Thermodynamics rules our world - from engines that power cars... Show more
Understanding Thermodynamics: Energy, Laws, and Processes









The Laws of Thermodynamics and Work
When gases expand or compress, they're doing work. Think about a piston in an engine - as gas pushes it outward, that's work being done by the gas. The direction matters:
- When gas expands, it does positive work (gas POV)
- When gas compresses, it does negative work (gas POV)
The formula for work is straightforward: W = PΔV, where P is pressure and ΔV is the change in volume. But there's an important perspective shift to remember. When calculating:
- Work done BY the gas: W = PΔV (positive when expanding)
- Work done ON the gas: W = -PΔV (negative when expanding)
Energy flows according to who's doing the work. When a system does positive work, its energy decreases. When work is done on the system, its energy increases.
Remember this! Always identify whose perspective you're using - the gas or the environment. This single detail determines whether your work value is positive or negative.

Work and the First Law of Thermodynamics
The area under a pressure-volume (PV) graph equals work. This visual representation makes it easy to understand energy transfer:
- Moving right (expanding): environment does negative work
- Moving left (compressing): environment does positive work
Work is path dependent, meaning how you get from state A to state B matters - not just the endpoints.
The First Law of Thermodynamics connects everything: ΔU = Q + W
- ΔU is change in internal energy
- Q is heat (positive when added, negative when removed)
- W is work done ON the system
This powerful equation is basically conservation of energy applied to thermodynamics. For example, if a gas absorbs 5000J of heat while doing 2000J of work, its internal energy increases by 3000J.
When solving problems with rigid containers, remember that W = 0 since the volume can't change. This simplifies the first law to ΔU = Q, meaning all heat added goes directly into increasing internal energy.
Pro tip: PV graphs are always from the environment's perspective. When tracing a path on the graph, think: right = expansion = negative work on system; left = compression = positive work on system.

Internal Energy Calculations
Different gases store energy in different ways. Think of it like having various types of luggage - some have more compartments than others:
For monoatomic gases (like helium):
- Internal energy change: ΔU = (3/2)nRΔT
- Heat capacity: C = (3/2)R
For diatomic gases (like oxygen):
- Internal energy change: ΔU = (5/2)nRΔT
- Heat capacity: C = (5/2)R
Diatomic gases have higher heat capacity because they can store energy not just in the motion of atoms, but also in the bonds between them.
To solve thermodynamic problems systematically:
- Use PV = nRT to find the number of moles
- Apply the combined gas law to find final temperatures
- Calculate ΔT = Tf - Ti
- Determine internal energy change using the appropriate equation
- Use ΔU = Q + W to solve for any missing values
Remember this conversion: When working with thermodynamics, 1 liter = 0.001 m³. Converting units correctly is essential for accurate calculations.

Types of Thermodynamic Processes
Different thermodynamic processes create distinctive PV curves and energy behaviors:
Adiabatic processes: No heat enters or leaves the system . This happens in thermally isolated systems or during extremely rapid changes. The relationship simplifies to ΔU = W.
Isobaric processes: Pressure remains constant. Work is easily calculated as W = PΔV. Since temperature typically changes, internal energy also changes (ΔU ≠ 0).
Isochoric processes: Volume remains constant (also called "isovolumetric"). Since there's no volume change, no work is done , which simplifies the first law to ΔU = Q.
Isothermal processes: Temperature stays constant , meaning internal energy doesn't change . This creates the relationship W = -Q - a perfect balance between heat and work. For isothermal processes, work is calculated using W = -nRTln.
Quick check for isothermal processes: Multiply PiVi and PfVf - if they're equal, the process is isothermal .

Isothermal Processes and Cyclic Processes
In isothermal expansions and compressions, temperature remains constant while volume and pressure change. The formula for work becomes: W = nRTln
This formula gives us insights about work direction:
- When expanding (Vf > Vi): ln > 0, so W > 0
- When compressing (Vf < Vi): ln < 0, so W < 0
Cyclic processes are fascinating because they return to their starting point. The work done in a cyclic process equals the area enclosed by the curve on a PV diagram. The direction of the cycle matters:
- Clockwise cycle: positive net work (engine)
- Counterclockwise cycle: negative net work (refrigerator)
When solving complex thermodynamic problems, break them into steps:
- Identify the type of process for each segment
- Calculate work using the appropriate formula for each segment
- Find temperature changes using ideal gas relationships
- Determine internal energy changes
- Use ΔU = Q + W to solve for heat transferred
Visualization tip: Draw the PV diagram whenever possible. It helps identify the processes and makes calculating work much more intuitive through the "area under the curve" concept.

