Enthelpy vs. Internal Energy (Thermodynamics)

In summary: is associated with the system in a way that is not immediately observable (and cannot be measured directly), but is still there.
  • #1
Kubus
5
0
Hello!

First post here :-) Hope this isn't too simple for this forum...if so, by all means give me a pointer...

I'm wondering about some basic thermod. concepts. Could somebody please shed a little light on these?

Internal Energy and Enthalpy (both from macroscopic viewpoint)

Does the internal energy U of a gas include kinetic energy from pressure? Since enthalpy is defined as U + PV, where P is pressure and V is volume, one might think that internal energy does not include pressure.

The thermodynamics text I have here makes it clear: all energy of a thermodynamic system other than 1) kinetic energy of the whole system in reference to an external frame, and 2) potential gravitational energy of the whole system in reference to an external frame, is labeled as internal energy U.

So, basically, if internal energy includes kinetic energy from pressure, what is the significance of enthalpy?


Thanks for your thoughts,

Kubus



( ( ( I should note that I think that pressure is not as straightforward as kinetic energy. As a simple explanation would have it, pressure is the kinetic energy of molecules as they move in a gas, but does not include the microscopic vibrations associated with thermal energy (temperature). However, thermal energy contributes to pressure, so my previous sentence cannot be completely accurate. Maybe classical thermodynamics is not enough here, and statistical mechanics / etc. is needed to explain the relation between pressure and temperature ? ) ) )
 
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  • #3
I don't understand what the "kinetic energy from pressure" is.
 
  • #6
Thank you! The link at the bottom of the older thread gave good insight.

I should've searched the forum first though. Sorry about that, newb mistake haha :-D.
 
  • #7
This might help conceptually as well:

Think about creating a system out of thin air. The amount of total energy one would need to do this is the energy associated with the system itself (energy stored in bonds, thermal energy, rest energy of the mass itself, etc. -> internal energy, U) as well as the work done to the on the medium to place the system there (the PV term).
 
  • #8
Austen_G, thanks for replying to my thread. That is a new way to look at it, and it makes sense to me - tracing where each component of the system's energy (enthalpy) came from.

But now that I look at this topic again after a while, I'm realizing that a lot of my original confusion stemmed from ascertaining whether or not internal energy is affected by pressure. That was the "kinetic energy from pressure" I talked about and which was unclear in my first post.

The simple answer I should have come to is: Assuming ideal gas behavior, NO, internal energy is a function of ONLY temperature.

Realizing this as I looked through my thermodynamics book, I stumbled across this statement:

"Similarly, for a gas obeying the ideal gas model, the specific enthalpy depends only on temperature, ..."

Specific enthalpy is, of course, h = u + pv , where u and v are internal energy per unit mass and volume per unit mass.


Which completely scrambled my thoughts. With that definition of specific enthalpy, how could specific enthalpy ever (ideal gas or not) be a function of ONLY temperature ?!


Thanks in advance if you dare to untangle my latest mess. :-)
 
  • #9
There is no such thing like "kinetic energy from pressure" .
The internal energy of a system is U .
U is supposed to included kinetic and potential energy, and this includes everything.
However, when analysing open systems, it is often more convenient to work with the enthalpy.
This is because of the mechanical work involved on the input or output streams.
 
  • #10
Austen G indicates the right direction for this discussion. However his apporach, which can also be found in Levenspiel 1996 (Understanding Engineering Thermo), implies that p in H=U+pV is the external (environmental) pressure not the internal pressure as is commonly believed, and this causes the confusion for Kubus and the rest of us. In 'equilibrium thermodynamics' the internal and external pressure are assumed to be equal, and then there seems to be no need to make the distinction, but in all real world thermodynamics there is.
 
  • #11
Zeppos, what you are saying is a revelation to me. If I had paid more attention, I would have seen that this is what Austen G was pointing at.

Trying to find more about how enthalpy relates to the distinction between internal and environmental pressure, I came to the wikipedia page about enthalpy, and it looks like somebody improved it since I first started this thread:

If pV is an additional energy associated with the system, and is not in the internal energy U, then where is it? ... In a nutshell, the energy pV is in the surroundings (typically, the atmosphere). When a system is created, energy must be supplied equal to its internal energy U plus pV, where pV is the work done in pushing against the ambient (atmospheric) pressure.This additional energy is therefore stored in the surroundings (atmosphere) and can be recovered when the system collapses back to its initial state.


I think that finally unravels the significance of enthalpy for me. The most important distinction is that the energy associated with enthalpy is 'contained' both inside and OUTSIDE the system boundary. Does that make sense?
 
