CP CV
CP CV
1. The heat capacity of anything tells us how much heat is required to raise a
certain amount of it by one degree. For a gas we can define a molar heat
capacity C - the heat required to increase the temperature of 1 mole of the gas
by 1 K.
Q = mC∆t
- The value of the heat capacity depends on whether the heat is added at
constant volume, constant pressure, etc. Instead of defining a whole set of molar
heat capacities; let's focus on CV, the heat capacity at constant volume, and CP,
the heat capacity at constant pressure.
3. Avoid heating of air locally and avoid heat deposition by providing insulation
proper insulation is needed outside the hollow cylinder to avoid the leaks of
heat.
The heat capacity ratio, or adiabatic index, is the ratio of the heat capacity
at constant pressure to heat capacity at constant volume. It is sometimes also
known as the isentropic expansion factor.
For gases, and also for other materials under high pressures, there is need
to distinguish between different boundary conditions for the processes under
consideration (since values differ significantly between different conditions).
Typical processes for which a heat capacity may be defined include isobaric
(constant pressure) or isochoric (constant volume) processes.
However, when this effect has been corrected for, by dividing the heat
capacity by the quantity of substance in a body, the resulting specific heat
capacity is a function of the structure of the substance itself. In particular, it
depends on the number of degrees of freedom that are available to the particles
in the substance; each independent degree of freedom allows the particles to
store thermal energy. The translational kinetic energy of substance particles
which manifests as temperature change is only one of the many possible
degrees of freedom, and thus the larger the number of degrees of freedom
available to the particles of a substance other than translational kinetic energy,
the larger will be the specific heat capacity for the substance. For example,
rotational kinetic energy of gas molecules stores heat energy in a way that
increases heat capacity, since this energy does not contribute to temperature.
Note that the especially high molar values, as for paraffin, gasoline, water
and ammonia, result from calculating specific heats in terms of moles of
molecules. If specific heat is expressed per mole of atoms for these substances,
none of the constant-volume values exceed, to any large extent, the theoretical
Dulong–Petit limit of 25 J⋅mol−1⋅K−1
= 3 R per mole of atoms (see the last
column of this table). Paraffin, for example, has very large molecules and thus a
high heat capacity per mole, but as a substance it does not have remarkable heat
capacity in terms of volume, mass, or atom-mol (which is just 1.41 R per mole
of atoms, or less than half of most solids, in terms of heat capacity per atom).
Table of
specific heat
capacities at
25 °C (298 K)
unless
otherwise
noted.[citation Isochor
needed] Isobaric Isobaric Isochore Isobaric e
atom-m
Substance Phase mass Molar molar volumetric olar
in units
cP
CP,m
CV,m CP,v of R
Air (Sea level,
dry,
0 °C (273.15
K)) gas 1.0035 29.07 20.7643 0.001297 ~ 1.25 R
Air (typical
room
conditions) gas 1.012 29.19 20.85 0.00121 ~ 1.25 R
Argon gas 0.5203 20.7862 12.4717 1.50 R
Carbon
dioxide
CO2[26] gas 0.839* 36.94 28.46 1.14 R
Helium gas 5.1932 20.7862 12.4717 1.50 R
Hydrogen gas 14.3 28.82 1.23 R
Hydrogen
sulfide
H2S[26] gas 1.015* 34.6 1.05 R
Methane at
2 °C gas 2.191 35.69 0.85 R
Nitrogen gas 1.04 29.12 20.8 1.25 R
Neon gas 1.0301 20.7862 12.4717 1.50 R
Oxygen gas 0.918 29.38 21 1.26 R
Water at
100 °C
(steam) gas 2.08 37.47 28.03 1.12 R
Water at
25 °C liquid 4.1813 75.327 74.53 4.1796 3.02 R
Water at
100 °C liquid 4.1813 75.327 74.53 4.216 3.02 R
m
CV,
Monatomi CV,
(J/(mol⋅K)
c gas m/R
)
He 12.5 1.5
Ne 12.5 1.5
Ar 12.5 1.5
Kr 12.5 1.5
Xe 12.5 1.5
INTRODUCTION
example, has a specific heat capacity of 4.18 . This means to heat one gram
of water by one degree Celsius, it would require 4.18 joules of energy.
q = heat
m = mass
Δ T = change in temperature
Where the subscripts v and p denote the variables held fixed during
differentiation. The properties cv and cp are referred to as specific heats (or heat
capacities) because under certain special conditions they relate the temperature
change of a system to the amount of energy added by heat transfer. Their SI
units are J/kg K or J/mol K. Two specific heats are defined for gases, one
for constant volume (cv) and one for constant pressure (cp).
A furnace works by blowing heated air through ducts that deliver the
warm air to rooms throughout the house via air registers or grills. This type of
heating system is called a ducted warm-air or forced warm-air distribution
system. It can be powered by electricity, natural gas, or fuel oil.
B) Boilers
C) Heat pumps
Heat pumps are just two-way air conditioners. During the summer, an
air conditioner works by moving heat from the relatively cool indoors to the
relatively warm outside. In winter, the heat pump reverses this trick, scavenging
heat from the cold outdoors with the help of an electrical system, and
discharging that heat inside the house.
METHODOLOGY
In this case, the setup will consist of a cylindrical section of metal having
a cavity/hollow section within itself. This section is then placed inside metal
box. Metal box is very well insulated and does not allow any dissipation of heat
through it. The cylindrical section is wrapped with heating coil over its surface
so as it covers the whole surface area of its cross section. The heating coil can
be made of different materials but generally the heating coil is made up of
copper as it is a very good conductor of heat and transfers heat easily within it.
The coil is supplied with the help of an electric supply which heats it at a very
high temperature, which in return heats the metal surface of the cylinder
uniformly throughout. This causes increase in the temperature inside the hollow
cavity section. The increase in temperature also causes the pressure increase in
the hollow section. The volume of the section is constant. The mass of air inside
the cylinder is calculated on the basis of the volume of cylinder and density of
air.
The Two factors that change the specific heat of a material are pressure
and temperature.
REFERENCES