Thermodynamics: ENG-214 Chapter 2 - Equations of State
Thermodynamics: ENG-214 Chapter 2 - Equations of State
ENG-214
Chapter 2 – Equations of State
To Review
• State of a system defined by state variables (P, T, v, etc.)
• Want to study what happened when we move from one state to another
• Can look up certain data (Psat, Tsat, u, h, s, in tables)
• Note that tables depend on reference state so BE CAREFUL
Don’t mix/max sources for data.
(e.g. don’t take hf from one table and hg from another)
• Customary to plot either P or T on the Y axis and v, u, h or s on the X axis
Equations of State – Relate T, P and v
Ideal Gas Law
Modified Ideal Gas Law (compressibility, z) - Eq. 2-18, page 90
Real Gas Law (Van der Waals Equation) - Eq. 2-22, page 94
Beattie-Bridgeman - Eq. 2-24, page 95
Benedict-Webb-Reubem- Eq. 26, page 95
Others you may come across:
Strodbridge
Redlich Kwong (RK)
Soave Redlich Kwong (SRK)
Peng Robinson (PR)
Etc…
Specific Heat
• Also called heat capacity measures how much heat can be stored
• Energy required to raise the temperature of a unit mass of substance by one degree
• k = Cp/Cv (1.4 for air and diatomic gasses, 1.3 for steam)
Specific Heat for Ideal Gases
CP Cv
h = u + Pv h u
Pv = RT T P T v
du Cv T dT
dh = du + RdT
u = f(T) * dh C P T dT
* Joule, et. al.
h = f(T)
Cp(T)dT= Cv(T)dT+ RdT h h2 h1 u u2 u1
C P T dT Cv T dT
2 2
Cp = Cv + R
1 1
Solids & Liquids… U, H and Cp
• Solids and liquids are considered incompressible
Cp = Cv = C
See Table A-3 for a listing of C for common liquids and solids
Consequences of this:
Enthalpy equation simplifies (v is nearly constant)
dh= du + vdP
dh = C(T)dT + vdP
For small changes in temperature can use Cavg in place of C(T)
• If constant pressure….. Dh = CavgDT
• If constant temperature….. Dh = vDP
Example 2-15
Vapor Pressure & Phase Equilibrium
Dalton's Law: Pt = SPi
For air / water system
Patm = Pair + PH2O
W
w
m
W
Power
t
Work
Q: Name some types of work?
Types of Work
- Electrical
- Magnetic
- Gravitational
- Mechanical
- Shaft
- Spring
- Moving Boundary
- Elastic
- Surface Tension
- Lifting
- Electric Polarization
Work
Formal sign convention for Work and Heat
2
1
dV V2 V1 V
2
1 W W12 NOT W2-W1
Work
1) Candle burring in a well insulated room. Taking the room as the system,
determine if there is any heat transfer and if there is a change in internal
energy.
3) A well insulated electric oven is being heated through its heating elements
If the entire oven, including the heating element, is taken to be the system,
determine whether there is either a heat or a work interaction.
4) What if the system is taken as only the air without the heating element?
Electrical Work
Ẇe = VI Expression for Ẇe assumes no variation with time
2
WHERE: We VIdt
1
Ẇe = Electrical Power (BTU/hr, hP, etc.)
If V and I are constant over the time period in question
V = Potential Difference (Volts)
I = Current (Amps) 2
We VI dt VIt
1
Also:
V = IR
So:
Ẇe = I2R
Mechanical Work
Work done by a constant force (F) on a body displaced by a distance (s)
W= Fs
For non-constant force:
2
W Fds
1
In many thermodynamic problems, mechanical work is the only for of work involved
Moving Boundary Work
Moving boundary work
Quasi-Steady State
dWb = F dS = PA dS = P dV
2
Wb PdV
Pv diagram 1
2 2
Quasi equilibrium expansion
Area A dA PdV
1 1
Moving Boundary Work
5) A rigid tank contains air at 500 kPa and 150 C. As a result of heat transfer to
the surroundings, T and P inside the tank drop to 65 C and 400 kPa respectively.
Determine the boundary work done.
7) a piston cylinder device initially contains 0.4m3 of air at 100 kPa and 80 C.
The air is compressed to 0.1m3 in such a way that the temperature inside the
cylinder remains constant. Determine the work done during this processes.
3.8) Determine the power transmitted through the shaft of a car when the
torque applied is 200 Nm and the shaft rotates at a rate of 4000 rpm.
Spring Work
δWspring = Fdx
F=kx [Hook’s law]
Substituting and integrating:
WSpring = ½ k (x22-x12)
3-9) A piston cylinder device contains 0.05 m3 of gas initially at 200 kPa. At this
state, a linear spring that has a spring constant of 150 kN/m is touching the
piston but exerting no force on it. Now heat is transferred to the gas, causing
the piston to rise and compress the spring until the volume inside the cylinder
doubles. If the cross sectional area of the piston is 0.25 m2, determine the final
pressure inside the cylinder, total work done by the gas, and the fraction of this
work done against the spring to compress it.
Other forms of Work
2 2
Welastic n dV n Adx
Elastic solid bars (sn = F/A) 1 1
2
Wsurface s dA
Stretching a liquid film 1
3-10) A 1200 kg car cursing steadily on a level road at 90 km/hr. It then start
climbing a hill sloped 30 deg. From the horizontal. If the velocity of the car
remains constant during climbing, determine the additional power that must be
delivered to the engine.
Continuity equation
F=PA
W=FL=PAL=PV
W=Pv
Total Energy
E = u + ke + pe = u + v2/2 + gz
Flowing fluid
Eq 3-48 3-49
Energy transport by mass
• Q = -k A dT/dx
Convective Heat Transfer – Newton’s Law of Cooling
• Convection – Movement of heat through fluid motion.
(motion can be either forced [pumped] or natural [density driven])
Qconv = hA(Ts-Tf)
Radiation Kirchhoff’s Law
• Radiation - Photons (“energy packets”) are absorbed
(hold your hand near a hot stove or around a campfire.)
Final Example for Tonight…
3-1C, 3-2C, 3-3C, 3-4C, 3-5C, 3-6C, 3-8C, 3-9C, 3-10C, 3-11C, 3-12C, 3-13C,
3-35C, 3-36C, 3-45C, 3-46C, 3-47C, 3-48C, 3-57C, 3-58C, 3-59C, 3-63C, 3-64C,
3-65C, 3-66C, 3-67C, 3-68C
3-14, 3-15, 3-8, 3-21, 3-24, 3-27, 3-29, 3-31, 3-37, 3-43, 3-44, 3-50, 3-53, 3-56,
3-62, 3-73, 3-87, 3-89E, 3-95, 3-98E
3-99, 3-100, 3-101, 3-102, 3-103, 3-104, 3-105, 3-106, 3-107, 3-108