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NCERT solutions for Physics [English] Class 11 chapter 11 - Thermal Properties of Matter [Latest edition]

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Solutions for Chapter 11: Thermal Properties of Matter

Below listed, you can find solutions for Chapter 11 of CBSE NCERT for Physics [English] Class 11.


Exercises
Exercises [Pages 294 - 297]

NCERT solutions for Physics [English] Class 11 11 Thermal Properties of Matter Exercises [Pages 294 - 297]

Exercises | Q 1 | Page 294

The triple points of neon and carbon dioxide are 24.57 K and 216.55 K respectively. Express these temperatures on the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales.

Exercises | Q 2 | Page 294

Two absolute scales A and B have triple points of water defined to be 200 A and 350 B. What is the relation between TA and TB?

Exercises | Q 3 | Page 294

The electrical resistance in ohms of a certain thermometer varies with temperature according to the approximate law:

Ro [1 + α (– To)]

The resistance is 101.6 Ω at the triple-point of water 273.16 K, and 165.5 Ω at the normal melting point of lead (600.5 K). What is the temperature when the resistance is 123.4 Ω?

Exercises | Q 4.1 | Page 294

Answer the following:

The triple-point of water is a standard fixed point in modern thermometry. Why? What is wrong in taking the melting point of ice and the boiling point of water as standard fixed points (as was originally done in the Celsius scale)?

Exercises | Q 4.2 | Page 294

Answer the following:

There were two fixed points in the original Celsius scale as mentioned above which were assigned the number 0 °C and 100 °C respectively. On the absolute scale, one of the fixed points is the triple-point of water, which on the Kelvin absolute scale is assigned the number 273.16 K. What is the other fixed point on this (Kelvin) scale?

Exercises | Q 4.3 | Page 294

The absolute temperature (Kelvin scale) is related to the temperature tc on the Celsius scale by

tc = – 273.15

Why do we have 273.15 in this relation, and not 273.16?

Exercises | Q 4.4 | Page 294

What is the temperature of the triple-point of water on an absolute scale whose unit interval size is equal to that of the Fahrenheit scale?

Exercises | Q 5 | Page 295

Two ideal gas thermometers Aand Buse oxygen and hydrogen respectively. The following observations are made:

Temperature Pressure thermometer A Pressure thermometer B
Triple-point of water 1.250 × 105 Pa 0.200 × 105 Pa
Normal melting point of sulphur 1.797 × 105 Pa 0.287 × 105 Pa

(a) What is the absolute temperature of the normal melting point of sulphur as read by thermometers Aand B?

(b) What do you think is the reason behind the slight difference in answers of thermometers Aand B? (The thermometers are not faulty). What further procedure is needed in the experiment to reduce the discrepancy between the two readings?

Exercises | Q 6 | Page 295

A steel tape 1m long is correctly calibrated for a temperature of 27.0 °C. The length of a steel rod measured by this tape is found to be 63.0 cm on a hot day when the temperature is 45.0 °C. What is the actual length of the steel rod on that day? What is the length of the same steel rod on a day when the temperature is 27.0 °C? Coefficient of linear expansion of steel = 1.20 × 10–5 K–1

Exercises | Q 7 | Page 295

A large steel wheel is to be fitted on to a shaft of the same material. At 27 °C, the outer diameter of the shaft is 8.70 cm and the diameter of the central hole in the wheel is 8.69 cm. The shaft is cooled using ‘dry ice’. At what temperature of the shaft does the wheel slip on the shaft? Assume coefficient of linear expansion of the steel to be constant over the required temperature range: αsteel = 1.20 × 10–5 K–1.

Exercises | Q 8 | Page 295

A hole is drilled in a copper sheet. The diameter of the hole is 4.24 cm at 27.0 °C. What is the change in the diameter of the hole when the sheet is heated to 227 °C? Coefficient of linear expansion of copper = 1.70 × 10–5 K–1.

