Thermal Energy and Heat
Thermal Energy and Heat
Thermal Energy and Heat
C= (F-32)/1.8
3. SI unit for temp. is the Kelvin
a. K = C + 273 (10C = 283K)
b. C = K – 273 (10K = -263C)
B. Thermal Energy –
the total of all the kinetic
and potential energy of
all the particles in a
substance.
1. Thermal energy relationships
a. Depends on temperature, mass, and type of
substance
b. As temperature increases, so does thermal
energy (because the kinetic energy of the
particles increased).
c. Even if the temperature doesn’t change, the
thermal energy in a more massive substance is
higher (because it is a total measure of
energy).
• Which beaker of water has more
thermal energy?
– B - same temperature, more mass
80ºC 80ºC
A B
400 mL
200 mL
HEAT TRANSFER
• Heat transfer is normally from a high
temperature object to a lower temperature
object.
• 3 Types of Heat Transfer
– A. CONDUCTION- heat transfer occurs
between objects by direct contact.
– Ex. Spoon in a cup of coffee, ironing clothes,
frying pan and stove.
HEAT TRANSFER
B. CONVECTION- is the movement of
heat by actual motion of matter. A form of
heat transfer in which energy transition occurs
within the fluid.
ex. Sea breeze/land breeze, boiling
water, blood circulation, hot air baloon,
refrigerator
C. RADIATION- is the transfer of energy
with the help of electromagnetic waves.
HEAT TRANSFER
C. RADIATION- is the transfer of energy
with the help of electromagnetic waves.
Ex. Microwave, heat or light from the sun,
X-rays, and gamma rays, heat from a stove,
sound waves from stereo, EM radiation from
cellphone
Cup gets cooler while
2. Heat
hand gets warmer
a. The flow of
thermal energy from
one object to another.
b. Heat always
flows from warmer to
cooler objects.
Ice gets warmer
while hand gets
cooler
C. Heat Transfer
1.Specific Heat (Cp)
– amount of energy
required to raise the
temp. of 1 kg of
material by 1 degree
Kelvin
– units: J/(kg·K)
or J/(kg·°C)
Heat Transfer
• Which sample will take
longer to heat to
100°C?
50 g Al 50 g Cu
Q = m T Cp
Q: heat (J)
m: mass (kg)
T: change in temperature (K or °C)
Cp : specific heat (J/kg·K)
– Q = heat loss
T = Tf - Ti + Q = heat gain
Specific Heat
2. Some things heat up or cool down
faster than others.
water metal