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2020 | Book

Thermodynamics: Basic Principles and Engineering Applications

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About this book

This textbook is for a one semester introductory course in thermodynamics, primarily for use in a mechanical or aerospace engineering program, although it could also be used in an engineering science curriculum. The book contains a section on the geometry of curves and surfaces, in order to review those parts of calculus that are needed in thermodynamics for interpolation and in discussing thermodynamic equations of state of simple substances. It presents the First Law of Thermodynamics as an equation for the time rate of change of system energy, the same way that Newton’s Law of Motion, an equation for the time rate of change of system momentum, is presented in Dynamics. Moreover, this emphasis illustrates the importance of the equation to the study of heat transfer and fluid mechanics. New thermodynamic properties, such as internal energy and entropy, are introduced with a motivating discussion rather than by abstract postulation, and connection is made with kinetic theory. Thermodynamic properties of the vaporizable liquids needed for the solution of practical thermodynamic problems (e.g. water and various refrigerants) are presented in a unique tabular format that is both simple to understand and easy to use. All theoretical discussions throughout the book are accompanied by worked examples illustrating their use in practical devices. These examples of the solution of various kinds of thermodynamic problems are all structured in exactly the same way in order to make, as a result of the repetitions, the solution of new problems easier for students to follow, and ultimately, to produce themselves. Many additional problems are provided, half of them with answers, for students to do on their own.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Measurement and Properties of Matter
Abstract
Dynamics, as you have learned in previous courses, is the study of how particles and rigid bodies move under the action of the forces and moments that are exerted on them. Thermodynamics is the theory that integrates dynamics with the concept of temperature. Dynamics is a fundamental part of physics because of Newton’s second law, which describes how the momentum of a fixed quantity of matter evolves in time.
Alan M. Whitman
Chapter 2. Equilibrium
Abstract
In the previous chapter, we noted the role of equilibrium in the measurement of pressure and temperature. Indeed, the concept of equilibrium is a central element in thermodynamics where, as in mechanics, it provides a starting point for more general considerations.
Alan M. Whitman
Chapter 3. Work and Heat
Abstract
In the last chapter, we saw that changes of a macroscopic equilibrium state can be accompanied by, or even result from, doing work on or heating a thermodynamic system. Indeed, the ability to calculate these quantities is of the utmost importance to engineers who need to know, for example, how much work must be provided in order to supply compressed air at some required design pressure. Therefore, this chapter is devoted to an extended discussion of each of them.
Alan M. Whitman
Chapter 4. The First Law
Abstract
In the last chapter, you learned how to calculate the work done by and the heat transfer to a system that undergoes a specified change of state. On the other hand, you could not calculate the change of state caused by given values for the work and heat interactions. Furthermore, although you learned how to calculate the work done and heat transfer independent of one another, experience tells us that they are intimately related. Indeed there is a fundamental relation between the work done by a system, the heat transfer to the system, and its change of state. Exploring and exploiting this relation is one of the basic concerns of thermodynamics.
Alan M. Whitman
Chapter 5. The Second Law
Abstract
In our study till now, we established the first law of thermodynamics, in which we saw that heat and work are equivalent insofar as they are different manifestations of the energy exchange between a system and its surroundings (or between various parts of a system). However, in this development, an asymmetry between heat and work has remained.
Alan M. Whitman
Chapter 6. Power and Refrigeration
Abstract
It is impossible to overestimate the impact that the development of steam- and gasoline-powered engines have had on the history of Western civilization. Indeed, the availability of large sources of power fueled the Industrial Revolution, while sources of increasingly higher power density extended the range of travel to the global scale. Today we are so dependent on easy access to power that it is difficult to imagine life without it. In this part of the current chapter, we will study the technical aspects of this development.
Alan M. Whitman
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Thermodynamics: Basic Principles and Engineering Applications
Author
Alan M. Whitman
Copyright Year
2020
Electronic ISBN
978-3-030-25221-2
Print ISBN
978-3-030-25220-5
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25221-2

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