Exercises | Q 9 | Page 295

A brass wire 1.8 m long at 27 °C is held taut with little tension between two rigid supports. If the wire is cooled to a temperature of –39 °C, what is the tension developed in the wire, if its diameter is 2.0 mm? Co-efficient of linear expansion of brass = 2.0 × 10–5 K–1; Young’s modulus of brass = 0.91 × 1011 Pa.

Exercises | Q 10 | Page 295

A brass rod of length 50 cm and diameter 3.0 mm is joined to a steel rod of the same length and diameter. What is the change in length of the combined rod at 250 °C, if the original lengths are at 40.0 °C? Is there a ‘thermal stress’ developed at the junction? The ends of the rod are free to expand (Co-efficient of linear expansion of brass = 2.0 × 10–5 K–1, steel = 1.2 × 10–5 K–1).

Exercises | Q 11 | Page 295

The coefficient of volume expansion of glycerin is 49 × 10–5 K–1. What is the fractional change in its density for a 30 °C rise in temperature?

Exercises | Q 12 | Page 295

A 10 kW drilling machine is used to drill a bore in a small aluminium block of mass 8.0 kg. How much is the rise in temperature of the block in 2.5 minutes, assuming 50% of power is used up in heating the machine itself or lost to the surroundings Specific heat of aluminium = 0.91 J g–1 K–1

Exercises | Q 13 | Page 295

A copper block of mass 2.5 kg is heated in a furnace to a temperature of 500 °C and then placed on a large ice block. What is the maximum amount of ice that can melt? (Specific heat of copper = 0.39 J g–1 K–1; heat of fusion of water = 335 J g–1).

Exercises | Q 14 | Page 295

In an experiment on the specific heat of a metal, a 0.20 kg block of the metal at 150 °C is dropped in a copper calorimeter (of water equivalent 0.025 kg) containing 150 cm3 of water at 27 °C. The final temperature is 40 °C. Compute the specific heat of the metal. If heat losses to the surroundings are not negligible, is your answer greater or smaller than the actual value for the specific heat of the metal?

Exercises | Q 15 | Page 296

Given below are observations on molar specific heats at room temperature of some common gases.

Gas

Molar specific heat (Cv)

(cal mol–1 K–1)

Hydrogen 4.87
Nitrogen 4.97
Oxygen 5.02
Nitric oxide 4.99
Carbon monoxide 5.01
Chlorine 6.17

The measured molar specific heats of these gases are markedly different from those for monatomic gases. Typically, molar specific heat of a monatomic gas is 2.92 cal/mol K. Explain this difference. What can you infer from the somewhat larger (than the rest) value for chlorine?

Exercises | Q 16.1 | Page 296

Answer the following question based on the P-T phase diagram of carbon dioxide:

At what temperature and pressure can the solid, liquid and vapour phases of CO2 co-exist in equilibrium?

Exercises | Q 16.2 | Page 296

Answer the following question based on the P-T phase diagram of carbon dioxide:

What is the effect of decrease of pressure on the fusion and boiling point of CO2?

Exercises | Q 16.3 | Page 296

Answer the following question based on the P-T phase diagram of carbon dioxide:

What are the critical temperature and pressure for CO2? What is their significance?

Exercises | Q 16.4 | Page 296

Answer the following question based on the P-T phase diagram of carbon dioxide:

Is CO2 solid, liquid or gas at

  1. –70 °C under 1 atm,
  2. –60 °C under 10 atm,
  3. 15 °C under 56 atm?
Exercises | Q 17.1 | Page 296

Answer the following questions based on the P–T phase diagram of CO2:

CO2 at 1 atm pressure and temperature – 60 °C is compressed isothermally. Does it go through a liquid phase?

Exercises | Q 17.2 | Page 296

Answer the following questions based on the P–T phase diagram of CO2:

What happens when CO2 at 4 atm pressure is cooled from room temperature at constant pressure?

Exercises | Q 17.3 | Page 296

Answer the following questions based on the P–T phase diagram of CO2:

Describe qualitatively the changes in a given mass of solid CO2 at 10 atm pressure and temperature –65 °C as it is heated up to room temperature at constant pressure.