  • #12
lalbatros, thanks for replying. Could you explain more why there is no such thing as kinetic energy from pressure, why I'm coming up with this idea?

Without implying that this term of mine makes sense, I'd like to put out this example:

A common engineering device is a compressor. Such a device clearly must be supplied with energy, and if it were completely efficient, the only effect it would produce would be an increase in pressure of the fluid (the thermodynamic system) which flows through it. Without academic rigor, a simple way to put it is that a compressor 'converts kinetic energy into pressure'.

The first time I read that quoted statement on some website, I thought it sounded unlikely...but then I realized that, since energy must be conserved, where else would it go?

If I use my NEW understanding of enthalpy (^^^ post above ^^^), I would say that the work done by the compressor becomes the work specified by enthalpy's pressure x volume, pV, term. This work is transferred further as the fluid (system) pushes against its surroundings on, say, the other end of the pipe.

Am I on the right track?

Thank you,
Kubus
 
  • #13
The work done by the compressor on the gas typically heats up the gas. So that is considered internal energy (the U term). I suppose it is kinetic in the sense that hot gas molecules move faster, but it's confusing to call it kinetic energy since the system as a whole isn't zooming off anywhere.
 
  • #14
I'd like to bring up a point about your compressor. In general, a compressor will decrease the volume of the container, which done through a quasi-static process (done "infinitely" slowly so that the system goes through infinitesimal changes) will increase the pressure of the system. To me this seems like a rather useless process. Kubis, is this really the formal definition of a compressor? Can I get the source please?

Take for instance an air compressor (a device which is used to fill car tires and such): This device will actually increase pressure by adding addition gas to the system. If you increase the number of particles (again just looking at an ideal gas) then the pressure will increase. In addition to an increase in pressure, as presbyope has pointed out, the temperature will also increase. The kinetic energy as you have mentioned is simply the increase in the momenta of the molecules inside. Realistically, this system will come to equilibrium with the temperature outside of the compressor, in which case your kinetic energy has been released in the form of heat. This is the sort of compressor I'm used to thinking about.
 
  • #15
Kubus,

I reacted to your sentense:

"Does the internal energy U of a gas include kinetic energy from pressure?"

In the same way, a compressor does not convert pressure into energy, but it eventually works on a gas and transfers energy to this gas.

Moreover, there is no way to recognize how a part of the internal energy has be transferred to the gas. The same final state could have been reached without external work, but by heat transfer.

I agree with you that this is more about "precise wording".
However, in thermodynamics, even more than in any other parts of physics, wording is quite important.

The best way to talk about enthalpy is to say that it is a state function.
You can also add that this state function is useful because it is the best "word" to use when the first law is applied in a constant pressure transformation. This function is also useful to analyse open systems.

As such the enthalpy cannot be said to have a physical meaning like mass or internal energy.
Yet, it is a state function that makes the energy balance looking short in some circumstance.
This is simply because it include work done on the system.

Of course, you are on track!
Enjoy thermodynamics!

Michel

see also: http://www.mathpages.com/home/kmath184/kmath184.htm (for example)
 
  • #16
lalbatros said:
The best way to talk about enthalpy is to say that it is a state function.
You can also add that this state function is useful because it is the best "word" to use when the first law is applied in a constant pressure transformation. This function is also useful to analyse open systems.
As such the enthalpy cannot be said to have a physical meaning like mass or internal energy.
see also: http://www.mathpages.com/home/kmath184/kmath184.htm

In my view:
the best way to talk about enthalpy is to say that it is a form of energy, which implies that it is a state function. Enthalpy is the sum of two froms of energy: internal energy (which includes the kinetic energy of molecules) and pV-energy which goes by many names like energy of displacment, pressure-energy, flow-energy, but still has to be recognized as an official form of energy. Note however that p must be understood as external pressure, not internal pressure (the difference can be subtle).
The LINK states: The justification for defining this variable (Enthalpy) is really only a matter of convenience, because we often find that the sum U + PV occurs in thermodynamic equations.
Having a complete energy balance is indeed very convenient, but it is not only a matter of convenience: it is necessary.
 
  • #17
Zeppos10,

I do not fully agree with you.
The term PV has the dimension of an energy, of work, of heat.
But calling it energy should mean more than that.
The term PV can even not be called work, since work is PdV.

If you consider a certain amount of a perfect gas, why would you consider H = U + PV as an energy related to this amount of gas?
My understanding is that H is an amount of energy related to an energy balance.
More precisely, I see it as an accounting artefact.
In accounting, things can be accounted in various ways, and some ways are simpler.
This is similar in thermodynamics.

