Syllabus, Thermodynamics
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Credit Hours
2
Course Type
General Engineering
Terms Offered
Fall, Spring
Catalog Description
EML 3100. Thermodynamics. Fundamentals of thermodynamics. System
description, common properties. Properties of pure substances.
Mathematical foundations. First and Second Laws of Thermodynamics,
closed and open systems. Equations of state and general thermodynamic
relations. For non-mechanical engineering majors.
Prerequisites
CHM 1045, MAC 2312, and PHY 2048
Instructor
Dr. Leon van Dommelen
Office: M 11-12 noon in A242 CEB (old building), help sessions
MW 4:30-6:45 in A223 CEB (or A242).
E-mail: dommelen@eng.famu.fsu.edu
Web page:
http://www.eng.famu.fsu.edu/~dommelen
Phone: 410-6324
More contact info:
http://www.eng.famu.fsu.edu/~dommelen/contact
Grader
Charles DeMartino, cd10h.
Class times are TR 11:45-1:00 in
A 105 (old building).
Tuesday |
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Thursday |
1/7 |
Topics: Introductory Comments
Read: 1.1-1.11
HW:
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1/9 |
Topics: Concepts and Definitions
Read: 1.1-1.11
HW:
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1/14 |
Topics: Properties of a Pure Substance
Read: 3.1-3.5
HW: Click here
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1/16 |
Topics: Properties of a Pure Substance
Read: 3.1-3.5
HW: Click here
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1/21 |
Topics: Properties of a Pure Substance
Read: 3.6-3.8
HW: Click here
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1/23 |
Topics: Work and Heat
Read: 4.1
HW: Click here
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1/28 |
Topics: Work and Heat
Read: 4.1, 2.3
HW: Click here
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1/30 |
Review
HW: Click here
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2/4 |
EXAM 1
| |
2/6 |
Topics: First Law of Thermo, Internal Energy, Enthalpy
Read: 2.2-2.6, 3.5, 4.2
HW:
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2/11 |
Topics: Specific Heat, Ideal Gases
Read: 4.3-4.5
HW: Click here
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2/13 |
Topics: 1st law formulations
Read: 4.1-4.5
HW: Click here
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2/18 |
Topics: SSSF
Read: 5.1-5.4
HW: Click here
| |
2/20 |
Topics: SSSF
Read: 5.1-5.4
HW: Click here
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2/21 Last day to drop in general |
2/25 |
Topics: SSSF
Read: 5.1-5.4
HW: Click here
| |
2/27 |
Review
HW: Click here
|
3/4 |
EXAM 2
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3/6 |
Topics: 2nd Law, Carnot Cycle, Temperature
Read: 6.1-6.2, 6.6. qs2nd,
HW:
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3/11 |
Spring Break
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3/13 |
Spring Break
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3/18 |
Topics: 2nd Law, Carnot Cycle, Temperature
Read: 6.7-6.11 qsrev
HW: Click here
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3/20 |
Review
HW: Click here
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3/25 |
Topics: Entropy
Read: 7.1-7.2 first
part of qsent,
HW:
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3/27 |
Topics: Entropy Changes, Polytropic Proc.
Read: 7.3-7.5
HW: Click here
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3/28 Last day to drop,
selected students |
4/1 |
Topics: More Entropy, Irreversible Processes
Read: 7.8-7-9.
HW: Click here
| |
4/3 |
Topics: 2nd Law for CV, Entropy & SSSF
Read: 7.10, 7.13.
HW: Click here
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4/8 |
Topics: Entropy and SSSF Processes
Read: 7.10, 7.13
HW: Click here
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4/10 |
Topics: Reversible shaft work
Read: 7.10, 7.13
HW: Click here
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4/15 |
Review
HW: Click here
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4/17 |
EXAM 3
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4/22 |
Topics: Efficiency
Read: 7.12.
HW:
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4/24 |
Review
HW: Click here
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Wednesday, April 30, 3-5 pm, in
A 105: Comprehensive Final
|
Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach by Yunus A. Çengel
and Michael A. Boles. Seventh Edition, McGraw-Hill Companies,
Inc. (2011) ISBN: 007352932x.
