Adiabatic process
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- This article covers adiabatic processes in thermodynamics. For adiabatic processes in quantum mechanics, see adiabatic process (quantum mechanics). For atmospheric adiabatic processes, see adiabatic lapse rate.
The opposite extreme, in which the maximum heat transfer with its surroundings occurs, causing the temperature to remain constant, is known as an isothermal process. Since temperature is thermodynamically conjugate to entropy, the isothermal process is conjugate to the adiabatic process for reversible transformations.
A transformation of a thermodynamic system can be considered adiabatic when it is quick enough so that no significant heat transfer happens between the system and the outside. At the opposite, a transformation of a thermodynamic system can be considered isothermal if it is slow enough so that the system's temperature can be maintained by heat exchange with the outside.
Adiabatic heating and cooling
Adiabatic heating and cooling are processes that commonly occur due to a change in the pressure of a gas. Adiabatic heating occurs when the pressure of a gas is increased. An example of this is what goes on in a bicycle pump. After using a bicycle pump to inflate a pneumatic tire or soccer ball the barrel of the pump is found to have heated up as a result of adiabatic heating. A common motorized air compressor, operating at pressures up to 150 psi, can reach outlet temperatures of several hundred Kelvin. Adiabatic cooling occurs when the pressure of a gas is decreased, such as when it expands into a larger volume. An example of this is when the air is released from a pneumatic tire; the outlet air will be noticeably cooler than the tire, and after all the air has escaped the valve stem will be cold to the touch. Diesel engines rely on adiabatic heating during their compression stroke to reach the high temperatures needed to ignite the fuel. Such temperature changes can be quantified using the ideal gas law.Adiabatic cooling does not have to involve a fluid. One technique used to reach very low temperatures (thousandths and even millionths of a degree above absolute zero) is adiabatic demagnetisation, where the change in magnetic field on a magnetic material is used to provide adiabatic cooling.
Ideal gas
The mathematical equation for an ideal fluid undergoing an adiabatic process is
- [ P V^ = \operatorname \qquad ]
- [ \gamma = \over C_} = \frac, ]
For adiabatic processes, it is also true that
- [ VT^\alpha = \operatorname ]
- [ TV^ = \operatorname ]
Derivation of formula
The definition of an adiabatic process is that heat transfer to the system is zero, [\delta Q=0 ]. Then, according to the first law of thermodynamics,
- [ d U + \delta W = \delta Q = 0 \qquad \qquad \qquad (1) ]
- [ \delta W = P dV. \qquad \qquad \qquad (2)]
It is desired to know how the values of dP and dV relate to each other as the adiabatic process proceeds. For an ideal gas the internal energy is given by
- [ U = \alpha n R T \qquad \qquad \qquad (3)]
Differentiating equation (3) and use of the ideal gas law yields
- [ d U = \alpha n R d T = \alpha d (P V) = \alpha (P d V + V d P). \qquad (4)]
Now substitute equations (2), (3), and (4) into equation (1) to obtain
- [ -P d V = \alpha P d V + \alpha V d P \,]
- [ - (\alpha + 1) P d V = \alpha V d P \,]
- [ -(\alpha + 1) = \alpha . ]
- [ -(\alpha + 1) d (\ln V) = \alpha d (\ln P) \,]
- [ = - ]
- [ = -, ]
- [ \ln \left( \right) =\ln \left( \right)^}. ]
- [ \left( \right) =\left( \right)^}, ]
- [ \left( \right)=\left( \right)^. ]
- [ \left( \right) \left( \right)^ = 1]
- [ P V^ = P_0 V_0^ = P V^\gamma = \operatorname. ]
Graphing adiabats
Properties of adiabats on a P-V diagram are:- Every adiabat asymptotically approaches both the V axis and the P axis (just like isotherms).
- Each adiabat intersects each isotherm exactly once.
- An adiabat looks similar to an isotherm, except that during an expansion, an adiabat loses more pressure than an isotherm, so it has a steeper inclination (more vertical).
- If isotherms are concave towards the "north-east" direction (45 °), then adiabats are concave towards the "east north-east" (31 °).
- If adiabats and isotherms are graphed severally at regular changes of entropy and temperature, respectively (like altitude on a contour map), then as the eye moves outwards away from the axes (towards the north-east), it sees the density of isotherms stay constant, but it sees the density of adiabats drop. The exception is very near absolute zero, where the density of adiabats drops sharply and they become rare (see Nernst's theorem).
The isotherms are the red curves and the adiabats are the black curves. The adiabats are isentropic. Volume is the abscissa (x-axis) and pressure is the ordinate (y-axis).
See also
- Cyclic process
- First law of thermodynamics
- Isobaric process
- Isochoric process
- Isothermal process
- Polytropic process
- Thermodynamic entropy
- Quasistatic equilibrium
- Total air temperature
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