<< Chapter < Page Chapter >> Page >

We can understand the experimental facts by noting that the transferred heat is the change in the internal energy, which is the total energy of the molecules. Under typical conditions, the total kinetic energy of the molecules K total is a constant fraction of the internal energy (for reasons and with exceptions that we’ll see in the next chapter). The average kinetic energy of a molecule K ave is proportional to the absolute temperature. Therefore, the change in internal energy of a system is typically proportional to the change in temperature and to the number of molecules, N . Mathematically, Δ U Δ K total = N K ave N Δ T The dependence on the substance results in large part from the different masses of atoms and molecules. We are considering its heat capacity in terms of its mass, but as we will see in the next chapter, in some cases, heat capacities per molecule are similar for different substances. The dependence on substance and phase also results from differences in the potential energy associated with interactions between atoms and molecules.

Heat transfer and temperature change

A practical approximation for the relationship between heat transfer and temperature change is:

Q = m c Δ T ,

where Q is the symbol for heat transfer (“quantity of heat”), m is the mass of the substance, and Δ T is the change in temperature. The symbol c stands for the specific heat    (also called “ specific heat capacity ”) and depends on the material and phase. The specific heat is numerically equal to the amount of heat necessary to change the temperature of 1.00 kg of mass by 1.00 ° C . The SI unit for specific heat is J/ ( kg × K ) or J/ ( kg × °C ) . (Recall that the temperature change Δ T is the same in units of kelvin and degrees Celsius.)

Values of specific heat must generally be measured, because there is no simple way to calculate them precisely. [link] lists representative values of specific heat for various substances. We see from this table that the specific heat of water is five times that of glass and 10 times that of iron, which means that it takes five times as much heat to raise the temperature of water a given amount as for glass, and 10 times as much as for iron. In fact, water has one of the largest specific heats of any material, which is important for sustaining life on Earth.

The specific heats of gases depend on what is maintained constant during the heating—typically either the volume or the pressure. In the table, the first specific heat value for each gas is measured at constant volume, and the second (in parentheses) is measured at constant pressure. We will return to this topic in the chapter on the kinetic theory of gases.

[1] The values for solids and liquids are at constant volume and 25 ° C , except as noted. [2] These values are identical in units of cal/g · °C . [3] Specific heats at constant volume and at 20.0 ° C except as noted, and at 1.00 atm pressure. Values in parentheses are specific heats at a constant pressure of 1.00 atm.
Specific heats of various substances [1]
Substances Specific Heat ( c )
Solids J/kg · ° C kcal/kg · ° C [ 2 ]
Aluminum 900 0.215
Asbestos 800 0.19
Concrete, granite (average) 840 0.20
Copper 387 0.0924
Glass 840 0.20
Gold 129 0.0308
Human body (average at 37 ° C ) 3500 0.83
Ice (average, −50 °C to 0 ° C ) 2090 0.50
Iron, steel 452 0.108
Lead 128 0.0305
Silver 235 0.0562
Wood 1700 0.40
Liquids
Benzene 1740 0.415
Ethanol 2450 0.586
Glycerin 2410 0.576
Mercury 139 0.0333
Water ( 15.0 ° C ) 4186 1.000
Gases [3]
Air (dry) 721 (1015) 0.172 (0.242)
Ammonia 1670 (2190) 0.399 (0.523)
Carbon dioxide 638 (833) 0.152 (0.199)
Nitrogen 739 (1040) 0.177 (0.248)
Oxygen 651 (913) 0.156 (0.218)
Steam ( 100 ° C ) 1520 (2020) 0.363 (0.482)
Practice Key Terms 7

Get Jobilize Job Search Mobile App in your pocket Now!

Get it on Google Play Download on the App Store Now




Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 2. OpenStax CNX. Oct 06, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12074/1.3
Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google Inc.

Notification Switch

Would you like to follow the 'University physics volume 2' conversation and receive update notifications?

Ask