Science/Design
Engineering Science: 100%
Course Topics
Thermodynamics. See schedule.
Assessment Tools
Grading is at the discretion of the instructors and grader.
Your numerical grade will normally be computed as follows:
Homework | 15% |
Exam 1 | 20% |
Exam 2 | 20% |
Exam 3 | 20% |
Final Exam | 25% |
Your letter grade will then be assigned according to the following
table:
Numerical Grade | Letter Grade |
0-44 | F |
45-58 | D |
59-72 | C |
73-86 | B |
87-100 | A |
Course Objectives
- Teach thermodynamics.
Student Learning Outcomes
At the conclusion of the course you should be able to:
- Understand and use thermodynamic property tables. [1]
- Perform simple graphical analysis of the phase that a substance
is in. [1]
- Compute work performed by an amount of substance during various
processes. [1]
- Apply the first and second laws of thermodynamics to an amount of
substance and to a control volume. [1]
- Compute thermal efficiencies and second law limitations for
these. [1]
Samples of specific problems are in the lecture notes, old exams,
and in homework assignments.
Numbers in square brackets refer to the Course Objectives above.
Methods of Instruction
Lectures, problem solving sessions, examinations, web-based information.
Computer Requirements
Students must have an E-mail address and daily check their E-mail.
Students must be able to use a Web browser such as Netscape. The
class web page can be accessed at
http://www.eng.famu.fsu.edu/~dommelen/courses/eml3100
Exams
- No make-up exams will be given. A zero grade will be assigned
instead.
- However, you are allowed to miss or fail one exam, including the
final. More precisely, your lowest exam will be replaced using the
average score of your other three tests.
- Exams are closed book.
- You may bring one handwritten, letter-size, single sheet
formula sheet to each exam and the final. Copies of handwritten
material, or of anything else, are not acceptable. You can write on
the sheet whatever you want, on either side. Invalid formulae
sheets result result in the assignment of a zero for the grade for
that exam.
- You can and should bring a basic calculator.
- The required tables from the book will be provided: Cengel:
Conversion factors, A1-A7, A17, A20, A24-A25.
- Copying or receiving any assistance not explicitly permitted by
the instructor is a violation of your honor code and will be pursued
vigorously.
- The same for allowing another student to copy.
- Work out and give the answers to at least 5 significant digits
where possible.
You must show for every number that you give where it comes from.
(The table used, and the location in that table. Or the formula used
to compute the number and the numbers put in it.) Otherwise wrong
numbers will receive zero credit and right numbers reduced credit.
Homework
- Homework must be neat. What we cannot easily read, we will not
grade. Grading of homework will depend on the availability of a
grader. All work and reasoning must be shown to demonstrate your
mastery of the material.
- Homework must be handed in at the start of the lecture at
which it is due. It may not be handed in at the departmental
office or at the end of class. Homework that is not received at the
start of class on the due date listed above cannot be made up unless
permission to hand in late has been given before the homework
is due, or it was not humanly possible to ask for such permission
before the class. If there is a chance you may be late in class, hand
the homework in to the instructor the day before it is due. (Shove it
under his door if necessary.) This also applies to Web students: they
must E-mail the homework before the time the class starts.
- Late homework cannot be accepted. A zero grade will be assigned
instead.
- However, you are allowed to miss two homeworks. In particular,
your lowest two homework grades will be replaced using the average
score for the rest of your homework. You still need to know how to do
such questions for the exams.
- Homework assignments for each lecture are listed at
http://www.eng.famu.fsu.edu/~dommelen/courses/eml3100/14/hw.
- You will find doing homework takes time, but the practice is
essential for passing the exams.
- The solutions to all questions will be posted at
http://www.eng.famu.fsu.edu/~dommelen/courses/eml3100/14/hwsol
after the lecture that it is due. You are responsible for checking
your own methods and answers against these solutions. If you do not
understand the posted answer, see the instructor; office hours are
listed above.
- Homework cannot be comprehensive; the selection is intended to
give you an hint whether you have major gaps in the most important
parts. I am open to suggestions for improvement, but of course,
realistically most students only have so much time. If you feel
unprepared, additionally do the "Concept-study guide problems" and
"How-to" sections.