The internal energy, U, is directly related to the kinetic (K) and potential energy (P) of the molecules of the gas. In fact U=K+P. Therefore, U can be called an energy of this gas, why the more precise terminology the "internal energy" of the gas.

Nothing similar can be said for the enthalpy.
However, in a transformation, when an amount of gas interacts with the environment, then the energy balance will of course include the work done on the gas. It is no surprise then that the energy balance might include the variation of the PV term, specially at constant pressure since then d(PV) = pdV = work.

Otherwise, the kinetic energy of the particles has not such flavor has "pressure".
The kinetic energy can however be split in some flavors, like rotational kinetic energy, translational energy, kinetic energy in the x-direction, ...
But the kinetic energy has no such flavor as "pressure-kinetic-energy".
The same applies for the potential energy.

This what I wanted to say.

Michel
 
  • #18
Lalbatros:
when you believe that enthalpy is an 'accounting artefact' you are in trouble. (The only 'accounting artefact' I know of was called ENRON.)
If you try to ALWAYS (!) distinguish between internal and external pressure (which most textbooks do not) you will find that enthalpy has physical meaning as a form of energy, but p in (U+pV) is the external pressure. Try to move a system with volume V from an environment of p' to an environment of p": tell me how much work you did and where this energy went.
PS: I have never heard of "pressure-kinetic-energy" exept in this thread so I leave it alone.
 
  • #19
Zeppos10,

My problem is that I don't know what you mean by:

"... has physical meaning as a form of energy ..."

By "form" do you mean kinetic, potential or what else?
And by energy, what do you mean, the energy of 1kg of oxygen?

I tried to solve these questions by explaining that the enthalpy appears naturally in an energy balance because of the work done on the system (eventually by a reversible transformation if you prefer so). That's why I used the language of accounting. Like ENRON, thermodynamics makes use of balance sheets, but thermodynamics doesn't intend to steal nature!

Enthalpy is obviously a state function, with the dimension of energy.
But you cannot related -I believe- enthalpy to a sum of energie of the different molecules in the gas.
Am I wrong about that?

Any way, as long as we use the laws of thermodynamics correctly, the names and meta-ideas don't really matter.

Michel
 
  • #20
Lalbatros:
if you google around a bit you can find under energy-wiki:
Different forms of energy include kinetic, potential, thermal, gravitational, sound, elastic and electromagnetic energy.
The wiki does not claim this is a complete list, nor do I. Note that gravitational energy is one form of potential energy, which in turn is part of mechanical energy.
Also note that no reference is made to chemical energy (1 kg of oxygen ??), while our society runs on chemical energy, which is called enthalpy if you want to make any calculation.

lalbatros said:
But you cannot relate -I believe- enthalpy to a sum of energie of the different molecules in the gas. Am I wrong about that?
Michel

Enthalpy = (U+pV). The internal energy is related to the sum of energy of different molecules, the pV part is independent of them, but the pV part is always small (a few %) of the total enthalpy, and it is convention to attribute all enthalpy to the molecules.
So strictly speaking you are right, but ...
 
  • #21
Zeppos10 said:
but the pV part is always small (a few %) of the total enthalpy, and it is convention to attribute all enthalpy to the molecules.

I have to correct myself:
but the (absolute value of -) pV part is generally small (a few %) of the (absolute value of -) total enthalpy: it is convention to attribute all enthalpy to the molecules.

Actually for helium gas at stp the pV part is 40% of enthalpy, but this doesn't show because the enthalpy value assigned to elements at stp equals zero.
 
  • #22
Zeppos10,

This "similar thread" is interresting: https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=345615 .

Reading another thread (https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=98358), I realized that other misconceptions are very common. The term "heat energy" of a system is -I think- such a misconception. You can transfer heat to and from a system, but you cannot say that -say- a given volume of gas contains so much heat energy. What you can say, based on the laws of thermodynamics, is that by a certain transformation you will exchange so much heat, or eventually put bounds on it. This is -I feel- similar to our E vs H discussion. More precisely, my understanding is that heat has no microscopic equivalent: it is not a state function and cannot be related to kinetic or potantial energy of particles. Concerning enthalpy, it is well a state function, but it cannot be related to a microscopic form of energy. Am I wrong?

Michel
 
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  • #23
lalbatros said:
Concerning enthalpy, it is well a state function, but it cannot be related to a microscopic form of energy. Am I wrong?
Michel

Well, if you google 'bond enthalpy' , you will find that for Cl2 the bond-enthalpy is 242 kJ/mol. This is used as an indication of the strength of the Cl-Cl bond. So formally it is related to a microscopic form of energy. Strictly speaking it is the enthalpy of atomization.
 
