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Specific Heat Capacity Even if two objects gain the same internal energy, they wont necessarily undergo the same change in temperature. This means that different objects have different specific heat capacities.
In this equation: o E is the change in internal energy. o m is the mass of object being heated. o c is the specific heat capacity. o is the change in temperature. Specific heat capacity has units of J kg-1K-1 Specific heat capacity is basically the energy needed to raise the temperature of 1kg of a substance by 1K. This is different for different substances. Dont forget: you may have to use P = E/t.
The Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution Not all molecules have the same kinetic and potential energies. The kinetic energy of particles is modelled by the Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution. D
Number of particles
Several important features: o No molecules have zero kinetic energy o Very few molecules have lots of kinetic energy o There is no maximum energy that a molecule can have. The graph is different for different temperatures. As the temperature increases, the peak is shifted to the right but it goes lower. It moves towards higher energies. The area under the curve increases.
There are two ways of finding the most probable speed of particles: Reading off the peak of the Maxwell-Boltzmann curve Finding the root-mean-square speed ( ), which is more useful. This is the speed associated with the average kinetic energy of the particles, so that E = m<c2>. Kinetic Theory Of Gases The average kinetic energy of particles is directly proportional to their absolute temperature:
k is the Boltzmann constant, which is 1.38 10-23 J K-1. This equation means that if an object is at absolute zero, their particles root mean square speed must also be zero (since their mass cant change). Boyles law is this: o For a gas whose mass and temperature are constant, the volume occupied by the gas is inversely proportional to its pressure. o More simply, . Charles law is this:
o For a gas whose mass and temperature are constant, the volume occupied by the gas is directly proportional to its absolute temperature. o More simply, . These two laws create another law, that: o For a gas whose mass and temperature are constant, the pressure exerted by the gas is proportional to its absolute temperature. o So .
Ideal gases For different gases, these laws dont perfectly apply. They only apply for theoretical ideal gases. For example, if T = 0, Charles law states that the volumes of a gas would be zero as well! This is not possible! There are several properties of an ideal gas: o The size of the molecules is zero. o All molecules are identical. o The particles collide with zero time. o They collide without loss of energy. o Aside from collisions, the molecules exert no forces on each other. o There are enough molecules for statistics to be applied.
or
N is the number of molecules of gas. n is the number of moles of gas. k is the Boltzmann constant. R is the universal gas constant, which is 8.31 J kg-1 mol-1.