- If you have problems solving the homework problems, go over the
relevant sections in your notes and the book. If you still have
problems, please ask for help from the instructor; office hours are
listed above. There is not going to be a Deus-ex-machina to
allow you to miraculously solve the problems on the exam that you
could not do in the homework.
- Working together on homework is highly recommended. You will see
more, and catch more mistakes. And it is more fun too. You must
however each turn in individual solutions. You need to phrase your
own answers and compute your own numbers.
- Copying homework solutions from someone else is never allowed and
counts as academic dishonesty. There is a big difference between
working together and copying.
- The same for allowing another student to copy your homework.
- Looking at the solution, wether from some solution manual or from
another student, while doing the homework or, worse, instead of
doing the homework, is going to give you a false sense of security.
You will almost certainly be in for a very unpleasant shock at the
exams. Please help us reduce the class size next time by passing
this time.
- Make sure you keep all returned graded homeworks until you have
received your final course grade, in case discrepancies arise.
Important Regulations
Must Check Dates Immediately
Immediately check the dates listed in the schedule above for any
conflicts. Enter the exam dates in your planner. If conflicts exist,
contact the instructor immediately.
Must Check E-mail Daily
Students must check their e-mail to the address they gave
the instructor at least once a day. Failure to do so may result in
missed exams and/or other problems.
Copying
- Copying of homework, assignments, or tests is never allowed and
will result in a failing or zero grade for the copied work, and other
actions. It will also result in a failing or zero grade of the person
whose work is being copied if that person could reasonably have
prevented the copying.
- However, working together is typically allowed and
encouraged for most homeworks, (and sometimes for other take-home
assignments,) as long as you present the final results in your own
words and using your own line of reasoning. Since close similarities
between solutions will reduce credit, it is better not to formally put
down anything until you have figured out the problem, and then let
each person write their own solution. If it is unclear whether
working together is allowed on any assignment, check with the
instructor beforehand.
Attendance Policy
Initial attendence
FSU students are dropped if not present the first day of classes.
FAMU students are dropped if not attending at the end of the first
week.
Excused absences
You should contact the instructor as soon as possible when the
need for an excused absence arrives.
Excused absences include documented illness, deaths in the
immediate family and other documented crises, call to active military
duty or jury duty, religious holy days, and official University
activities. Accommodations for these excused absences will be made
and will do so in a way that does not penalize students who have a
valid excuse. Consideration will also be given to students whose
dependent children experience serious illness. See however the
notification requirements below.
Please note that the College of Engineering has a restrictive
interpretation of what is considered a valid excuse for an
absence. See:
http://www.eng.famu.fsu.edu/current/undergraduate/guide.html
If an absence is to be excused, make sure you check beforehand. In
case of excused absence, the instructor will work with you to help you
make up for missed time and catch up, subject to the notification
requirements below.
Classes are not suspended at the College of Engineering unless
they are suspended at both institutions. If you are required to attend
a university event, you can receive an excused absence. Otherwise,
your absence is considered unexcused.
You must notify me in the first week of the semester if you will
need an excused absence during a scheduled examination for observance
of a religious holy day. If you will need such an absence for a
planned event, you must notify me at the start of the semester, or the
day that the event is scheduled if later. If an emergency prevents
you from attending a scheduled examination, you must notified me at
your earliest opportunity, by e-mail (check that you get a timely
response from me), phone, or in person. Please provide official
documentation of event or emergency. In case the notification
procedures are not followed, no make up examination will be given and
a zero will be assigned.
Unexcused absences
A student having more than four unexcused absences will be dropped
from the course and assigned the grade F. No exceptions. Tests and
exams missed because of unexcused absence receive the grade 0. No
exceptions.
Other projects and activities missed completely receive the grade 0
for those projects or activities. No exceptions except as may be noted
elsewhere in this syllabus. Homework handed in after the due date and
time will receive a zero or greatly reduced credit depending on
circumstances and any regulations elsewhere in this syllabus.
Consequential loss of credit
Failure to properly complete homework, tests, assignments, etcetera
due to changes in date, assignment, etcetera, that you did not know
about due to failure to check e-mail, unexcused absence, lateness, or
inattentiveness will not be excused and cannot be made up.
