P1 Heat And Energy Transfer Flashcards

0
Q

Explain the emission of inferred waves.

A

All objects continually emit and absorb inferred radiation.
If an object is hotter than the surroundings, it will cool by emitting more radiation then absorbed. If it is cooler than the surroundings it will absorb more radiation and heat up.
The hotter an object, the more radiation emitted.

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1
Q

What are the three ways in which energy can be transfered?

A

Conduction, radiation, convection.

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2
Q

What can affect the radiation of heat?

A

Dark, matt surfaces absorb more and emit more energy than light shiny surfaces. This is because shiny surfaces reflect a lot of energy back. Vacuum flasks have a silver lining.
Solar hot water panels are water pipes under a black sheet. The suns heat is absorbed by the sheet and heats the water.

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3
Q

Explain the molecular structure of solids.

A

Strong forces of attraction hold the particles together in a regula arrangement. The particles have little energy so only vibrate about their fixed position.

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4
Q

Explain the molecular structure of liquids.

A

The forces of attraction are weaker. The particles are close together but can move past each other, forming irregular arrangements. They have more energy than in a solid.

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5
Q

Explain the molecular structure of gases.

A

Almost no forces of attraction between the particles. These particles have the most energy. They are free to move and travel in random directions at high speed.

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6
Q

Explain conduction in solids.

A

Conduction of heat energy is the process where vibrating particles pass on their extra kinetic energy to neighbouring particles.
This happens faster in denser solids as the particles are closer together and will collide more often, thus meaning a larger energy transfer.

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7
Q

Why is metal a good thermal conductor?

A

Electrons are free to move in them.
Electrons are heated and vibrate more, hitting other electrons.
This is faster than in ordinary solids as the electrons are free to move around.

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8
Q

Explain what convection is.

A

Convection occurs when the more energetic particles move from a hotter region to a cooler region and take their heat energy with them.

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9
Q

Explain convection currents in an immersion heater.

A

Conduction transfers heat from the coils to the water.
Particles near the coils have more energy and so move faster.
This causes the density of that area to decreases as there is more space between particles.
This reduction in density causes that water to rise through the denser water.
As the warm water rises it displaces the cooler water out of the way towards the heater coils.
Also the risen water warms the water at the top and will raise the temperature slightly when it matches the temperature.
This is heated and rises and the convection currents continue.
Note that convection currents only occur in water above the heater coils and that these currents work best in roundish, squarish containers, not thin tall ones.

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10
Q

Explain condensation.

A

When a gas cools, the particles lose kinetic energy and slow down. The attractive forces pull them closer.
When it gets cool enough, the particles become so close together the gas becomes a liquid.

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11
Q

Explain evaporation.

A

This is when particles escape from a liquid and it can happen at temperatures lower than the boiling point.
Particles near the surface evaporate when they are traveling in the right direction and when they have enough kinetic energy to leave.
When the fast particles evaporate off, the average speed and kinetic energy of the remaining particles decreases meaning the average particle energy falls. The liquid cools.

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12
Q

What can increase the rate of evaporation?

A

The temperature is higher. This will increase average particle energy so more particles can escape.
The density is lower. The inter-molecular forces are weaker meaning less energy is needed to escape.
Surface area is larger. More particles will be near enough to the surface to escape.
The airflow over the liquid is great. This means the air above the liquid will have less of the evaporated substance in it and the lower the concentration the higher the rate of evaporation.

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13
Q

What can increase the rate of condensation?

A

The temperature of the gas is lower. This means the particles have less energy so they join together.
The temperature of the surface the gas touches is lower.
The density is higher. This means stronger intermolecular forces meaning less particles will have the energy needed to escape.
Airflow is less. The concentration of the substance in the air will be higher.

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14
Q

What can affect the rate of heat transfer?

A

An increase in surface area. More inferred waves can be emitted or absorbed.
Heats sinks transfer heat away from the thing they touch. They have fin which increase the surface area.
A higher proportion of the object in contact with the surroundings.
A larger difference between the surroundings and the object.
Is the object made of an insulator or conductor.
Is it shiney or matt?

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15
Q

How are vacuum flasks designed to minimise heat transfer?

A

It has two walls with a vacuum in the middle which stops, conduction and convection.
The ways are silvered. These reflect back heat and minimise radiation.
The bottle is supported with insulating foam which minimises heat conduction from the inner to outer bottle.
The stoppers made out of cork or foam which is an insulator.

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16
Q

Explain how animals and humans control heat transfer.

A

In the cold, your hairs stand up and trap a layer of insulating hair around you. Fur also does this and it stops convection.
Vasculodilation occurs when hot meaning heat is lost through radiation.
Animals in warmer climates have larger ears to lose heat.
Arctic foxes have small ears and a small surface area which conserves heat.
Desert foxes have big ears and a large surface area meaning heat is lost.

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17
Q

What does cavity wall insulation do?

A

Foam is squirted in the gaps between wall reducing convection and radiation across the gap.

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18
Q

What does loft insulation do?

A

A thick layer of fibreglass will is laid out, reducing conduction and radiation of heat into the attic.

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19
Q

What does draft proofing do?

A

Foam and plastic is put around doors and floors which stops draughts of cold air, thus reducing convection.

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20
Q

What does a hot water jacket do?

A

A layer of fibreglass wool is put around a water tank reducing conduction and radiation. This means more energy stays in the boiler and the water gets warmer.

21
Q

What do thick curtains do?

