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Ask iit jee aieee pet cbse icse state board experts Expert Question: DOUBTS IN THERMAL PHYSICS
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harshs (0)

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Iam IIT ASPIRANT & Ihave doubts in heat transfer & want to know  techniques of solving question of 1 laws of thermodynamics.

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The transfer of heat is normally from a high temperature object to a lower temperature object. Heat transfer changes the internal energy of both systems involved according to the First Law of Thermodynamics.
 
                               First law of Thermodynamics
 
The first law of thermodynamics is the application of the conservation of energy principle to heat and thermodynamic processes:
 
The change in internal energy of a system is equal to the heat aded to the system plus work done on the system i.e.,
 
U = Q + W
 
The first law makes use of the key concepts of internal energy, heat, and system work. It is used extensively in the discussion of heat engines.
 
Sign convention is:
1) Work done on the system is taken as +ve
2) Work done by the system is taken as -ve
Hence in the context of physics, the common scenario is one of adding heat to a volume of gas and using the expansion of that gas to do work, as in the pushing down of a piston in an internal combustion engine. In the context of chemical reactions and process, it may be more common to deal with situations where work is done on the system rather than by it.

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                         INTERNAL ENERGY (U)
Internal energy is defined as the energy associated with the random, disordered motion of molecules. It is separated in scale from the macroscopic ordered energy associated with moving objects; it refers to the invisible microscopic energy on the atomic and molecular scale. For example, a room temperature glass of water sitting on a table has no apparent energy, either potential or kinetic. But on the microscopic scale it is a seething mass of high speed molecules traveling at hundreds of meters per second.
 
Internal energy involves energy on the microscopic scale. For an ideal monoatomic gas, this is just the translational kinetic energy of the linear motion of the "hard sphere" type atoms , and the behavior of the system is well described by kinetic theory. However, for polyatomic gases there is rotational and vibrational kinetic energy as well. Then in liquids and solids there is potential energy associated with the intermolecular attractive forces. A simplified visualization of the contributions to internal energy can be helpful in understanding phase transitions and other phenomena which involve internal energy.
 
                             Internal Energy Example
 
When the sample of water and copper are both heated by 1°C, the addition to the kinetic energy is the same, since that is what temperature measures. But to achieve this increase for water, a much larger proportional energy must be added to the potential energy portion of the internal energy. So the total energy required to increase the temperature of the water is much larger, i.e., its specific heat is much larger.

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