Extract of College Policy
It is the policy of the College not to assign “plus and minus
(+/-)” grades for undergraduate engineering courses.
http://www.eng.famu.fsu.edu/current/undergraduate/guide.html
Any student who has repeated attempts in one or more engineering
courses may be subject to academic sanctions including but not limited
to warning, probation, suspension, or dismissal from their engineering
program. Students should contact the department of their engineering
major for more information regarding this policy.
Learning outcomes/compacts
Engineering program outcomes/student learning outcomes:
http://www.eng.famu.fsu.edu/outcomes
Engineering academic learning compact:
http://www.eng.famu.fsu.edu/about/accreditation/outcomes.html
Florida State University academic learning compact:
http://learningforlife.fsu.edu/smalcs/learningCompact.cfm?smalcId=57339
Honor Policy}
Students are expected to uphold their University Student Code of
Conduct and/or Academic Honor Code. You must read this code if you
have not yet done so.
- Florida A&M University is committed to academic honesty and its
core values which include scholarship, excellence, accountability,
integrity, fairness, respect, and ethics. These core values are
integrated into its academic honesty policy. Being unaware of the
Academic Honesty Policy is not a defense to violations of academic
honesty. Academic Honesty Policy violations shall be reported and
appropriate actions taken by the department chair and associate dean
for student affairs and curriculum. The complete Florida A\&M
Student
Code of Conduct - Regulation 2.012 (10) (s) can be found at
http://www.famu.edu/index.cfm?judicialAffairs&StudentCodeofConduct
- The Florida State University Academic Honor Policy outlines the
University’s expectations for the integrity of students’ academic
work, the procedures for resolving alleged violations of those
expectations, and the rights and responsibilities of students and
faculty members throughout the process. Students are responsible
for reading the Academic Honor Policy and for living up to their
pledge to "... be honest and truthful and ... [to] strive
for personal and institutional integrity at Florida State
University." The complete
Florida State University Academic Honor Policy can be found at
http://fda.fsu.edu/Academics/Academic-Honor-Policy
Possible sanction for violations of your code
of conduct and/or honor code include but are not limited to:
- a failing grade on an exam or assignment,
- a failing grade in the course,
- dismissal from the academic program,
- dismissal from the university.
Americans with Disabilities Act
Students with disabilities needing academic accommodation should:
- Register with and provide documentation to the appropriate
university office. For FAMU students, this is the Learning
Development and Evaluation Center (LEDC). For FSU students this is
the Student Disability Resource Center (SDRC);
- Bring a letter to the instructor indicating the need for
accommodation and what type.
This should be done during the first week of class.
For more information about services available to students with
disabilities:
- FAMU Students should contact:
Learning Development and Evaluation Center (LDEC)
677 Ardelia Court
Florida A\&M University
Nathaniel Holmes, Director
Donna Shell, Asst. Director
(850) 599-3180 (voice)
(850) 561-2512 (fax)
(850) 561-2783 (TDD)
http://www.famu.edu/index.cfm?a=EOP&p=ADA
- FSU Students should contact:
Student Disability Resource Center (SDRC)
874 Traditions Way
108 Student Services Building
Florida State University
Tallahassee, FL 32306-4167
(850) 644-9566 (voice)
(850) 644-8504 (TDD)
sdrc@admin.fsu.edu
http://www.disabilitycenter.fsu.edu/
Non-Discrimination Policy Statement
Exceptions
The instructor might wave some regulation on a case-by-case basis
depending on his subjective determination of fairness and
appropriateness. This will occur only under exceptional circumstances
and should not be assumed. Especially, never assume that a seemingly
minor regulation will be waived because the instructor has waived it
in the past. A second appeal to waive a minor regulation will
probably indicate to the instructor that the regulation is not being
taken seriously and most likely refused. Any appeal to the instructor
will further be refused a priori unless it is made at the earliest
possible moment by phone and/or by E-mail. Do not wait until you are
back in town, say.
Syllabus Change Policy
Except for changes that substantially affect implementation of the
evaluation (grading) statement, this syllabus is a guide for the
course and is subject to change with advance notice.
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