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Thermodynamics and Propulsion | |
5.6 Muddiest Points on Chapter 5
MP 5..1
Why is
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This is a relation between state variables. As such it is not path
dependent, only depends on the initial and final states, and thus
must hold no matter how we transition from initial state to final
state. What is not always true, and what holds only for reversible
processes, are the relations
MP 5..2
What makes
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The term
MP 5..3
What happens when all the energy in the universe is
uniformly spread, i.e., entropy at a maximum?
I quote from The Refrigerator and the Universe, by Goldstein and Goldstein:
The entropy of the universe is not yet at its maximum possible value and it seems to be increasing all the time. Looking forward to the future, Kelvin and Clausius foresaw a time when the maximum possible entropy would be reached and the universe would be at equilibrium forever afterward; at this point, a state called the ``heat death'' of the universe, nothing would happen forever after. The book also gives comments on the inevitability of this fate.
MP 5..4
Why do you rewrite the entropy change in terms of
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We have discussed the representation of thermodynamic changes in
MP 5..5
What is the difference between isentropic and adiabatic?
Isentropic means no change in entropy (
MP 5..6
In the single reservoir example, why can the entropy
decrease?
When we looked at the single reservoir, our ``system'' was the
reservoir itself. The example I did in class had heat leaving the
reservoir, so that
MP 5..7
Why does the entropy of a heat reservoir change if the
temperature stays the same?
A heat reservoir is an idealization (like an ideal gas, a rigid
body, an inviscid fluid, a discrete element mass-spring-damper
system). The basic idea is that the heat capacity of the heat
reservoir is large enough so that the transfer of heat in whatever
problem we address does not appreciably alter the temperature of the
reservoir. In grappling with approximations such as this it is
useful to think about extreme cases. Therefore, suppose the thermal
reservoir is the atmosphere. The mass of the atmosphere is roughly
![]() Substituting for the atmospheric mass and the specific heat gives a value for temperature change of roughly ![]() ![]()
MP 5..8
How can the heat transfer from or to a heat reservoir be
reversible?
We made the assumption that the heat reservoir is very large, and therefore it is a constant temperature heat source or sink. Since the temperature is uniform there is no heat transfer across a finite temperature difference and this heat exchange is reversible. We discussed this in the second example, ``Heat transfer between two heat reservoirs,'' in Section 5.5.
MP 5..9
How can
![]() The second law says that the total entropy (system plus surroundings) always increases. (See Section 5.1). This means that either the system or the surroundings can have its entropy decrease if there is heat transfer between the two, although the sum of all entropy changes must be positive. For an isolated system, with no heat transfer to the surroundings, the entropy must always increase.
MP 5..10
If
![]() ![]() ![]() Yes, as long as the system you were adding heat to fulfilled the conditions for being a reservoir.
MP 5..11
What is the difference between the isothermal expansion of a
piston and the (forbidden) production of work using a single
reservoir?
The difference is contained in the word sole in the Kelvin-Planck statement of the second law given in Section 5.1 of the notes. For the isothermal expansion the changes are:
For the ``forbidden'' process,
MP 5..12
For the ``work from a single heat reservoir'' example, how
do we know there is no
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Our system was the heat reservoir itself. In the example we had heat
leaving the reservoir, thus
MP 5..13
How does a cycle produce zero
![]() The change in entropy during a cycle is zero because we are considering a complete cycle (returning to initial state) and entropy is a function of state (holds for ideal and real cycles!).
The entropy you are referring to is entropy that is generated in the
components of a nonideal cycle. For example in a real jet engine we
have a non-ideal compressor, a non-ideal combustor and also a
non-ideal turbine. All these components operate with some loss and
generate entropy -- this is the entropy that the designers try to
minimize. Although the change in entropy during a non-ideal cycle is
zero, the total entropy change (cycle and heat reservoirs!) is
MP 5..14
On the example of free expansion versus isothermal
expansion, how do we know that the pressure and volume ratios are
the same? We know for each that
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During the free expansion no work is done and no heat is transferred
(insulated system). Thus the internal energy stays constant and so
does the temperature. This means that
MP 5..15
Where did
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We were using the 1st and 2nd
law combined (Gibbs) and in the example discussed there was no
change in internal energy ( UnifiedTP |