TITLE.PM5

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BASIC CONCEPTS OF THERMODYNAMICS 45

dharm
M-therm/th2-2.pm5


Equilibrium
states

1

2

p

V

patm

pgas

170 mm

Liquid
(Sp. gravity = 0.8)
X X

Solution. Equating pressure on both arms above the
line XX (Fig. 2.27), we get
pgas + pliquid = patm. ...(i)
Now, pliquid = ρ.g.h

= (0.8 × 1000) × 9.81 × 1000170
= 1334.16 N/m^2
= 0.0133416 bar
patm. = 760 mm of Hg = 1.01325 bar
Substituting these value is eqn. (i) above, we have
pgas + 0.0133416 = 1.01325
∴ pgas = 0.9999 bar. (Ans.)
Example 2.9. Estimate the mass of a piston that can be supported by a gas entrapped
under the piston in a 200 mm diameter vertical cylinder when a manometer indicates a difference
of 117 mm of Hg column for the gas pressure. (Poona University, May 1996)
Solution. Refer Fig. 2.28.
Let m = mass of the piston, kg.
p = pressure of the gas
= 117 mm of Hg column
Dia. of vertical cylinder, d = 200 mm
Now, downward force = m.g ...(i)
and upward force = p × π/4 d^2 ...(ii)
Equating eqns. (i) and (ii), we get
m.g = p × π/4 d^2

m × 9.81 = 136 1000 981
117
..××× 1000
F
H

I

π
4

200
1000

2
×FH IK (Q p = ρgh)

∴ m = 49.989 kg.(Ans.)

2.18. REVERSIBLE AND IRREVERSIBLE PROCESSES
Reversible process. A reversible process (also sometimes
known as quasi-static process) is one which can be stopped at any
stage and reversed so that the system and surroundings are exactly
restored to their initial states.
This process has the following characteristics :


  1. It must pass through the same states on the reversed path
    as were initially visited on the forward path.

  2. This process when undone will leave no history of events in
    the surroundings.

  3. It must pass through a continuous series of equilibrium
    states.
    No real process is truely reversible but some processes may approach reversibility, to close
    approximation.


Fig. 2.28

Fig. 2.29. Reversible process.

Fig. 2.27
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