Thermodynamics

Thermodynamics

Thermodynamics deals with heat, work, and internal energy. It is fundamental for understanding energy conversion and thermal effects on structures.

Temperature and Heat

Temperature (TT): A measure of the average kinetic energy of particles in a substance.

  • Kelvin (K): The absolute temperature scale. TK=TC+273.15T_K = T_C + 273.15.
  • Celsius (^\circC): Common scale.

Heat (QQ): The transfer of thermal energy between systems due to a temperature difference. Q=mcΔTQ = mc \Delta T where mm is mass and cc is specific heat capacity. Unit: Joule (J) or Calorie (cal).

Thermal Expansion

Most materials expand when heated and contract when cooled.

  • Linear Expansion: ΔL=αL0ΔT\Delta L = \alpha L_0 \Delta T
  • Volume Expansion: ΔV=βV0ΔT\Delta V = \beta V_0 \Delta T

where α\alpha is the coefficient of linear expansion and β3α\beta \approx 3\alpha is the coefficient of volume expansion.

Civil Engineering Importance: Bridges and concrete pavements must have expansion joints to accommodate thermal expansion, preventing buckling and cracking. For example, steel has α12×106/\alpha \approx 12 \times 10^{-6} /^\circC, meaning a 100m bridge expands by 1.2 cm for a 1010^\circC rise.

Laws of Thermodynamics

Zeroth Law

If two systems are in thermal equilibrium with a third system, they are in thermal equilibrium with each other. This defines temperature.

First Law (Conservation of Energy)

The change in internal energy (ΔU\Delta U) of a system is equal to the heat added to the system minus the work done by the system. ΔU=QW\Delta U = Q - W

Second Law

Heat flows spontaneously from a hotter body to a colder body. It is impossible to convert heat completely into work in a cycle. Entropy (SS) of an isolated system always increases. ΔS0\Delta S \ge 0

Third Law

The entropy of a perfect crystal at absolute zero (0 K) is zero.

Heat Transfer Mechanisms

  1. Conduction: Transfer of heat through direct contact (e.g., heat flow through a wall). H=dQdt=kAdTdxH = \frac{dQ}{dt} = -kA \frac{dT}{dx} where kk is thermal conductivity.

  2. Convection: Transfer of heat by fluid motion (e.g., wind cooling a building). H=hA(TsTf)H = hA(T_s - T_f)

  3. Radiation: Transfer of heat by electromagnetic waves (e.g., solar heating). P=σAϵT4P = \sigma A \epsilon T^4 Stefan-Boltzmann Law.

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