Lecture 18 second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

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Lecture 18 Second law of thermodynamics. Carnot cycle. Absolute zero.

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Lecture 18 second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

Transcript of Lecture 18 second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

Page 1: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

Lecture 18Second law of

thermodynamics. Carnot cycle. Absolute zero.

Page 2: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

ACT: Leaving the fridge open

If you leave the door of your fridge open, you will get a heart-stopping electricity bill, but you will also:

A. Freeze the kitchen

B. Warm up the kitchen

H C C Q Q W Q

Now the fridge and the kitchen are one system. We are taking QC out of this system and dumping QH into it. Overall, heat is added!

Page 3: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

Second law of thermodynamics

It is impossible for any process to have as its sole result the transfer of heat from a cooler to a hotter body (“refrigerator” or Clausius statement)

i.e.,

It is impossible to build a 100%-efficient heat engine (e = 1)

It is impossible for any system to undergo a process in which it absorbs heat form a reservoir at a single temperature and convert the heat completely into mechanical work, with the system ending in the same state as it began (“engine” or Kelvin-Plank statement)

Or

i.e.,

It is impossible to build a workless refrigerator (K ∞)

Page 4: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

Clausius Kelvin-Plank

100%-efficient engineWorkless refrigerator

Page 5: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

Kelvin-Plank Clausius

100%-efficient engine

Workless refrigerator

Page 6: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

The Carnot cycle

Cycle made with reversible isothermal and adiabatic processes.

A

B

D

C

Page 7: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

ACT: Carnot cycle

Where in the cycle is heat absorbed? 1

2

4

3

A. At point 1

B. Between 1 and 2

C. Between 4 and 1

To absorb heat, we need a process between two states. 1 is a state.

No heat transfer between 4 and 1 (adiabatic)

Between 1 and 2, temperature is alwaysTH

1 2

1 2 1 2

0

0

U

Q W

Page 8: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

Heat exchange in Carnot’s cycle

1 2

21 2 1 2 H

1

0

ln 0

U

VQ W nRT

V

1

2

4

3

3 4

43 4 3 4 C

3

0

ln 0

U

VQ W nRT

V

1 1H 1 C 4T V T V 1 1

H 4 3

C 1 2

T V V

T V V

4 3

1 2

V V

V V1 1

H 2 C 3T V T V

2H

H 1 2 1

C 3 4 4C

3

ln

ln

VnRT

Q Q V

Q Q VnRT

V

32

1 4

VV

V V

H

C

T

T H H

C C

Q T

Q T

Page 9: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

Carnot efficiency

H

We

Q C

H

1T

T C H

H

Q Q

Q

C

H

1Q

Q C

CarnotH

1T

eT

Carnot’s cycle is completely reversible. Run backwards, it is a Carnot refrigerator

CC C

H CH C

QQ TK

T TW Q Q

C

CarnotH C

TK

T T

Page 10: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

In-class example: Carnot engine

A Carnot engine can operate between different sets of reservoirs.

1: TH = 80°C, TC = 10°C

2: TH = 10°C, TC = −50°C

3: TH = − 60°C, TC = −100°C

Rank their efficiencies (largest to smallest).

A. 1,2,3

B. 3,2,1

C. 3,1,2

D. 2,1,3

E. 2,3,1

1: TH = 353K, TC = 283K

2: TH = 283K, TC = 223K

3: TH = 213K, TC = 173KC

1

2831 0.198

353e C

CarnotH

1T

eT

2

2231 0.212

283e

3

1731 0.188

213e

Page 11: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

Carnot is the ideal cycle

The Carnot cycle is completely reversible. So let’s use it as a refrigerator, and couple it to a hypothetical superengine with eSE > eCarnot.

Carnot Super engine

QH

QC

QH + Δ

QC

TC

TH

Δ

Δ

TC

TH

Superengine produces more work than Carnot for these temperatures

Required to balance energy in SE

This is equivalent to this!

Impossi

ble

No engine can be more efficient than a Carnot engine operating between the same two temperatures.

Page 12: Lecture 18   second law of thermodynamics. carnot's cycle

Absolute zero

The colder you try to go, the less efficient the refrigerator gets:

Since heat leaks will not disappear as the object is cooled, you need more cooling power the colder it gets.The integral of the power required diverges as T 0.

Therefore you cannot cool a system to absolute zero

The best refrigerator you can get (Carnot) has performance

CCarnot

H C

TK

T T

C

CCarnot 0

H C

0T

TK

T T