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Science NCERT Exemplar Solutions (Class 6th to 10th)
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Science NCERT Exemplar Solutions (Class 11th)
Physics Chemistry Biology
Science NCERT Exemplar Solutions (Class 12th)
Physics Chemistry Biology

Class 11th (Physics) Chapters
1. Introduction 2. Units And Measurements 3. Motion In A Straight Line
4. Motion In A Plane 5. Laws Of Motion 6. Work, Energy And Power
7. System Of Particles And Rotational Motion 8. Gravitation 9. Mechanical Properties Of Solids
10. Mechanical Properties Of Fluids 11. Thermal Properties Of Matter 12. Thermodynamics
13. Kinetic Theory 14. Oscillations 15. Waves
Sample Paper I Sample Paper II



Chapter 12 Thermodynamics



Multiple Answer Questions (Type - II)

Question 12.1. An ideal gas undergoes four different processes from the same initial state (Fig. 12.1). Four processes are adiabatic, isothermal, isobaric and isochoric. Out of 1, 2, 3 and 4 which one is adiabatic.

P-V diagram showing four processes from an initial state. Process 1 is vertical (isochoric), 4 is horizontal (isobaric), 2 and 3 are curves with 2 being steeper than 3.

(a) 4

(b) 3

(c) 2

(d) 1

Answer:

Question 12.2. If an average person jogs, hse produces $14.5 \times 10^3$ cal/min. This is removed by the evaporation of sweat. The amount of sweat evaporated per minute (assuming 1 kg requires $580 \times 10^3$ cal for evaparation) is

(a) 0.25 kg

(b) 2.25 kg

(c) 0.05 kg

(d) 0.20 kg

Answer:

Question 12.3. Consider P-V diagram for an ideal gas shown in Fig 12.2.

P-V diagram for an ideal gas. The process from 1 to 2 is a straight line passing through the origin, implying P is proportional to V.

Out of the following diagrams (Fig. 12.3), which represents the T-P diagram?

Four possible T-P diagrams. (i) P constant. (ii) T constant. (iii) P decreasing with T. (iv) P increasing with T.

(a) (iv)

(b) (ii)

(c) (iii)

(d) (i)

Answer:

Question 12.4. An ideal gas undergoes cyclic process ABCDA as shown in given P-V diagram (Fig. 12.4).

A rectangular cyclic process on a P-V diagram. A is at (V0, P0), B is at (2V0, P0), C is at (2V0, 3P0), and D is at (V0, 3P0).

The amount of work done by the gas is

(a) $6P_oV_o$

(b) $–2 P_oV_o$

(c) $+ 2 P_oV_o$

(d) $+ 4 P_oV_o$

Answer:

Question 12.5. Consider two containers A and B containing identical gases at the same pressure, volume and temperature. The gas in container A is compressed to half of its original volume isothermally while the gas in container B is compressed to half of its original value adiabatically. The ratio of final pressure of gas in B to that of gas in A is

(a) $2^{\gamma - 1}$

(b) $(\frac{1}{2})^{\gamma - 1}$

(c) $(\frac{1}{2})^{1 - \gamma}$

(d) $2^{1 - \gamma}$

Answer:

Question 12.6. Three copper blocks of masses $M_1, M_2$ and $M_3$ kg respectively are brought into thermal contact till they reach equilibrium. Before contact, they were at $T_1, T_2, T_3 (T_1 > T_2 > T_3)$. Assuming there is no heat loss to the surroundings, the equilibrium temprature T is (s is specific heat of copper)

(a) $T = \frac{T_1 + T_2 + T_3}{3}$

(b) $T = \frac{M_1 T_1 + M_2 T_2 + M_3 T_3}{M_1 + M_2 + M_3}$

(c) $T = \frac{M_1 T_1 + M_2 T_2 + M_3 T_3}{3(M_1 + M_2 + M_3)}$

(d) $T = \frac{M_1 T_1 s + M_2 T_2 s + M_3 T_3 s}{M_1 + M_2 + M_3}$

Answer:



Multiple Answer Questions (Type - II)

Question 12.7. Which of the processes described below are irreversible?

