Heat Energy and Transfer

 
Heat
1st year
 
By the end of this chapter you
will be able to:
 
Describe heat energy, its’ units and explain how
it converts to other forms
Explain how heat affects expansion and
contraction of materials
Explain conduction, convection and radiation
Identify good and bad conductors of heat
(insulators V conductors)
Differentiate between heat energy and
temperature
 
What is Heat?
 
F
o
r
m
 
o
f
 
e
n
e
r
g
y
 
b
e
c
a
u
s
e
 
i
t
 
c
a
n
 
m
o
v
e
t
h
i
n
g
s
 
- E.g: Makes a hot air balloon rise.
 
- Steam engines
M
e
a
s
u
r
e
d
 
i
n
 
J
O
U
L
E
S
 
(
J
)
 
 
Heat can be converted to other
forms of energy
 
Sunlight
 (heat) is used by plants for
Photosynthesis (to make food), it is
converted to 
chemical energy
.
Oil and gas 
are burned in power stations
to produce heat energy, this is used to turn
turbines which produce electricity
(electrical energy)
 
How is heat produced?
 
The movement of particles/molecules
produces heat
Particles move about more and take
   up 
 
more room if heated – this is why
   things expand if heated
 It is also why substances change form
when heated
 
  
solids         liquids         gases
 
Heat Transfer
 
Heat always moves from a warmer place
to a cooler place.
Hot objects in a cooler room will cool 
to
room temperature.e.g: tea, coffee
Cold objects in a warmer room will heat up
to room temperature.e.g: butter, ice
 
What do you think?
 
Forms of Heat Transfer
 
3 types;
Conduction
Convection
Radiation
Radiation
How does heat energy get
from the Sun to the Earth?
There are no particles between
the Sun and the Earth so it
MUST travel by radiation
?
RADIATION
 
Radiation
 
The transfer of heat in rays, from a hot
object, without needing a medium to 
pa
ss
through
It travels in all directions from a hot object
The hotter an object is, the more heat it
will radiate out
Does the surface affect the way heat is
radiated?
What colour should we paint
radiators?
Which colour is better to
wear on a sunny day?
black or white?
 
A dull black surface will radiate and absorb
heat better than a bright shiny surface.
Four containers were filled with warm water.  Which
container would have the warmest water after ten minutes?
The __________ container would be the warmest after ten
minutes because its shiny surface reflects heat _______ back
into the container so less is lost. The ________ container
would be the coolest because it is the best at _______ heat
radiation.
shiny metal
radiation
dull black
emitting
Radiation – Think Pair-Share
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Radiation 
travels 
in 
straight 
lines
True
/
False
Radiation 
can 
travel 
through 
a 
vacuum
True
/
False
Radiation 
requires 
particles 
to 
travel
True
/
False
Radiation 
travels 
at 
the 
speed 
of 
light
True
/
False
Radiation questions
Why are houses painted white in hot countries?
White reflects heat radiation and keeps the house cooler.
Why are shiny foil blankets wrapped around marathon runners at the end of a
race?
The shiny metal reflects the heat radiation from the runner back in, this stops
the runner getting cold.
 
Conduction
 
Transfer of heat is through a 
SOLID
 by
being passed from one particle to the next
Particles at the warm end move fast
er
 
a
nd
this then causes the next particles to 
move
faster and so on. e.g: poker in fire
    
     spoon in tea
In this way heat in an object travels from:
the HOT end 
  
  the cold end
 
 
Conduction
 
When you heat a metal strip at one end, the heat travels
to the other end.
 
 
 
 
 
As you heat the metal, the particles vibrate, these
vibrations make the adjacent particles vibrate, and so on
and so on, the vibrations are passed along the metal and
so is the heat. We call this? Conduction
 
Conductors/Insulators
 
I
f
 
a
 
s
u
b
s
t
a
n
c
e
 
e
a
s
i
l
y
 
a
l
l
o
w
s
 
h
e
a
t
 
t
o
 
m
o
v
e
t
h
r
o
u
g
h
 
i
t
,
 
w
e
 
c
a
n
 
s
a
y
 
i
t
 
i
s
 
a
 
g
o
o
d
c
o
n
d
u
c
t
o
r
 
o
f
 
h
e
a
t
.
 
e
.
g
:
 
m
o
s
t
 
m
e
t
a
l
s
If a substance does not allow heat to pass
through it easily we can say it is an
Insulator
. E.g: wood, plastic, glass
Why do many sauce pans have plastic
handles?
Conduction V Insulation
 
Conductor or Insulator?
 
Wood?
Aluminium?
Plastic?
Glass?
Iron?
Polystyrene?
Copper?
Cardboard?
Convection
What happens to the particles in a liquid or a
gas when you heat them?
The particles spread out and
become less dense
.
A liquid or gas.
Convection
It is the way in which particles in a 
GAS or
LIQUID
 move 
upwards
, carrying heat with
them
Think about when you boil water, the bubbles move
upwards
Or think of a gas heater in the room, the heat rises
around the room
 
Convection
Hot water
rises
Cooler
water sinks
Convection
current
Cools at the
surface
 
Convection
 
Where is the
cooling
compartment
put in a fridge?
 
Cooling
compartment
 
It is put at the top,
because  cool air
sinks, so it cools the
food on the way
down.
 
It is warm
er
 at
the bottom, 
so
this warmer air
rises and a
convection
current is set up.
 
Should a radiator be called a
radiator?
Convection questions
Why are boilers placed beneath hot water
tanks in people’s homes?
Hot water rises.
So when the boiler heats the water, and the hot water rises, the water tank
is filled with hot water.
Why does hot air rise and cold air sink?
Cool air is more dense than warm air, so the cool air ‘falls
through’ the warm air.
Heat Vs Temperature
T
h
e
 
t
e
m
p
e
r
a
t
u
r
e
 
o
f
 
a
n
 
o
b
j
e
c
t
 
t
e
l
l
s
 
u
s
 
h
o
w
H
O
T
 
i
t
 
i
s
Measured in 
degrees Celsius - 
°C
I
t
 
i
s
 
N
O
T
 
t
h
e
 
s
a
m
e
 
a
s
 
h
e
a
t
 
e
n
e
r
g
y
a
l
t
h
o
u
g
h
 
t
h
e
 
t
w
o
 
q
u
a
n
t
i
t
i
e
s
 
a
r
e
 
r
e
l
a
t
e
d
.
e
.
g
.
 
a
 
b
e
a
k
e
r
 
o
f
 
w
a
t
e
r
 
a
t
 
6
0
 
°
C
 
i
s
h
o
t
t
e
r
 
t
h
a
n
 
a
 
b
a
t
h
 
o
f
 
w
a
t
e
r
 
a
t
 
4
0
 
°
C
 
B
U
T
t
h
e
 
b
a
t
h
 
c
o
n
t
a
i
n
s
 
m
o
r
e
 
j
o
u
l
e
s
 
o
f
 
h
e
a
t
e
n
e
r
g
y
Heating
 
and Cooling
 
If an object has become 
hotter
,
it means that it has 
gained 
heat ene
rgy.
 
If an object 
cools down
, it means it has
lost
 
energy
Heating and Cooling cont…
 
Heat energy always moves from
:
HOT
 
object
                     
COOLER
 
object
 
e.g. Cup of water at 20 
°C in a room at 30°C -
gains heat energy and heats up – its
temperature rises
  
Cup of water at 20 °C in a room at 10°C
loses heat energy and cools down – its
temperature will fall.
 
Expansion/Contraction
 
Why are gaps left in pavements, railway
tracks, and floor boards?
Why are electricity cables left slack?
Why are bottles of minerals not filled up to
the top?
Because materials expand when they
   heat up we need to leave room for that.
 
Expansion V Contraction
 
The reason materials expand when heated
is because the heat gives the molec
ule
s
energy and as a result they begin to 
mov
e,
leaving them further apart and hence 
the
material expands
Cooling has the opposite effect, the
particles move closer together causing the
molecules to contract
One exception: water expands when
cooled
 
Revision
 
1.
 
 Which of the following is not a
method of heat transfer?
 
A.
 
Radiation
 
B.
 
Insulation
 
C.
 
Conduction
 
D.
 
Convection
 
Revision
 
1.
 
 Which of the following is not a
method of heat transfer?
 
A.
 
Radiation
 
B.
 
Insulation
 
C.
 
Conduction
 
D.
 
Convection
 
2.
 
 In which of the following are
the particles closest together?
 
A.
 
Solid
 
B.
 
Liquid
 
C.
 
Gas
 
D.
 
Fluid
 
2.
 
 In which of the following are
the particles closest together?
 
A.
 
Solid
 
B.
 
Liquid
 
C.
 
Gas
 
D.
 
Fluid
 
3.
 
 How does heat energy reach
the Earth from the Sun?
 
A.
 
Radiation
 
B.
 
Conduction
 
C.
 
Convection
 
D.
 
Insulation
 
3.
 
 How does heat energy reach
the Earth from the Sun?
 
A.
 
Radiation
 
B.
 
Conduction
 
C.
 
Convection
 
D.
 
Insulation
 
4.
 
 Which is the best surface for
reflecting heat radiation?
 
A.
 
Shiny white
 
B.
 
Dull white
 
C.
 
Shiny black
 
D.
 
Dull black
 
4.
 
 Which is the best surface for
reflecting heat radiation?
 
A.
 
Shiny white
 
B.
 
Dull white
 
C.
 
Shiny black
 
D.
 
Dull black
 
5.
 
 Which is the best surface for
absorbing heat radiation?
 
A.
 
Shiny white
 
B.
 
Dull white
 
C.
 
Shiny black
 
D.
 
Dull black
 
5.
 
 Which is the best surface for
absorbing heat radiation?
 
A.
 
Shiny white
 
B.
 
Dull white
 
C.
 
Shiny black
 
D.
 
Dull black
Key Words
 
H
e
a
t
R
a
d
i
a
t
i
o
n
C
o
n
v
e
c
t
i
o
n
C
o
n
d
u
c
t
i
o
n
C
o
l
d
I
n
s
u
l
a
t
o
r
C
o
n
d
u
c
t
o
r
T
e
m
p
e
r
a
t
u
r
e
E
m
i
t
A
b
s
o
r
b
T
r
a
n
s
f
e
r
Slide Note
Embed
Share

Heat energy is a versatile form of energy that can be converted into other forms such as chemical or electrical energy. This article explains the basics of heat energy, its production, transfer mechanisms like conduction, convection, and radiation, and how it affects the expansion and contraction of materials. Discover the importance of good and bad conductors of heat, and differentiate between heat energy and temperature.

  • Heat energy
  • Transfer mechanisms
  • Conduction
  • Convection
  • Radiation

Uploaded on Sep 20, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Heat 1st year

  2. By the end of this chapter you will be able to: Describe heat energy, its units and explain how it converts to other forms Explain how heat affects expansion and contraction of materials Explain conduction, convection and radiation Identify good and bad conductors of heat (insulators V conductors) Differentiate between heat energy and temperature

  3. What is Heat? Form of energy because it can move things - E.g: Makes a hot air balloon rise. - Steam engines Measured in JOULES (J)

  4. Heat can be converted to other forms of energy Sunlight (heat) is used by plants for Photosynthesis (to make food), it is converted to chemical energy. Oil and gas are burned in power stations to produce heat energy, this is used to turn turbines which produce electricity (electrical energy)

  5. How is heat produced? The movement of particles/molecules produces heat Particles move about more and take up more room if heated this is why things expand if heated It is also why substances change form when heated solids liquids gases

  6. Heat Transfer Heat always moves from a warmer place to a cooler place. Hot objects in a cooler room will cool to room temperature.e.g: tea, coffee Cold objects in a warmer room will heat up to room temperature.e.g: butter, ice

  7. What do you think?

  8. Forms of Heat Transfer 3 types; Conduction Convection Radiation

  9. Radiation How does heat energy get from the Sun to the Earth? There are no particles between the Sun and the Earth so it MUST travel by radiation RADIATION ? earthwithtilt

  10. Radiation The transfer of heat in rays, from a hot object, without needing a medium to pass through It travels in all directions from a hot object The hotter an object is, the more heat it will radiate out Does the surface affect the way heat is radiated?

  11. What colour should we paint radiators? Which colour is better to wear on a sunny day? black or white? A dull black surface will radiate and absorb heat better than a bright shiny surface.

  12. Four containers were filled with warm water. Which container would have the warmest water after ten minutes? Dull metal Shiny black Shiny metal Dull black shiny metal The __________ container would be the warmest after ten minutes because its shiny surface reflects heat _______ back into the container so less is lost. The ________ container would be the coolest because it is the best at _______ heat radiation. radiation dull black emitting

  13. Radiation Think Pair-Share Radiation travels in straight lines True/False Radiation can travel through a vacuum True/False Radiation requires particles to travel True/False Radiation travels at the speed of light True/False

  14. Radiation questions Why are houses painted white in hot countries? White reflects heat radiation and keeps the house cooler. Why are shiny foil blankets wrapped around marathon runners at the end of a race? The shiny metal reflects the heat radiation from the runner back in, this stops the runner getting cold.

