An athlete whose mass is 70.0 kg drinks 16.0 ounces (454 g) of refrigerated water. The water is at a temperature of 35.0°F. (a) Ignoring the temperature change of the body that results from the water intake (so that the body is regarded as a reservoir always at 98.6°F), find the entropy increase of the entire system. (b) What If? Assume the entire body is cooled by the drink and the average specific heat of a person is equal to the specific heat of liquid water. Ignoring any other energy transfers by heat and any
(a)
The entropy rise of the entire system.
Answer to Problem 22.78AP
The entropy rise of the entire system is
Explanation of Solution
The mass of the athlete and the water is
Write the expression to calculate the change in entropy of the system.
Here,
Write the expression to calculate the change in entropy of water.
Here,
Write the expression to convert the temperature from Fahrenheit to Kelvin.
Substitute
Here,
Substitute
Here,
Substitute
Integrate the above expression from the limit of
Write the expression to calculate the change in entropy of water.
Substitute
Conclusion:
Substitute
Thus, the entropy rise of the entire system is
(b)
The athlete’s temperature after she drinks the cold water.
Answer to Problem 22.78AP
The final temperature of the body is
Explanation of Solution
Write the expression of heat balance equation.
Here,
Conclusion:
Substitute
Therefore, the final temperature of the body is
(c)
The entropy rise of the entire system.
Answer to Problem 22.78AP
The entropy rise of the entire system is
Explanation of Solution
The mass of the athlete and the water is
Write the expression to calculate the change in entropy of the system.
Write the expression to calculate the change in entropy of water.
Integrate the above expression from the limit of
Substitute
Write the expression to calculate the change in entropy of body.
Here,
Integrate the above expression from the limit of
Substitute
Conclusion:
Substitute
`
Thus, the entropy rise of the entire system is
(d)
The result by comparing the part (a) and (c).
Answer to Problem 22.78AP
The the change in entropy in part (c) is less than that of part (a) by a factor of
Explanation of Solution
Write the expression for the ratio of entropy in part (c) and (a)
Here,
Conclusion:
Thus the change in entropy in part (c) is less than that of part (a) by a factor of
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Chapter 22 Solutions
PHYSICS 1250 PACKAGE >CI<
- Assume a sample of an ideal gas is at room temperature. What action will necessarily make the entropy of the sample increase? (a) Transfer energy into it by heat. (b) Transfer energy into it irreversibly by heat. (c) Do work on it. (d) Increase either its temperature or its volume, without letting the other variable decrease. (e) None of those choices is correct.arrow_forwardIs it possible for a system to have an entropy change if it neither absorbs nor emits heat during a reversible? transition? What happens it the process is irreversible?arrow_forwardAn ideal gas is taken from an initial temperature Ti to a higher final temperature Tf along two different reversible paths. Path A is at constant pressure, and path B is at constant volume. What is the relation between the entropy changes of the gas for these paths? (a) SA SB (b) SA = SB (c) SA SBarrow_forward
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- Find the work done in the quasi-static processes shown below. The states are given as (p, V) values for the points in the PV plane: 1 (3 atm, 4 L), 2 (3 atm, 6 L), 3 (5 atm, 4 L), 4 (2 atm, 6 L), 5 (4 atm, 2 L), 6 (5 atm, 5 L) and 7 (2 atm, 5 L).arrow_forwardTwo hundred grams of water at 0 is brought into contact into thermal equilibrium successively with reservoirs at 20 , 40 , 60 , and 80 . (a) What is the entropy change of the water? (b) Of the reservoir? (c) What is the entropy change of the universe?arrow_forwardA Carnot engine employs 1.5 mol of nitrogen gas as a working substance, which is considered as an ideal diatomic gas with =7.5 at the working temperatures of the engine. The Carnot cycle goes in the cycle ABCDA with AB being an isothermal expansion. The volume at points A and C of the cycle are 5.0103 m3 and 0.15 L, respectively. The engine operates between two thermal baths of temperature 500 K 300 K. (a) Find the values of volume at B and D. (b) How much heat is absorbed by the gas in the AB isothermal expansion? (c) How much work is done by the gas in the AB isothermal expansion? (d) How much heat is given up by the gas in the CD isothermal expansion? (e) How much work is done by the gas in the CD isothermal compression? (f) How much work is done by the gas in the BC adiabatic expansion? (g) How much work is done by the gas in the DA adiabatic compression? (h) Find the value of efficiency of the engine based on the net and heat input. Compare this value to the efficiency of a Carnot engine based on the temperatures of the baths.arrow_forward
- At point A in a Carnot cycle, 2.34 mol of a monatomic ideal gas has a pressure of 1 4000 kPa, a volume of 10.0 L, and a temperature of 720 K. The gas expands isothermally to point B and then expands adiabatically to point C, where its volume is 24.0 L. An isothermal compression brings it to point D, where its volume is 15.0 L. An adiabatic process returns the gas to point A. (a) Determine all the unknown pressures, volumes, and temperatures as you f ill in the following table: (b) Find the energy added by heat, the work done by the engine, and the change in internal energy for each of the steps A B, B C, C D, and D A (c) Calculate the efficiency Wnet/|Qk|. (d) Show that the efficiency is equal to 1 - TC/TA, the Carnot efficiency.arrow_forwardWhat is the entropy change of 10 g of steam at 100 when it condenses to water at the same temperature?arrow_forwardA sealed container holding 0.500 kg of liquid nitrogen at its boiling point of 77.3 K is placed in a large room at 21.0C. Energy is transferred from the room to the nitrogen as the liquid nitrogen boils into a gas and then warms to the rooms temperature. (a) Assuming the rooms temperature remains essentially unchanged at 21.0C, calculate the energy transferred from the room to the nitrogen. (b) Estimate the change in entropy of the room. Liquid nitrogen has a latent heat of vaporization of 2.01 105 J/kg. The specific heat of N2 gas at constant pressure is CN2 = 1.04 103J/kg K.arrow_forward
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