(a) The increase in temprature of an iron rod by hammering it.

(b) A gas in a small cantainer at a temprature $T_1$ is brought in contact with a big reservoir at a higher temprature $T_2$ which increases the temprature of the gas.

(c) A quasi-static isothermal expansion of an ideal gas in cylinder fitted with a frictionless piston.

(d) An ideal gas is enclosed in a piston cylinder arrangement with adiabatic walls. A weight W is added to the piston, resulting in compression of gas.

Answer:

Question 12.8. An ideal gas undergoes isothermal process from some initial state i to final state f. Choose the correct alternatives.

(a) $dU = 0$

(b) $dQ = 0$

(c) $dQ = dU$

(d) $dQ = dW$

Answer:

Question 12.9. Figure 12.5 shows the P-V diagram of an ideal gas undergoing a change of state from A to B. Four different parts I, II, III and IV as shown in the figure may lead to the same change of state.

P-V diagram showing a change of state from A to B via four different paths labeled I, II, III, and IV. All paths start at A and end at B.

(a) Change in internal energy is same in IV and III cases, but not in I and II.

(b) Change in internal energy is same in all the four cases.

(c) Work done is maximum in case I

(d) Work done is minimum in case II.

Answer:

Question 12.10. Consider a cycle followed by an engine (Fig. 12.6)

1 to 2 is isothermal

2 to 3 is adiabatic

3 to 1 is adiabatic

A P-V diagram showing a cyclic process 1-2-3-1. 1 to 2 is an isotherm. 2 to 3 is an adiabat. 3 to 1 is also an adiabat, which is impossible as two adiabats cannot intersect.

Such a process does not exist because

(a) heat is completely converted to mechanical energy in such a process, which is not possible.

(b) mechanical energy is completely converted to heat in this process,which is not possible.

(c) curves representing two adiabatic processes don’t intersect.

(d) curves representing an adiabatic process and an isothermal process don’t intersect.

Answer:

Question 12.11. Consider a heat engine as shown in Fig. 12.7. $Q_1$ and $Q_2$ are heat added to heat bath $T_1$ and heat taken from $T_2$ in one cycle of engine. W is the mechanical work done on the engine.

Schematic of a heat engine. A hot bath at T1 provides heat Q1 to the engine. The engine performs work W and rejects heat Q2 to a cold bath at T2.

If W > 0, then possibilities are:

(a) $Q_1 > Q_2 > 0$

(b) $Q_2 > Q_1 > 0$

(c) $Q_2 < Q_1 < 0$

(d) $Q_1 < 0, Q_2 > 0$

Answer:



Very Short Answer Questions

Question 12.12. Can a system be heated and its temperature remains constant?

Answer:

Question 12.13. A system goes from P to Q by two different paths in the P-V diagram as shown in Fig. 12.8. Heat given to the system in path 1 is 1000 J. The work done by the system along path 1 is more than path 2 by 100 J. What is the heat exchanged by the system in path 2?

A P-V diagram showing two paths (1 and 2) for a system going from state P to state Q.

Answer:

Question 12.14. If a refrigerator’s door is kept open, will the room become cool or hot? Explain.

Answer:

Question 12.15. Is it possible to increase the temperature of a gas without adding heat to it? Explain.

Answer:

Question 12.16. Air pressure in a car tyre increases during driving. Explain.

Answer:



Short Answer Questions

Question 12.17. Consider a Carnot’s cycle operating between $T_1 = 500K$ and $T_2=300K$ producing 1 kJ of mechanical work per cycle. Find the heat transferred to the engine by the reservoirs.

Answer:

Question 12.18. A person of mass 60 kg wants to lose 5kg by going up and down a 10m high stairs. Assume he burns twice as much fat while going up than coming down. If 1 kg of fat is burnt on expending 7000 kilo calories, how many times must he go up and down to reduce his weight by 5 kg?

Answer:

Question 12.19. Consider a cycle tyre being filled with air by a pump. Let V be the volume of the tyre (fixed) and at each stroke of the pump $\Delta V (<< V)$ of air is transferred to the tube adiabatically. What is the work done when the pressure in the tube is increased from $P_1$ to $P_2$?

