Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Physics 212 Lecture: "Thermodynamics II."
Jan 21, 1998
- There are several special cases in which processes are
relatively simple to understand:
- Isobaric: constant pressure
- Isochoric: constant volume
- Isothermal: constant temperature
- Adiabatic: no heat gain or loss
- In each of the above cases, one can simplify the
basic equation of the First Law of Thermodynamics
- The molar specific heat capacity relates heat added
to a substance to its change in temperature:
- Specifically, molar heat capacity of a substance
is the
amount of energy required to raise one mole by
one degree Kelvin
- Molar specific heat capacity for an ideal monatomic gas
depends on how the process occurs:
- If isobaric, then Cp = (5/2)*R
- If isochoric, then Cp = (3/2)*R
This lecture discusses material in Chapter 15 of Cutnell and Johnson.
Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.