  • #24
You are right Zeppos10.
However, in this situation, the word refers again to a variation.
Consider the enthalpy (or heat) of vaporisation of water.
This quantity is of course a variation and it includes the work done against the environment.
This work allows the water vapor to expand.
That's why, in an energy balance for vaporisation, the enthalpy is convenient.

However, the work done on the environment is also energy transferred to the environment.
Then, the energy for vaporisation does not match totally to a form of energy accumulated within the water vapor.
That's why we cannot say -I think- that enthalpy is a form of energy of the water vapor in this example.
It is actually an energy that is needed to get the water vapor in its final state.
Moreover, this relates to certain conventions, I believe.
This energy is not totally accumulated in the water vapor, the environment gets a part of it.

That's why I feel uncomfortable if saying that "enthalpy is a form of energy".
I preffer the full story to avoid the possible lapsus that "enthalpy of water vapor would be some energy of water vapor". It is actually a energy needed to bring water vapor in a certain state in a certain way, and it includes work done on the environment.

Michel
 
  • #25
lalbatros said:
That's why I feel uncomfortable if saying that "enthalpy is a form of energy".
I preffer the full story to avoid the possible lapsus that "enthalpy of water vapor would be some energy of water vapor". It is actually a energy needed to bring water vapor in a certain state in a certain way, and it includes work done on the environment.

The reason why you feel unfomfortable to say that "enthalpy is a form of energy" is because most textbooks and wikipedias do not state this explicitly.
However, if you buy (eg) cornflakes it states an energy-value of 370 kcal/100 g. This is an estimate of the enthalpy of combustion, using the Atwater conversion factors. So you already use enthalpy as a form of energy at breakfast, although this is not acknowledged as such on the corn-flakes box.
By the way: enthalpy values are not dependent on 'a certain way' the state is reached.
There is o problem in calling enthalpy a form of energy, not even for water vapor.
 
  • #26
You are right Zeppos10, yet I preffer the full story and dislike fuzzy definitions.

For me it makes no sense to talk about "a form of energy".
For me, this just means one item in an energy balance, as I said earlier.
In your example, 370 kcal/100g of corn flakes is indeed just a term in an energy balance.
Moreover, you should justify why this is called "enthalpy of combustion" and not "energy of combustion" or even "free energy of combustion", and why this makes sense.

At my work, I use thermodynamics everyday, but mostly at constant pressure.
Therefore, I am using the enthalpy everyday without really going back to its meaning everyday.
I am doing this since twenty years.

Nevertheless, I was interrested by this thread just because of a recent discussion at work.
The question was about CO2 inertisation of a coal grinding mill: how long could we use CO2 from a high-pressure tank before the tank would become too cold.
I realized that in this case, expansion leaves the internal energy constant.
(although this has no big practical impact)

In addition to that I like to make a connection to the microscopic point of view.
That was my initial motivation to post here.

I still do not see how enthalpy can be seen as a sum of microscopic bits of energy,
kinetic and potential term, quantum mechanical version if needed.
Yet, as far as pop corn combustion is involved, this might be related to some molecular binding energy.
But was is the link from the microscopic to the macroscopic and the definition H=E+PV ?

Here is an extract from wikipedia:

"Enthalpy is a measure of the total energy of a thermodynamic system. It includes the internal energy, which is the energy required to create a system, and the amount of energy required to make room for it by displacing its environment and establishing its volume and pressure."

I do not feel very satisfied with that definition.
It is much better to write a balance equation and stick to it.
I never feel uncomfortable with balance equations.

This discussion is really a pedagogical issue.
How is it best to teach, or to talk, about enthalpy?
 