Answer:

Question 12.20. In a refrigerator one removes heat from a lower temperature and deposits to the surroundings at a higher temperature. In this process, mechanical work has to be done, which is provided by an electric motor. If the motor is of 1kW power, and heat is transferred from –3°C to 27°C, find the heat taken out of the refrigerator per second assuming its efficiency is 50% of a perfect engine.

Answer:

Question 12.21. If the co-efficient of performance of a refrigerator is 5 and operates at the room temperature (27 °C), find the temperature inside the refrigerator.

Answer:

Question 12.22. The initial state of a certain gas is ($P_i, V_i, T_i$). It undergoes expansion till its volume becoms $V_f$. Consider the following two cases:

(a) the expansion takes place at constant temperature.

(b) the expansion takes place at constant pressure.

Plot the P-V diagram for each case. In which of the two cases, is the work done by the gas more?

Answer:



Long Answer Questions

Question 12.23. Consider a P-V diagram in which the path followed by one mole of perfect gas in a cylindrical container is shown in Fig. 12.9.

P-V diagram for a gas expanding from state 1 (P1, V1, T1) to state 2 (P2, V2, T2) following the curve PV^(1/2) = constant.

(a) Find the work done when the gas is taken from state 1 to state 2.

(b) What is the ratio of temperature $T_1/T_2$, if $V_2 = 2V_1$?

(c) Given the internal energy for one mole of gas at temperature T is (3/2)RT, find the heat supplied to the gas when it is taken from state 1 to 2, with $V_2 = 2V_1$.

Answer:

Question 12.24. A cycle followed by an engine (made of one mole of perfect gas in a cylinder with a piston) is shown in Fig. 12.10.

A to B : volume constant

B to C : adiabatic

C to D : volume constant

D to A : adiabatic

$V_C = V_D = 2V_A = 2V_B$

P-V diagram for a thermodynamic cycle. A to B is isochoric, B to C is adiabatic expansion, C to D is isochoric, and D to A is adiabatic compression.

(a) In which part of the cycle heat is supplied to the engine from outside?

(b) In which part of the cycle heat is being given to the surrounding by the engine?

(c) What is the work done by the engine in one cycle? Write your answer in term of $P_A, P_B, V_A$.

(d) What is the efficiency of the engine?

($\gamma = 5/3$ for the gas], ($C_v = \frac{3}{2}R$ for one mole)

Answer:

Question 12.25. A cycle followed by an engine (made of one mole of an ideal gas in a cylinder with a piston) is shown in Fig. 12.11. Find heat exchanged by the engine, with the surroundings for each section of the cycle. ($C_v = (3/2) R$)

AB : constant volume

BC : constant pressure

CD : adiabatic

DA : constant pressure

P-V diagram of a thermodynamic cycle. AB is isochoric heating, BC is isobaric expansion, CD is adiabatic expansion, and DA is isobaric compression.

Answer:

Question 12.26. Consider that an ideal gas (n moles) is expanding in a process given by $P = f(V)$, which passes through a point ($V_0, P_0$). Show that the gas is absorbing heat at ($P_0, V_0$) if the slope of the curve $P = f(V)$ is larger than the slope of the adiabat passing through ($P_0, V_0$).

Answer:

Question 12.27. Consider one mole of perfect gas in a cylinder of unit cross section with a piston attached (Fig. 12.12). A spring (spring constant k) is attached (unstretched length L) to the piston and to the bottom of the cylinder. Initially the spring is unstretched and the gas is in equilibrium. A certain amount of heat Q is supplied to the gas causing an increase of volume from $V_o$ to $V_1$.

A cylinder with a piston. A spring is attached between the bottom of the cylinder and the piston. The gas is inside the cylinder below the piston.

(a) What is the initial pressure of the system?

(b) What is the final pressure of the system?

(c) Using the first law of thermodynamics, write down a relation between Q, $P_a$, V, $V_o$ and k.

Answer: