Definition and Concept

Nature of Heat

Heat: energy transfer due to temperature difference. Not stored in a body but flows from higher to lower temperature. Unit: joule (J) or calorie (cal).

Thermodynamic Perspective

Heat: path function, depends on process not state. Distinct from internal energy, work. Symbol: Q.

Historical Context

Early caloric theory replaced by kinetic theory. Heat understood as molecular motion transfer.

Mechanisms of Heat Transfer

Conduction

Direct molecular collisions transfer kinetic energy. Dominant in solids. Fourier's law governs conduction rate.

Convection

Heat transfer via fluid motion. Natural (buoyancy-driven) or forced (external source). Described by Newton's law of cooling.

Radiation

Electromagnetic wave emission and absorption. Does not require medium. Stefan-Boltzmann law quantifies emission.

Heat in the First Law of Thermodynamics

First Law Statement

ΔU = Q - W, where ΔU is internal energy change, Q is heat added, W is work done by system.

Role of Heat

Heat: energy crossing system boundary due to temperature difference. Source/sink for internal energy changes.

Work vs Heat

Work: ordered energy transfer. Heat: disordered, random energy transfer.

Heat Capacity and Specific Heat

Definitions

Heat capacity (C): heat required to change temperature by 1 K. Specific heat (c): heat per unit mass per degree.

Types

At constant volume (Cv) and constant pressure (Cp). Cp > Cv in gases due to work done at expansion.

Units and Measurement

Units: J/(kg·K) or J/(mol·K). Measured calorimetrically or via calorimeter apparatus.

Enthalpy and Heat

Definition of Enthalpy

H = U + PV, state function. Represents total heat content at constant pressure.

Heat at Constant Pressure

Heat absorbed/released at constant pressure equals enthalpy change: Qp = ΔH.

Applications

Used in chemical reactions, phase changes, engineering calculations.

Calorimetry Techniques

Basic Principle

Measure heat transfer by temperature change in known mass and specific heat medium.

Types of Calorimeters

Bomb calorimeter: constant volume, combustion reactions. Coffee cup calorimeter: constant pressure, solution reactions.

Calculations

Q = mcΔT, accounting for system and surroundings.

Temperature vs Heat

Distinct Concepts

Temperature: measure of average kinetic energy. Heat: energy transferred due to temperature difference.

Thermodynamic Implications

Temperature is an intensive property; heat is extensive. Temperature change may occur without heat transfer (adiabatic processes).

Measurement Methods

Thermometers measure temperature; calorimeters measure heat transfer indirectly.

Heat Flow and Sign Conventions

Heat Flow Direction

Positive Q: heat added to system. Negative Q: heat removed from system.

Sign Convention in Equations

Consistent use critical for first law application. ΔU = Q - W typically used.

Energy Conservation

Heat flow balanced by internal energy changes and work interactions.

Heat and Phase Changes

Latent Heat

Energy absorbed/released without temperature change during phase transitions.

Types of Latent Heat

Fusion (melting/freezing), vaporization (boiling/condensation), sublimation.

Calculations

Q = mL, where L is latent heat per unit mass.

Mathematical Formulas and Calculations

Heat Transfer by Conduction

Q = -kA (dT/dx) Δtwhere,Q = heat transferred (J),k = thermal conductivity (W/m·K),A = cross-sectional area (m²),dT/dx = temperature gradient,Δt = time interval (s)

Heat Transfer by Convection

Q = h A (Ts - Tf) Δtwhere,h = convective heat transfer coefficient (W/m²·K),Ts = surface temperature,Tf = fluid temperature

Heat Transfer by Radiation

Rate given by Stefan-Boltzmann law:

Q = ε σ A (T⁴ - T₀⁴) Δtwhere,ε = emissivity,σ = Stefan-Boltzmann constant (5.67×10⁻⁸ W/m²·K⁴),T, T₀ = absolute temperatures (K)

Applications of Heat in Thermodynamics

Engine Cycles

Heat input and rejection govern efficiency (Carnot, Otto, Diesel cycles).

Refrigeration and Heat Pumps

Heat transfer reversed by work input for cooling or heating.

Material Processing

Heat treatments control microstructure via controlled heat transfer.

Limitations and Misconceptions

Heat as a Substance

Heat is not a fluid or substance; it is energy transfer only.

Heat vs Temperature Confusion

Heat transfer may occur without temperature change; temperature alone does not quantify heat content.

Equilibrium Considerations

Heat transfer ceases at thermal equilibrium; irreversible processes generate entropy.

References

  • Callen, H. B., Thermodynamics and an Introduction to Thermostatistics, Wiley, 1985, pp. 1-480.
  • Çengel, Y. A., and Boles, M. A., Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach, 8th Ed., McGraw-Hill, 2015, pp. 50-400.
  • Moran, M. J., Shapiro, H. N., Fundamentals of Engineering Thermodynamics, 7th Ed., Wiley, 2010, pp. 100-450.
  • Atkins, P., de Paula, J., Physical Chemistry, 10th Ed., Oxford University Press, 2014, pp. 200-350.
  • Çengel, Y. A., Heat and Mass Transfer: A Practical Approach, 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill, 2007, pp. 60-500.