A

They reduce heat escaping through the windows by stopping conduction and radiation.

22
Q

What does double glazing do?

A

It stops conduction and convection.

23
Q

What can be done to reduce heat loss from a house.

A

Spend as stack load of cash on double glazing, thick curtains, water tanks jackets, draught proofing, loft insulation and cavity wall insulation.

24
Q

What is a U-value?

A

It is measured in W/m squared K.

The higher the U value the better the material is at being a conductor. Low values means is is a good insulator.

25
Q

What is specific heat capacity?

A

The energy needed to increase one Kg of a substance by one degree.
The higher the SHC the more energy the substance can store. It can release a lot of energy when it cools down.

26
Q

What is the formula used with the Specific heat Capacity?

A

Energy transferred (J)= mass (Kg) X SHC (J/KgC) X temperature change (C)

27
Q

How much energy is used to heat 2Kg of water from 10 degrees to 100 degrees?

A

2 X 4200 X 90 = 756000 J

28
Q

A empty 200g kettle cools from 115 degrees to 10 and loses 19068 J of energy. What is the SHC of kettles?

A

115-10=105
19068 divided by (0.2 X 105)
=908 J/Kg C

29
Q

Why do heaters have high SHCs?

A

It means they can store large amounts of energy.
Water has a high SHC and it can be pumped meaning it is good for central heating.
Electric storage heaters are made of bricks and ceramics which have a high SHC. They warm up during the night when energy is cheaper and release heat during the day.
Some heating systems use oil, not water. The SHC is lower meaning less energy is stored but oil has a higher boiling point meaning it can reach higher temperatures.

30
Q

Name nine different types of energy.

A

Electrical, light, sound, nuclear, kinetic, thermal, gravitational and elastic potential, chemical energy.

31
Q

Name three types of stored energy.

A

Chemical and elastic and gravitational potential.

32
Q

Energy is only useful when…

A

It can be converted from one form to another.

33
Q

Use the example of light bulbs to explain cost effectiveness and efficiency.

A

Low energy light bulbs use four times less energy and last longer than ordinary light bulbs but cost more. Over all they are more cost effective.
LED light bulbs use even less energy and last even longer but cost more and don’t give out as much light.

34
Q

How can waste energy be used?

A

Heat exchangers can capture lost heat energy. They pump cool liquid into the escaping heat and the liquid gains heat energy.
This heat energy can be converted into useful energy again. In a car the heater is powered from excess energy from the engine.

35
Q

Explain kilowatt-hours.

A

It is the amount of energy transferred by a 1Kw appliance left for one hour.
It is the standard unit of electrical energy.

36
Q

What is power usually measured in?

A

Watts. A 1Watt appliance transfers 1 Joule of energy every second.
A 5Kw appliance transfers 500 Joules every second.

37
Q

What is the formula used to calculate Kilowatt hours?

A

Power(in Kw) X time (in hours)

38
Q

How is the cost of electricity calculated?

A

No. of units X price per unit.

39
Q

Electricity costs 14p a unit. A 60W light bulb is on for 30 minutes. What is the cost?

A

Number of units.

  1. 06 Kw X 0.5 hours =0.03 units.
  2. 03 X 14 = 0.42p.
40
Q

Electricity costs 14p a unit. A 60W light bulb is on for one year. What is the cost?

A

24 X 365= 8760.

  1. 06 X 8760 =525.6 units.
  2. 6 X 14 pence = £73.58
41
Q

Explain and compare clockwork and battery powered radios.

A

They both work well then there is no mains electricity available.
The clockwork radio stores elastic potential energy.
Batteries can be expensive, but powering clockwork is free.
Battery power is only good if new batteries can be got or recharged. However winding clockwork every few hours is a bore.
Clockwork is also a lot better for the enviroment.

42
Q

A person wants a heater. He could have a 720 W one or a 9Kw heater. They will be used 30 hours a week it costs 7p per KWH. How much would be saved by choosing the 720 W one?

A

High power heater.
9KW X 30 hours = 270 KWH. 270 X 7p = £18.90
Low power heater.
0.72 KW X 30 hours = 21.6 KWH. 21.6 X 7p = £1.51
£18.90 - £1.51 = £17.39

43
Q

How is the standard of living affected by the access to electricity?

A

Electric lights are convent and safe at night.
Fridges keep food fresh and keep vaccines cold. This means important vaccines can be distributed.
Health care also uses machines like X-rays to improve health. With them, life expectancy would be less.
Communication would be affected. People can’t stay in touch or know about the news.

44
Q

Why is a fridges outside shiny and white?

A

A white surface will reflect back heat energy.

Same for a shiny for a surface.

45
Q

In a fridge it is 4 degrees and in a freezer it is -18. Where will the rate of energy transfer be higher?

A

In the freezer because there is larger temperature difference between the outside room and the freezer.

46
Q

If a plot the temperature of a cup of tea on a graph, why would the graph start steep and then fall?

A

It is hotter at the start meaning a greater difference between the tea and room temperature.

47
Q

What is the formula used to calculate power?

A

Power = current X voltage.

48
Q

Define power.

A

The rate at which an electrical appliance uses electrical power.

49
Q

A lamp as a power of 100 W and is used 6 hours a day. What is the power in kW and how many kWh would be used in a day?

A

0.1 and 0.6

50
Q

Why are studies done with large numbers of people?

A

So there is enough data to find meaningful relationships.

51
Q

What must you mention when talking about why evaporation causes things to cool?

A

That there are bonds between molecules.