Mechanical Engineering - Thermodynamics - Discussion

Discussion Forum : Thermodynamics - Section 2 (Q.No. 33)
33.
In an isothermal process,
there is no change in temperature
there is no change in enthalpy
there is no change in internal energy
all of these
Answer: Option
Explanation:
No answer description is available. Let's discuss.
Discussion:
21 comments Page 2 of 3.

Divyank singh said:   8 years ago
H=u+Pv And we know that change in pv for isothermal is zero and internal energy is constant so enthalpy is constant from this.

D is correct.

Vinoth said:   8 years ago
It is true for ideal gas.

de, dh depends on temperature only.

Chintan said:   8 years ago
Isothermal temp remains constant.

ABHISHEK said:   8 years ago
t=c, therefore no change in temp.
t=c, u=f(t) so du=0 or u=c
h=u+pv, here u=c, and t=c gives pv=c finally every thing in this is cont.

So, the answer is D.

Prashant said:   8 years ago
In an isothermal process internal energy is constant but work is done so enthalpy must be change.

Adam said:   9 years ago
I think A is correct.

Aman said:   9 years ago
Option B is not the correct one.

Abhishek Tripathy said:   9 years ago
B is not the correct answer because in PV curve when a phase change occurs from liquid to vapor (in the wet region) the temperature is constant but enthalpy change.

VRC said:   9 years ago
D is the correct answer because in an isothermal process T1 = T2, that's why internal energy, temperature & enthalpy remains constant/unchanged.

Himanshu said:   9 years ago
B is not the correct one.


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