First Law of Thermodynamics
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III. First Law of Thermodynamics



The first law of thermodynamics gives a precise definition of heat, another commonly used concept.

When an object is brought into contact with a relatively colder object, a process takes place that brings about an equalization of temperatures of the two objects. To explain this phenomenon, 18th-century scientists hypothesized that a substance more abundant at higher temperature flowed toward the region at a lower temperature. This hypothetical substance, called "caloric," was thought to be a fluid capable of moving through material media. The first law of thermodynamics instead identifies caloric, or heat, as a form of energy. It can be converted into mechanical work, and it can be stored, but is not a material substance. Heat, measured originally in terms of a unit called the calorie, and work and energy, measured in ergs, were shown by experiment to be totally equivalent. One calorie is equivalent to 4.186 × 107 ergs, or 4.186 joules.

The first law, then, is a law of energy conservation. It states that, because energy cannot be created or destroyed—setting aside the later ramifications of the equivalence of mass and energy
the amount of heat transferred into a system plus the amount of work done on the system must result in a corresponding increase of internal energy in the system. Heat and work are mechanisms by which systems exchange energy with one another.

In any machine some amount of energy is converted into work; therefore, no machine can exist in which no energy is converted into work. Such a hypothetical machine (in which no energy is required for performing work) is termed a "perpetual-motion machine of the first kind." Since the input energy must now take heat into account (and in a broader sense chemical, electrical, nuclear, and other forms of energy as well), the law of energy conservation rules out the possibility of such a machine ever being invented. The first law is sometimes given in a contorted form as a statement that precludes the existence of perpetual-motion machines of the first kind.


IV. Second Law of Thermodynamics



The second law of thermodynamics gives a precise definition of a property called entropy. Entropy can be thought of as a measure of how close a system is to equilibrium; it can also be thought of as a measure of the disorder in the system. The law states that the entropy—that is, the disorder—of an isolated system can never decrease. Thus, when an isolated system achieves a configuration of maximum entropy, it can no longer undergo change: It has reached equilibrium. Nature, then, seems to "prefer" disorder or chaos. It can be shown that the second law stipulates that, in the absence of work, heat cannot be transferred from a region at a lower temperature to one at a higher temperature.

The second law poses an additional condition on thermodynamic processes. It is not enough to conserve energy and thus obey the first law. A machine that would deliver work while violating the second law is called a "perpetual-motion machine of the second kind," since, for example, energy could then be continually drawn from a cold environment to do work in a hot environment at no cost. The second law of thermodynamics is sometimes given as a statement that precludes perpetual-motion machines of the second kind.

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