- #36
rkmurtyp
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Red_CCF said:This was the first time I came across the fact that processes with friction cannot be quasistatic as everything I've read up to this point (such as the sources below and other threads) including has indicated that it is possible to have a quasistatic process with friction, so I'm having a tough time accepting this. If the argument for friction applies, what about a process with heat transfer with finite temperature gradient; can those be quasistatic then?
From Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quasistatic_process
From a journal article (I only have access to the abstract unfortunately): http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1960AmJPh..28..119T
I've always thought of the slow enough argument to be qualitative to mean that the rate in which the process proceeds << the rate in which equilibrium is established during the process after an infinitessimal disturbance (an infinitessimal movement of the cylinder). Quantitatively I do not believe time ever factors into any analysis.
With regards to ΔSBC=-ΔSCB= - ΔSsur= -∑(Qi/Ti); Qi here is w.r.t. the surroundings and hence positive? Other than that everything makes sense.
Thanks very much
The references imply this: For quasistatic processes the difference in the values of the intensive properties of the system and surrounding differ by infinitesimal amounts. To that infinitesimal extent the process would be irreversible; only in the case the differences are zero reversibility is attained - when not zero no reversibility (one may coin hundred names such as quasistatic etc, they all continue to remain irreversible). I have used in my arguments reversibility and quasistatic synonimously and ΔP to be zero ( not tending to zero!).
'Rverersibility' concept is a beatiful mental costruct that aids in simplifying the concepts and helps understanding - just as massless, frictionless pistons and pulleys help understanding the concepts easily.
I've always thought of the slow enough argument to be qualitative to mean that the rate in which the process proceeds << the rate in which equilibrium is established during the process after an infinitessimal disturbance (an infinitessimal movement of the cylinder). Quantitatively I do not believe time ever factors into any analysis.
True, time plays no role in thermodynamic processes.
With regards to ΔSBC=-ΔSCB= - ΔSsur= -∑(Qi/Ti); Qi here is w.r.t. the surroundings and hence positive? Other than that everything makes sense.
You are right; Qi here is w.r.t. the surroundings and hence positive - remember when HRs receive heat Qi is positive, and negative when they lose heat.