  15. Conduction Transfer of heat is through a SOLID by being passed from one particle to the next Particles at the warm end move faster and this then causes the next particles to move faster and so on. e.g: poker in fire spoon in tea In this way heat in an object travels from: the HOT end the cold end

  16. Conduction When you heat a metal strip at one end, the heat travels to the other end. As you heat the metal, the particles vibrate, these vibrations make the adjacent particles vibrate, and so on and so on, the vibrations are passed along the metal and so is the heat. We call this? Conduction

  17. Conductors/Insulators If a substance easily allows heat to move through it, we can say it is a good conductor of heat. e.g: most metals If a substance does not allow heat to pass through it easily we can say it is an Insulator. E.g: wood, plastic, glass Why do many sauce pans have plastic handles?

  18. Conduction V Insulation

  19. Conductor or Insulator? Wood? Aluminium? Plastic? Glass? Iron? Polystyrene? Copper? Cardboard?

  20. Convection What happens to the particles in a liquid or a gas when you heat them? The particles spread out and become less dense. A liquid or gas.

  21. Convection It is the way in which particles in a GAS or LIQUID move upwards, carrying heat with them Think about when you boil water, the bubbles move upwards Or think of a gas heater in the room, the heat rises around the room

  22. Convection Cools at the surface Convection current Cooler water sinks Hot water rises

  23. Convection Where is the cooling compartment put in a fridge? Cooling compartment It is warmer at the bottom, so this warmer air rises and a convection current is set up. It is put at the top, because cool air sinks, so it cools the food on the way down.

  24. Should a radiator be called a radiator?

  25. Convection questions Why does hot air rise and cold air sink? Cool air is more dense than warm air, so the cool air falls through the warm air. Why are boilers placed beneath hot water tanks in people s homes? Hot water rises. So when the boiler heats the water, and the hot water rises, the water tank is filled with hot water.

  26. Heat Vs Temperature The temperature of an object tells us how HOT it is Measured in degrees Celsius - C It is NOT the same as heat energy although the two quantities are related. e.g. a beaker of water at 60 C is hotter than a bath of water at 40 C BUT the bath contains more joules of heat energy

  27. Heating and Cooling If an object has become hotter, it means that it has gained heat energy. If an object cools down, it means it has lost energy

  28. Heating and Cooling cont Heat energy always moves from: HOT object COOLER object e.g. Cup of water at 20 C in a room at 30 C - gains heat energy and heats up its temperature rises Cup of water at 20 C in a room at 10 C loses heat energy and cools down its temperature will fall.

  29. Expansion/Contraction Why are gaps left in pavements, railway tracks, and floor boards? Why are electricity cables left slack? Why are bottles of minerals not filled up to the top? Because materials expand when they heat up we need to leave room for that.

  30. Expansion V Contraction The reason materials expand when heated is because the heat gives the molecules energy and as a result they begin to move, leaving them further apart and hence the material expands Cooling has the opposite effect, the particles move closer together causing the molecules to contract One exception: water expands when cooled

  31. Revision 1. method of heat transfer? Which of the following is not a A. B. C. D. Radiation Insulation Conduction Convection

  32. Revision 1. method of heat transfer? Which of the following is not a A. B. C. D. Radiation Insulation Conduction Convection

  33. 2. the particles closest together? In which of the following are A. B. C. D. Solid Liquid Gas Fluid

  34. 2. the particles closest together? In which of the following are A. B. C. D. Solid Liquid Gas Fluid

  35. 3. the Earth from the Sun? How does heat energy reach A. B. C. D. Radiation Conduction Convection Insulation

  36. 3. the Earth from the Sun? How does heat energy reach A. B. C. D. Radiation Conduction Convection Insulation

  37. 4. reflecting heat radiation? Which is the best surface for A. B. C. D. Shiny white Dull white Shiny black Dull black

  38. 4. reflecting heat radiation? Which is the best surface for A. B. C. D. Shiny white Dull white Shiny black Dull black

  39. 5. absorbing heat radiation? Which is the best surface for A. B. C. D. Shiny white Dull white Shiny black Dull black

  40. 5. absorbing heat radiation? Which is the best surface for A. B. C. D. Shiny white Dull white Shiny black Dull black

  41. Key Words Temperature Cold Insulator Radiation Heat Transfer Convection Conduction Conductor Absorb Emit

More Related Content

giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#