SAT Subject Test Chemistry,10 edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Systems and Surroundings: The First Law of


Thermodynamics


The term system is used to describe the particular part of the universe we are focusing our attention
on: a beaker, a cell, Earth and its atmosphere, et cetera; everything outside the system is considered
the surroundings or environment (i.e., system + surroundings = universe). A system may be classified
as:


BASIC CONCEPT


Three   Types   of  Systems

You may have learned that energy, though interconvertible among all its different forms (kinetic,
potential, et cetera), is conserved: The total amount of energy has to be constant. This is true of a
particular system only if it is isolated. Since energy can neither go in nor go out, it has to be
conserved. If the system is closed or open, the amount of energy in the system can certainly change.
A system can exchange energy with its surroundings in two general ways: as heat or as work. The


Isolated—when   it  cannot  exchange    energy  or  matter  with    the surroundings,   as  with    an
insulated bomb reactor or a well-insulated Thermos flask
Closed—when it can exchange energy but not matter with the surroundings, as with a steam
radiator or a stoppered test tube out of (and into) which heat can flow
Open—when it can exchange both matter and energy with the surroundings, as with a pot of
boiling water: Water molecules are escaping into the gas phase, bringing energy with them.

Isolated
Closed
Open
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