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  • #27
lalbatros said:
You are right Zeppos10, yet I preffer the full story and dislike fuzzy definitions.
Although I am said to be right, yet (!) I also prefer (and give) the full story (enthalpy is a form of energy) and I also dislike fuzzy definitions. (Hence: H=U+pV= sum of 2 forms of energy: nothing fuzzy about it.)
Although you state:
lalbatros said:
For me it makes no sense to talk about "a form of energy".
Yet you do (for 'term' read 'form'):
lalbatros said:
I still do not see how enthalpy can be seen as a sum of microscopic bits of energy,
kinetic and potential term, quantum mechanical version if needed.
The problem is that the definition of 'potential energy' is somewhat fuzzy. It is believed that " Energy forms are either potential or kinetic." [http://www.eia.doe.gov/kids/energy.cfm?page=about_forms_of_energy-forms].
If this holds then the pV-term in enthalpy will have to be classified as potential energy, since it is obviously not a kinetic term. However now you still have to distinguish different forms of potential energy.
lalbatros said:
For me, this just means one item in an energy balance, as I said earlier.
In your example, 370 kcal/100g of corn flakes is indeed just a term in an energy balance.
Moreover, you should justify why this is called "enthalpy of combustion" and not "energy of combustion" or even "free energy of combustion", and why this makes sense.
In many instances 'enthalpy' can be replaced by 'energy', because it is a form of energy. In the same way you can replace 'kinetic energy' by 'energy', but in all cases you get less specific, hence more fuzzy, and nothing is gained by that substitution.
The way the measurement is made for the 'caloric value' is the way the enthalpy of combustion is made.
(nb: I am not going to expand this discussion to 'free energy': I consider that as an attempt to sidetrack this discussion.)
lalbatros said:
At my work, I use thermodynamics everyday, but mostly at constant pressure.
Therefore, I am using the enthalpy everyday without really going back to its meaning everyday. I am doing this since twenty years.
It might be a good idea to reconsider.
lalbatros said:
I still do not see how enthalpy can be seen as a sum of microscopic bits of energy,
kinetic and potential term, quantum mechanical version if needed.
Yet, as far as pop corn combustion is involved, this might be related to some molecular binding energy. But what is the link from the microscopic to the macroscopic and the definition H=E+PV ?
If you know what 'volume' is on the microscopic level, you have your anwer.
lalbatros said:
Here is an extract from wikipedia:
"Enthalpy is a measure of the total energy of a thermodynamic system. It includes the internal energy, which is the energy required to create a system, and the amount of energy required to make room for it by displacing its environment and establishing its volume and pressure."
I do not feel very satisfied with that definition.
I don't feel satisfied either: enthalpy is not 'total energy' because it does not include macroscopic mechanical energy.
lalbatros said:
It is much better to write a balance equation and stick to it.
Much better then what ?
lalbatros said:
This discussion is really a pedagogical issue.
How is it best to teach, or to talk, about enthalpy?
No: this discussion is about terms that have to be taken into account in a proper energy balance, which applies to all systems at bwork. But you are right: teaching thermodynamics becomes much more abstract if enthalpy is considered a 'Legendre Transform' (see elsewere in this forum) or 'An accounting artefact'.
 

What is the difference between enthalpy and internal energy?

Enthalpy and internal energy are both thermodynamic properties used to describe a system. Enthalpy (H) is defined as the sum of a system's internal energy (U) and the product of its pressure (P) and volume (V). In other words, H = U + PV. Internal energy, on the other hand, is the total energy of a system due to the movement and interactions of its particles. It does not take into account any changes in pressure or volume.

How are enthalpy and internal energy measured?

Enthalpy and internal energy are both measured in units of energy, such as Joules (J) in the SI system. Enthalpy can be measured experimentally by measuring the change in heat (Q) at constant pressure (P), using the equation ΔH = Q. Internal energy can also be measured experimentally, typically by measuring the change in temperature (ΔT) at constant volume (V), using the equation ΔU = nCΔT, where n is the number of moles of the substance and C is its molar heat capacity.

Which one, enthalpy or internal energy, is more useful in practical applications?

The usefulness of enthalpy and internal energy depends on the specific application. In many cases, enthalpy is more useful because it takes into account any changes in pressure or volume, which can be important in certain processes. For example, in chemical reactions, enthalpy change (ΔH) is often used to calculate the amount of heat released or absorbed. However, in some cases, internal energy may be more useful, such as in studying the behavior of gases.

Can enthalpy and internal energy be converted into each other?

No, enthalpy and internal energy cannot be converted into each other because they represent different properties of a system. Enthalpy takes into account pressure and volume, while internal energy does not. However, both enthalpy and internal energy can be converted into other forms of energy, such as work or heat.

What is the relationship between enthalpy and internal energy in a closed system?

In a closed system where no energy is exchanged with the surroundings, the change in internal energy (ΔU) is equal to the amount of heat added to the system (Q) minus the amount of work done by the system (W), or ΔU = Q - W. In this case, the change in enthalpy (ΔH) is equal to the amount of heat added to the system at constant pressure (ΔH = Q). This means that for closed systems under constant pressure, the change in enthalpy is equal to the change in internal energy plus the work done by the system, or ΔH = ΔU + PΔV.

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