Thermodynamics & Kinetic Theory of Gases
Apply concepts from Thermodynamics & Kinetic Theory of Gases to problem-solving. Focus on numerical practice and real-world applications.
Concept Core
Thermodynamics governs energy exchange between systems and their surroundings. The Zeroth Law establishes the concept of temperature: if system A is in thermal equilibrium with B, and B with C, then A is in thermal equilibrium with C.
The First Law is the energy conservation statement: Q = -U + W, where Q is the heat absorbed by the system (J), -U is the change in internal energy (J), and W is the work done by the system (J). All have dimensional formula []. Sign convention (NEET standard): Q > 0 (heat absorbed), Q < 0 (heat released); W > 0 (expansion), W < 0 (compression); -U > 0 (temperature rise).
Four thermodynamic processes define special conditions.
In an isothermal process (T = constant), -U = 0 for an ideal gas, so Q = W = nRT ln(), where n is moles, R = 8.314 J , and PV = constant.
In an adiabatic process (Q = 0), W = --U = nC_v -T = ( - )/( - 1); the governing relations are PV^ = constant, TV^(-1) = constant. Adiabatic expansion cools the gas; compression heats it.
In an isochoric process (V = constant), W = 0, so Q = -U = nC_v -T; P/T = constant.
In an isobaric process (P = constant), W = P -V = nR -T, Q = nC_p -T; V/T = constant. Work done in any process equals the area under the PV curve.
The Second Law has two equivalent statements. Kelvin-Planck: no engine can convert all absorbed heat into work (100% efficiency is impossible). Clausius: heat cannot spontaneously flow from cold to hot without external work.
The Carnot engine operates between a hot reservoir at (K) and a cold reservoir at (K) with maximum efficiency: = 1 - = W/ = ( - )/. Temperatures must be in kelvin; using Celsius gives wrong answers.
A refrigerator has COP = /W = /( - ).
The kinetic theory of gases connects microscopic molecular motion to macroscopic properties.
The ideal gas equation PV = nRT = Nk_B T, where = 1.38 x J/K is the Boltzmann constant.
Kinetic pressure: P = [] (Pa).
Molecular speeds: = [] (m/s), = ), = .
The ratio : : = : : = 1 : 1.128 : 1.224. The ordering < < is always maintained — most probable speed is the smallest.
Degrees of freedom (f): monoatomic gases (He, Ne, Ar) have f = 3 (translational only), diatomic (, , ) have f = 5 (3 translational + 2 rotational), polyatomic (, ) have f = 6 (3 translational + 3 rotational).
By the law of equipartition, energy per degree of freedom = T per molecule = RT per mole.
Internal energy U = (f/2)nRT.
Specific heats: = (f/2)R, = + R = ((f+2)/2)R, and = = (f+2)/f.
For monoatomic: = 3R/2, = 5R/2, = = 1.67.
For diatomic: = 5R/2, = 7R/2, = = 1.4.
For polyatomic: = 3R, = 4R, = = 1.33.
Solved Numerical 1: Isothermal expansion at T = 300 K, n = 2 mol, = 2 L, = 6 L (R = 8.314 J ).
W = nRT ln() = 2 x 8.314 x 300 x ln() = 2 x 8.314 x 300 x ln(3) = 4988.4 x 1.0986 = 5480 J.
Since isothermal: -U = 0, Q = W = 5480 J.
Solved Numerical 2: Carnot engine: = 527 degrees C = 527 + 273 = 800 K, = 127 degrees C = 127 + 273 = 400 K.
Efficiency: = 1 - = 1 - = 0.5 = 50%.
If = 2000 J: W = = 0.5 x 2000 = 1000 J.
= - W = 2000 - 1000 = 1000 J.
Dimensional check: all quantities in [J] = [].
Solved Numerical 3: Oxygen (M = 32 x kg/mol) at T = 300 K (R = 8.314 J ).
= = = = = 483.5 m/s.
= ) = ) = = = 445.5 m/s.
= = = = 394.8 m/s. Ratio check: 394.8 : 445.5 : 483.5 = 1 : 1.128 : 1.225.
The key testable concept is the distinction between thermodynamic processes (especially that Q = 0 in adiabatic does NOT mean -U = 0 or T = constant) and the correct application of Carnot efficiency using kelvin temperatures.
Key Testable Concept
The key testable concept is the distinction between thermodynamic processes (especially that Q = 0 in adiabatic does NOT mean Delta-U = 0 or T = constant) and the correct application of Carnot efficiency using kelvin temperatures.
Comparison Tables
A) Thermodynamic Processes
| Process | Constant Quantity | Q | W | -U | Key Equation | PV Curve Shape |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Isothermal (T = const) | Temperature | nRT ln() | nRT ln() | 0 | PV = const | Rectangular hyperbola |
| Adiabatic (Q = 0) | No heat exchange | 0 | --U = nC_v(-) | nC_v(-) | PV^ = const | Steeper than isothermal |
| Isochoric (V = const) | Volume | nC_v -T | 0 | nC_v -T | P/T = const | Vertical line |
| Isobaric (P = const) | Pressure | nC_p -T | P -V = nR -T | nC_v -T | V/T = const | Horizontal line |
B) Carnot Engine vs Refrigerator
| Parameter | Heat Engine | Refrigerator | Formula |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Converts heat to work | Transfers heat from cold to hot | — |
| Energy input | Heat from hot reservoir | Work W from external source | — |
| Efficiency / COP | = W/ = 1 - | COP = /W = /( - ) | < 1 always; COP can be > 1 |
| Output | Mechanical work W | Heat = + W to hot reservoir | — |
| Ideal limit | = 1 only if = 0 K (impossible) | COP = infinity if = (no work needed) | — |
C) Molecular Speeds
| Speed Type | Formula | Physical Meaning | Ratio Factor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Most probable () | Speed with maximum number of molecules | 1 (= ) | |
| Mean / average () | ) | Arithmetic mean of all molecular speeds | 1.128 (= ) |
| RMS () | Root mean square; used in pressure formula | 1.224 (= ) | |
| Order | < < | Always: most probable is the smallest | — |
D) Gas Type Properties
| Gas Type | f (DOF) | = | Examples | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monoatomic | 3 | 3R/2 = 12.47 J/(mol K) | 5R/2 = 20.79 J/(mol K) | = 1.67 | He, Ne, Ar |
| Diatomic | 5 | 5R/2 = 20.79 J/(mol K) | 7R/2 = 29.10 J/(mol K) | = 1.40 | , , |
| Polyatomic (nonlinear) | 6 | 3R = 24.94 J/(mol K) | 4R = 33.26 J/(mol K) | = 1.33 | , |
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