Lesson 1
Lesson 1
Lesson 1
FORMS OF ENERGY
W=Fxd
=N.M
= kg.m/sec2xm
LAW OF CONSERVATION OF ENERGY (“FIRST
LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS”)
1.000cal/g.°c
The formulas used to calculate the specific heat is specific heat
= amount of heat energy (J or cal)/Mass(g)x△T (°c)
Procedure:
Determine a specific heat from the heat required to change a
given mass and a given temperature change.
0.704x=
THE PRINCIPLE OF HEAT EXCHANGE
States that heat lost equals heat gained, assuming no heat is lost
to the surroundings, Heat exchange is a practical example of the
conservation of energy. The application of the principle of heat
exchange can also be used to measure the specific heat of a
substance. When two substance at different temperatures are
mixed, the hotter the item will lose heat energy and the cooler
one will gain heat energy. Thus, the temperature of the hotter
item comes down as the temperature of the other increases.
Eventually the two substances come to the same temperature,
which is somewhere between the two original temperature.
Example: Determining a Specific Heat by Heat Exchange
Procedure:
(b.) The heat gained by the water is equal to the heat lost by the metal.
Heat lost is assigned a negative sign by convention. The heat lost by the
metal is Heat lost = -Δ°C(metal x mass(g metal) x specific heat(metal)
(c.) Set the heat gained by the water equal to the heat lost by the metal.
Solve for the specific heat of the metal
One of the most important characteristics of energy is that it is conserved. The total
energy lost by the system is equal to the total energy absorbed by its surroundings.
Likewise, the total energy absorbed by the system is equal to the energy lost by the
surroundings. This is the law of conservation of energy or the first law of
thermodynamics.
The exact energy of any system cannot be determined but the change in the internal
energy when a system undergoes transformation from state 1 to state 2 can be determined.
The internal energy of a system refers to the sum of all possible forms of energy in the
system. For example, in a system consisting of pure ethanol, all of the following types of
energy are present- kinetic energy of the molecules in the system, gravitational potential
energy, electrostatic potential energy from the attraction of opposite dipoles and repulsion
between dipoles, rotational energy of the molecules, vibrational energy in the bonds of the
molecules, and a lot more.
There are two possible types of transformation that a system may undergo:
The change in energy, △E( read as ‘delta E’), is defined as the change in
the total energy of the system it transforms from one state to another.
The equation is written as:
△E = Efinal – Einitial
For a chemical reaction, the initial energy is the energy of the reactants and the final
energy is that of the products. If △E is positive, it means that the system has
absorbed energy from the surroundings. If △E is negative, it means that the
system has released or given up energy to the surroundings.
Energy can be exchanged between a system and its surroundings in the form of either heat
or work. Therefore, the first law of thermodynamics is mathematically expressed as:
△E = q + w
Where △E is the total change in the internal energy, q is the heat exchange between
systems and surroundings, and w is the work exchange between system and surroundings.
Heat absorbed by the system and work done on the system are assigned a positive sign
(+). On the other hand, heat released by the system and work done by the system is
assigned a negative sign (-).
Sample Problem 1.
When a system gives off 100J of heat and the surroundings does 50J of
work on the systems, what is the change in internal energy of the system
△E?
SYSTEM SYSTEM
Given: q = -100J
w = +50J
Find: △E
Solution: △E= q + w = -100J + (+50J) = +50J
HEAT CAPACITY
The heat transferred by the system to the surroundings during
a chemical or physical change is measurable. The amount of
heat needed to raise the temperature of an object by one degree
Celsius is the object’s heat capacity. Molar heat capacity
refers to the heat capacity of one mole of a substance, with
specific heat is the heat capacity of one gram of a substance.
The heat gained or lost by the material is the product of the heat capacity
of the material and the temperature change.
The heat capacity, c of an object is the product of mass of the object and its
specific heat. Thus. The amount of heat gained or lost by the system can be
calculated from its △t if the mass and specific heat of the substance are
known
The equation is expressed as:
q = m(specific heat) △t
The heat lost by the system equals the heat gained by the
surroundings, and vice versa.
Sample Problem 1
The heat capacity of a cup is 108J °C1. When the cup is filled with
hot coffee, the temperature of the cup increases from 24.3 °C to 71.8 °C.
How much heat does the cup gain?
Find: q
Solution:
q = c△t
= 108J °C-1(71.8°C – 24.3°C)
= 5130J