Heat Engines and Efficiency
Heat engines convert thermal energy into mechanical work by moving heat from a hot reservoir to a cold one. Think of your car engine - it burns fuel (hot reservoir), does work (moves your car), and expels waste heat through the exhaust (cold reservoir).
The key formula for an engine is: Weng = |Qh| - |Qc| Where:
- Weng is work output
- Qh is heat from the hot reservoir
- Qc is heat rejected to the cold reservoir
Efficiency is the ratio of useful work to the heat input: e = Weng/|Qh| = 1 - |Qc|/|Qh|
Perfect efficiency would require Qc = 0, meaning no heat rejected to the cold reservoir. However, this is physically impossible according to the Second Law of Thermodynamics - some energy must always be "wasted."
When analyzing temperature in PV diagrams, hyperbolas (curves) represent isotherms - lines of constant temperature. The further from the origin, the higher the temperature. For example, in a PV diagram with points A, B, C, and D, you can determine which point has the highest temperature by seeing which lies on the outermost curve.
Real-world connection: This is why your car's engine feels hot and why it needs a cooling system - physics dictates that engines cannot convert all their heat into work!

Analyzing Cyclic Processes
Cyclic processes are powerful tools for understanding thermodynamic systems. In a cycle, the system returns to its initial state after performing a series of processes. Let's analyze a typical cycle:
When working with a cycle (A→B→C→A), break it into segments:
- A→B might be isochoric (constant volume)
- B→C might be isothermal (constant temperature)
- C→A might be isobaric (constant pressure)
For each segment, calculate:
- Work (W): using appropriate formulas or area under PV curve
- Internal energy change (ΔU): using formulas for gases
- Heat (Q): using the first law, ΔU = Q + W
The direction of the cycle determines overall behavior:
- Clockwise cycles produce net positive work (like engines)
- Counterclockwise cycles require net work input (like refrigerators)
The key insight: expansion typically happens at higher pressure than compression, which is why engines can produce net work.
Physics insight: Work in a cycle depends on path, not just endpoints. Two cycles between the same states can have completely different work values depending on the path taken.

Second Law and Carnot Efficiency
The Second Law of Thermodynamics deals with the direction of natural processes. It states that no heat engine operating in a cycle can convert all heat absorbed into work - some heat must always be rejected to a colder reservoir.
The Carnot engine represents the theoretical maximum efficiency possible. It operates through four stages:
- Isothermal expansion (absorbing heat)
- Adiabatic expansion (doing work)
- Isothermal compression (rejecting heat)
- Adiabatic compression (returning to initial state)
The Carnot efficiency formula is elegantly simple: e = 1 - Tc/Th
Where:
- Tc is the cold reservoir temperature (often room temperature, ~300K)
- Th is the hot reservoir temperature
This maximum possible efficiency depends solely on temperature ratio. For example, if Th = 600K and Tc = 300K, the maximum efficiency is 50%, regardless of engine design.
Entropy is the measure of disorder in a system. The Second Law can be restated: the total entropy of the universe always increases in natural processes. Creating order in one place requires creating more disorder elsewhere.
Real-world application: This is why your room naturally becomes messy and requires work to clean up! Increasing organization in one part of the universe requires increasing disorder elsewhere.
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Understanding Thermodynamics: Energy, Laws, and Processes
Thermodynamics rules our world - from engines that power cars to chemical reactions in your body. These powerful laws describe how energy moves, transforms, and ultimately dictates what's physically possible in our universe. Let's break down the key concepts that... Show more

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The Laws of Thermodynamics and Work
When gases expand or compress, they're doing work. Think about a piston in an engine - as gas pushes it outward, that's work being done by the gas. The direction matters:
- When gas expands, it does positive work (gas POV)
- When gas compresses, it does negative work (gas POV)
The formula for work is straightforward: W = PΔV, where P is pressure and ΔV is the change in volume. But there's an important perspective shift to remember. When calculating:
- Work done BY the gas: W = PΔV (positive when expanding)
- Work done ON the gas: W = -PΔV (negative when expanding)
Energy flows according to who's doing the work. When a system does positive work, its energy decreases. When work is done on the system, its energy increases.
Remember this! Always identify whose perspective you're using - the gas or the environment. This single detail determines whether your work value is positive or negative.

