In thermodynamics, the internal energy of a thermodynamic system, or a body with well-defined
boundaries, denoted by U, or sometimes E, is the total of the
kinetic energy due to the motion of molecules
(translational, rotational, vibrational) and the potential energy associated with the
vibrational and electric energy of atoms within molecules or
crystals. It includes the energy in all the chemical bonds, and the energy of the free, conduction
electrons in metals.
The internal energy is a thermodynamic potential and for a closed thermodynamic system held at constant
entropy, it will be minimized.
One can also calculate the internal energy of electromagnetic or
blackbody radiation. It is a state function of a
system, an extensive quantity. The
SI unit of energy is the joule
although other historical, conventional units are still in use, such as the (small and large) calorie for heat.
Overview
Internal energy does not include the translational or rotational kinetic energy of a body as a whole. It also
does not include the relativistic mass-energy
equivalent E = mc2. It excludes any potential energy a body may have because of its
location in external gravitational or electrostatic field, although the potential energy it has in a
field due to an induced electric or magnetic
dipole moment does count, as does the energy of
deformation of solids (stress-strain).
The principle of equipartition of energy in classical statistical mechanics states that each
molecular degree of freedom receives 1/2 kT of
energy, a result which was modified when quantum mechanics explained certain
anomalies; e.g., in the observed specific
heats of crystals (when hν > kT). For monatomic
helium and other noble gases, the internal energy consists
only of the translational kinetic energy of the individual atoms. Monatomic
particles, of course, do not (sensibly) rotate or vibrate, and are not electronically
excited to higher energies except at very high temperatures.
From the standpoint of statistical mechanics, the internal energy is equal to
the ensemble average of the total energy of the system.
Composition
Internal energy – the sum of all microscopic forms of energy of a system. It is
related to the molecular structure and the degree of molecular activity and may be viewed as the sum of kinetic and potential
energies of the molecules; it is comprised of the following types of energies:[1]
| Type |
Composition of Internal Energy (U) |
| Sensible energy |
the portion of the internal energy of a system associated with
kinetic energies (molecular translation, rotation, and vibration; electron translation and spin; and nuclear spin) of the
molecules. |
| Latent energy |
the internal energy associated with the phase of a
system. |
| Chemical energy |
the internal energy associated with the atomic bonds in a
molecule. |
| Nuclear energy |
the tremendous amount of energy associated with the strong
bonds within the nucleus of the atom itself. |
| Energy interactions |
those types of energies not stored in the system (e.g. heat
transfer, mass transfer, and work), but
which are recognized at the system boundary as they cross it, which represent gains
or losses by a system during a process. |
| Thermal energy |
the sum of sensible and latent forms of internal energy. |
The first law of thermodynamics
The internal energy is essentially defined by the first law of
thermodynamics which states that energy is conserved:

where
- ΔU is the change in internal energy of a system during a process.
- Q is heat added to a system (measured in joules in
SI); that is, a positive value for
Q represents heat flow into a system while a negative value denotes heat flow
out of a system.
- W is the mechanical work done on a system (measured in joules in
SI)
- W' is energy added by all other processes
The first law may be equivalently in infinitesimal terms as:

where the terms now represent infinitesimal amounts of the respective quantities. The d before the internal energy
function indicates that it is an exact differential. In other words it is a state function or a value which can be assigned to
the system. On the other hand, the δ's before the other terms indicate that they describe increments of energy which are not
state functions but rather they are processes by which the internal energy is changed. (See the discussion in the
first law article.)
From a microscopic point of view, the internal energy may be found in many different forms. For a gas it may consist almost
entirely of the kinetic energy of the gas molecules. It may also consist of the potential
energy of these molecules in a gravitational, electric, or magnetic field. For any material, solid, liquid or
gaseous, it may also consist of the potential energy of attraction or repulsion between the individual molecules of the
material.
Expressions for the internal energy
Strictly speaking, the internal energy cannot be precisely measured. This is because only changes in the internal energy can
be measured, and the total internal energy of a given system is the difference between the internal energy of the system and the
internal energy of the same system at absolute zero temperature. Since absolute zero cannot be attained, the total internal
energy cannot be precisely measured. The same is true of other thermodynamic parameters such as entropy and the chemical potential.
The internal energy may be expressed in terms of other thermodynamic parameters. Each term is composed of an intensive variable (a generalized force) and its conjugate infinitesimal extensive variable (a generalized displacement).
For example, for a non-viscous fluid, the mechanical work done on the system may be related to the pressure p and volume V. The pressure is the intensive
generalized force, while the volume is the extensive generalized displacement:
Taking the default direction of work, W, to be from the working fluid to the
surroundings,
.
- p is the pressure
- V is the volume
Taking the default direction of heat transfer, Q, to be into the working fluid and
assuming a reversible process, we have
.
- T is temperature
- S is entropy
Although the internal energy is not exactly measurable, it may be expressed in terms of other similarly unmeasurable
quantities. Using the above two equations in the first law of thermodynamics
to construct one possible expression for the internal energy of a closed system gives:

The internal energy function may be written as U(S,V) in which case it
follows that, since U, S, and V are extensive

From Euler's homogeneous function theorem we may now write the internal energy
as:

If the (non-viscous) fluid gains energy from the addition of particles, we add the chemical energy term:

.
- μi is the chemical potential of
chemical species i. It is an intensive variable.
- Ni is the particle number of
chemical species i. It is an extensive variable.
For an elastic substance the mechanical term must be replaced by the more general
expression involving the stress σij and strain
. The infinitesimal statement
is:

where Einstein notation has been used for the tensors, in which there is a
summation over all repeated indices in the product term. For a linearly elastic material, the stress can be related to the strain
by:

and the Euler theorem yields for the internal energy [#wp-endnote_LL_ (Landau & Lifshitz 1986)]:

References
- Lewis, Gilbert Newton; Randall, Merle: Revised by Pitzer, Kenneth S. &
Brewer, Leo (1961). Thermodynamics, 2nd Edition, New York, NY USA: McGraw-Hill Book Co.. ISBN
0-07-113809-9.
- Landau, L. D.; Lifshitz, E.
M. (1986). Theory of Elasticity (Course of Theoretical Physics Volume 7), (Translated from Russian by J.B. Sykes
and W.H. Reid), Third ed., Boston, MA: Butterworth Heinemann. ISBN 0-7506-2633-X.
- ^ Cengel, Yungus, A.; Boles, Michael (2002). Thermodynamics - An Engineering Approach, 4th ed..
McGraw-Hill, 17-18. ISBN 0-07-238332-1.
See also
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)