Conservation of energy
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Conservation of energy is the first law of thermodynamics, and one of several conservation laws.
It is stated as follows:
- The total inflow of energy into a system must equal the total outflow of energy from the system, plus the change in the energy contained within the system.
Meanwhile, in 1843 James Prescott Joule independently discovered the law by an experiment, now called the "Joule apparatus", in which a descending weight attached to a string caused a paddle immersed in water to rotate. He showed that the gravitational potential energy lost by the weight in descending was equal to the thermal energy (heat) gained by the water by friction with the paddle.
Unfortunately for Mayer, his work was overlooked in favour of Joule's, and Mayer attempted to commit suicide. Later, Mayer's reputation was restored by a sympathetic account in John Tyndall's Heat: A Mode of Motion (1863).
A similar law was written in the privately published Die Erhaltung der Kraft (1847) by Hermann von Helmholtz.
With the discovery of special relativity by Albert Einstein, conservation of energy was shown to be a special case of a more general rule. According to special relativity, mass and energy are interchangeable in the famous equation E = mc2.
Conservation of energy can be shown through Noether's theorem to be the result of the time-invariance of the laws of physics.
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Formulae
One formulation for the first law of thermodynamics is
- .
If all the heat is used to do work ( and ) then the system is undergoing an isothermal process, which means that its temperature remains constant. This is because the system's internal energy is proportional to its temperature.
If all the heat is used to increase internal energy, ( and ) then the system is undergoing an isochoric process, also called isometric process. This is a process in which the system's volume is constant:
so that, according to equation (2),W = 0.
It is also possible for the heat energy to be used up partially by doing work and partially by increasing internal energy. Examples of such processes are the isobaric process and the adiabatic process.
Equation (1) is the one preferred by engineers. Another convention preferred by chemists is
- .
The law of conservation of energy excludes the possibility of perpetuum mobile of the first kind.
References
- Engines of Our Ingenuity, episode 722 - radio broadcast by John Lienhard, produced by KUHF-FM Houston)
- Peter J. Nolan, Fundamentals of College Physics, 2nd edition, William C. Brown Publishers, 1995.
- Chapter 17, Thermodynamics.
- Oxtoby & Nachtrieb, Principles of Modern Chemistry, 3rd edition, Saunders College Publishing, 1996.
- Chapter 8, Thermodynamic Processes and Thermochemistry.