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Work and the First Law of Thermodynamics
The area under a pressure-volume (PV) graph equals work. This visual representation makes it easy to understand energy transfer:
- Moving right (expanding): environment does negative work
- Moving left (compressing): environment does positive work
Work is path dependent, meaning how you get from state A to state B matters - not just the endpoints.
The First Law of Thermodynamics connects everything: ΔU = Q + W
- ΔU is change in internal energy
- Q is heat (positive when added, negative when removed)
- W is work done ON the system
This powerful equation is basically conservation of energy applied to thermodynamics. For example, if a gas absorbs 5000J of heat while doing 2000J of work, its internal energy increases by 3000J.
When solving problems with rigid containers, remember that W = 0 since the volume can't change. This simplifies the first law to ΔU = Q, meaning all heat added goes directly into increasing internal energy.
Pro tip: PV graphs are always from the environment's perspective. When tracing a path on the graph, think: right = expansion = negative work on system; left = compression = positive work on system.

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Internal Energy Calculations
Different gases store energy in different ways. Think of it like having various types of luggage - some have more compartments than others:
For monoatomic gases (like helium):
- Internal energy change: ΔU = (3/2)nRΔT
- Heat capacity: C = (3/2)R
For diatomic gases (like oxygen):
- Internal energy change: ΔU = (5/2)nRΔT
- Heat capacity: C = (5/2)R
Diatomic gases have higher heat capacity because they can store energy not just in the motion of atoms, but also in the bonds between them.
To solve thermodynamic problems systematically:
- Use PV = nRT to find the number of moles
- Apply the combined gas law to find final temperatures
- Calculate ΔT = Tf - Ti
- Determine internal energy change using the appropriate equation
- Use ΔU = Q + W to solve for any missing values
Remember this conversion: When working with thermodynamics, 1 liter = 0.001 m³. Converting units correctly is essential for accurate calculations.

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- Access to all documents
- Improve your grades
- Join milions of students
Types of Thermodynamic Processes
Different thermodynamic processes create distinctive PV curves and energy behaviors:
Adiabatic processes: No heat enters or leaves the system . This happens in thermally isolated systems or during extremely rapid changes. The relationship simplifies to ΔU = W.
Isobaric processes: Pressure remains constant. Work is easily calculated as W = PΔV. Since temperature typically changes, internal energy also changes (ΔU ≠ 0).
Isochoric processes: Volume remains constant (also called "isovolumetric"). Since there's no volume change, no work is done , which simplifies the first law to ΔU = Q.
Isothermal processes: Temperature stays constant , meaning internal energy doesn't change . This creates the relationship W = -Q - a perfect balance between heat and work. For isothermal processes, work is calculated using W = -nRTln.
Quick check for isothermal processes: Multiply PiVi and PfVf - if they're equal, the process is isothermal .

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Isothermal Processes and Cyclic Processes
In isothermal expansions and compressions, temperature remains constant while volume and pressure change. The formula for work becomes: W = nRTln
This formula gives us insights about work direction:
- When expanding (Vf > Vi): ln > 0, so W > 0
- When compressing (Vf < Vi): ln < 0, so W < 0
Cyclic processes are fascinating because they return to their starting point. The work done in a cyclic process equals the area enclosed by the curve on a PV diagram. The direction of the cycle matters:
- Clockwise cycle: positive net work (engine)
- Counterclockwise cycle: negative net work (refrigerator)
When solving complex thermodynamic problems, break them into steps:
- Identify the type of process for each segment
- Calculate work using the appropriate formula for each segment
- Find temperature changes using ideal gas relationships
- Determine internal energy changes
- Use ΔU = Q + W to solve for heat transferred
Visualization tip: Draw the PV diagram whenever possible. It helps identify the processes and makes calculating work much more intuitive through the "area under the curve" concept.

