 kT
f = # of degrees of freedom of the gas molecules.