There seems to have been some cross posting/editing as there are some equations in this earlier post I don't recall having seen and don't think I would have been OK with.Fool wrote: ↑Tue Jan 02, 2024 1:39 pm I'm okay with heat being a form of energy passing from hotter to colder. I am not comfortable with internal energy being called heat. Something hotter has a higher temperature and higher internal energy than that same thing at a colder temperature, everything else the same.
Sorry it took so long to reply, I get busy, tired, lazy, distracted, procrastinated, plus, I like to think about your questions, and think a lot, sometimes for days. I research and think about my answers, also often for days, sometimes longer. I want to check and recheck that I'm not missing anything.
I think the question, "what is heat", is a proverbial 'good one'. I'm glad you put out an answer before I had a chance to do so. Although I think heat needs more than that description, it isn't your definition of heat that is our problem. It appears to be what follows.
Heat can be 'described' just as you have stated. Mathematics 'defines' the variable Q as heat, and it is solely to be used in equations for models. Subscripts are used to separate different processes or values of heat.
Moving on, I have a problem with your last statements. Conservation of energy is not derived from conservation of caloric, the two tend to contradict each other. Similar to how in an inelastic collisions kinetic energy and momentum appear to not both be conserved. They are, however, caloric doesn't exist. Let us forget about caloric.
First law:
Qh = Ql + W
Has zero to do with caloric theory. It reflects the observation that energy is conserved and caloric isn't. If caloric were conserved, the equation would be of the form:
Qh = Ql
Caloric/heat in would equal caloric/heat out. Work energy would then have to spontaneously form and be pushed out magically. Since this has never been observed, we conclude energy passes through and is conserved, caloric isn't (Which agrees with the lack of observed caloric.). Done talking about caloric. Leading to many energy balance equations such as the following:
Qh = Ql +W
Which means that for work out, the ejected Ql must be smaller than Qh. The process of 'converting heat to work', isn't direct. Heat must first be converted to internal energy. This is accomplished by a rise in temperature and or pressure, or both. 'Internal energy'/'pressure', pushes out the work, and at the same time pressure decreases, decreasing internal energy. That equation doesn't, by itself, disallow Ql from being zero. It does have a serious, divide by zero, problem with Qh being zero.
A side example. That is not the only equation. Example, the following:
Qh = U + Ql + W
U = Energy saved, stored inside the engine. Also called internal energy.
The left side is energy in, the right side is energy out plus energy saved. The equals symbol means the two sides must balance, similar to putting weight on either side of a balance.
The energy balance equation can be expanded even further:
Win + Qh + Uout = Uin + Ql + Wout
U can be in the form of potential, kinetic/momentum, light, or heat, chemical and perhaps others. Nuclear decay strikes me as one I left out.
Ending with:
Since the equation, Qh=Ql+W, doesn't come from caloric theory, and you said you were comfortable with it, can we move on with accepting it as the first law of kinematic thermodynamics? Please. If more clarification is desired, please explain.
I'm hoping to get to efficiency, n =W/Qh next.
Starting with:
A side example. That is not the only equation. Example, the following:
That makes no sense.Qh = U + Ql + W
U = Energy saved, stored inside the engine. Also called internal energy.
Say we add 50 joules = Qh
Or say we add 1 Joule = Qh
How could that ever be equivalent to all the internal energy - U, plus the heat rejected, plus the work output?
A typo maybe?