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- Improve your grades
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Heat Engines and Efficiency
Heat engines convert thermal energy into mechanical work by moving heat from a hot reservoir to a cold one. Think of your car engine - it burns fuel (hot reservoir), does work (moves your car), and expels waste heat through the exhaust (cold reservoir).
The key formula for an engine is: Weng = |Qh| - |Qc| Where:
- Weng is work output
- Qh is heat from the hot reservoir
- Qc is heat rejected to the cold reservoir
Efficiency is the ratio of useful work to the heat input: e = Weng/|Qh| = 1 - |Qc|/|Qh|
Perfect efficiency would require Qc = 0, meaning no heat rejected to the cold reservoir. However, this is physically impossible according to the Second Law of Thermodynamics - some energy must always be "wasted."
When analyzing temperature in PV diagrams, hyperbolas (curves) represent isotherms - lines of constant temperature. The further from the origin, the higher the temperature. For example, in a PV diagram with points A, B, C, and D, you can determine which point has the highest temperature by seeing which lies on the outermost curve.
Real-world connection: This is why your car's engine feels hot and why it needs a cooling system - physics dictates that engines cannot convert all their heat into work!

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- Access to all documents
- Improve your grades
- Join milions of students
Analyzing Cyclic Processes
Cyclic processes are powerful tools for understanding thermodynamic systems. In a cycle, the system returns to its initial state after performing a series of processes. Let's analyze a typical cycle:
When working with a cycle (A→B→C→A), break it into segments:
- A→B might be isochoric (constant volume)
- B→C might be isothermal (constant temperature)
- C→A might be isobaric (constant pressure)
For each segment, calculate:
- Work (W): using appropriate formulas or area under PV curve
- Internal energy change (ΔU): using formulas for gases
- Heat (Q): using the first law, ΔU = Q + W
The direction of the cycle determines overall behavior:
- Clockwise cycles produce net positive work (like engines)
- Counterclockwise cycles require net work input (like refrigerators)
The key insight: expansion typically happens at higher pressure than compression, which is why engines can produce net work.
Physics insight: Work in a cycle depends on path, not just endpoints. Two cycles between the same states can have completely different work values depending on the path taken.

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- Access to all documents
- Improve your grades
- Join milions of students
Second Law and Carnot Efficiency
The Second Law of Thermodynamics deals with the direction of natural processes. It states that no heat engine operating in a cycle can convert all heat absorbed into work - some heat must always be rejected to a colder reservoir.
The Carnot engine represents the theoretical maximum efficiency possible. It operates through four stages:
- Isothermal expansion (absorbing heat)
- Adiabatic expansion (doing work)
- Isothermal compression (rejecting heat)
- Adiabatic compression (returning to initial state)
The Carnot efficiency formula is elegantly simple: e = 1 - Tc/Th
Where:
- Tc is the cold reservoir temperature (often room temperature, ~300K)
- Th is the hot reservoir temperature
This maximum possible efficiency depends solely on temperature ratio. For example, if Th = 600K and Tc = 300K, the maximum efficiency is 50%, regardless of engine design.
Entropy is the measure of disorder in a system. The Second Law can be restated: the total entropy of the universe always increases in natural processes. Creating order in one place requires creating more disorder elsewhere.
Real-world application: This is why your room naturally becomes messy and requires work to clean up! Increasing organization in one part of the universe requires increasing disorder elsewhere.
We thought you’d never ask...
What is the Knowunity AI companion?
Our AI companion is specifically built for the needs of students. Based on the millions of content pieces we have on the platform we can provide truly meaningful and relevant answers to students. But its not only about answers, the companion is even more about guiding students through their daily learning challenges, with personalised study plans, quizzes or content pieces in the chat and 100% personalisation based on the students skills and developments.
Where can I download the Knowunity app?
You can download the app in the Google Play Store and in the Apple App Store.
Is Knowunity really free of charge?
That's right! Enjoy free access to study content, connect with fellow students, and get instant help – all at your fingertips.
Similar Content
Most popular content: Work
2Most popular content in Physics
9Most popular content
9Can't find what you're looking for? Explore other subjects.
Students love us — and so will you.
The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.
This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.
Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.