Exercises | Q 17.4 | Page 296

Answer the following questions based on the P–T phase diagram of CO2:

CO2 is heated to a temperature 70 °C and compressed isothermally. What changes in its properties do you expect to observe?

Exercises | Q 18 | Page 296

A child running a temperature of 101°F is given an antipyrin (i.e. a medicine that lowers fever) which causes an increase in the rate of evaporation of sweat from his body. If the fever is brought down to 98 °F in 20 min, what is the average rate of extra evaporation caused, by the drug? Assume the evaporation mechanism to be the only way by which heat is lost. The mass of the child is 30 kg. The specific heat of human body is approximately the same as that of water, and latent heat of evaporation of water at that temperature is about 580 cal g–1.

Exercises | Q 19 | Page 296

A ‘thermacole’ icebox is a cheap and efficient method for storing small quantities of cooked food in summer in particular. A cubical icebox of side 30 cm has a thickness of 5.0 cm. If 4.0 kg of ice is put in the box, estimate the amount of ice remaining after 6 h. The outside temperature is 45 °C, and coefficient of thermal conductivity of thermacole is 0.01 J s–1 m–1 K–1. [Heat of fusion of water = 335 × 103 J kg–1]

Exercises | Q 20 | Page 296

A brass boiler has a base area of 0.15 m2 and thickness 1.0 cm. It boils water at the rate of 6.0 kg/min when placed on a gas stove. Estimate the temperature of the part of the flame in contact with the boiler. The thermal conductivity of brass = 109 J s –1 m–1 K–1; Heat of vaporisation of water = 2256 × 103 J kg–1.

Exercises | Q 21.1 | Page 297

Explain why a body with large reflectivity is a poor emitter

Exercises | Q 21.2 | Page 297

Explain why a brass tumbler feels much colder than a wooden tray on a chilly day

Exercises | Q 21.3 | Page 297

Explain why an optical pyrometer (for measuring high temperatures) calibrated for an ideal black body radiation gives too low a value for the temperature of a red hot iron piece in the open but gives a correct value for the temperature when the same piece is in the furnace

Exercises | Q 21.4 | Page 297

Explain why the earth without its atmosphere would be inhospitably cold

Exercises | Q 21.5 | Page 297

Explain why heating systems based on circulation of steam are more efficient in warming a building than those based on circulation of hot water

Exercises | Q 22 | Page 297

A body cools from 80 °C to 50 °C in 5 minutes. Calculate the time it takes to cool from 60 °C to 30 °C. The temperature of the surroundings is 20 °C.

Solutions for 11: Thermal Properties of Matter

Exercises

NCERT solutions for Physics [English] Class 11 chapter 11 - Thermal Properties of Matter

Shaalaa.com has the CBSE Mathematics Physics [English] Class 11 CBSE solutions in a manner that help students grasp basic concepts better and faster. The detailed, step-by-step solutions will help you understand the concepts better and clarify any confusion. NCERT solutions for Mathematics Physics [English] Class 11 CBSE 11 (Thermal Properties of Matter) include all questions with answers and detailed explanations. This will clear students' doubts about questions and improve their application skills while preparing for board exams.

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Concepts covered in Physics [English] Class 11 chapter 11 Thermal Properties of Matter are Anomalous Expansion of Water, Measurement of Temperature, Ideal-gas Equation and Absolute Temperature, Thermal Expansion, Calorimetry, Change of State - Latent Heat Capacity, Conduction, Convection, Radiation, Newton’s Law of Cooling, Qualitative Ideas of Black Body Radiation, Wien's Displacement Law, Stefan's Law, Liquids and Gases, Thermal Expansion of Solids, Green House Effect, Specific Heat Capacity, Heat and Temperature, Anomalous Expansion of Water, Measurement of Temperature, Ideal-gas Equation and Absolute Temperature, Thermal Expansion, Calorimetry, Change of State - Latent Heat Capacity, Conduction, Convection, Radiation, Newton’s Law of Cooling, Qualitative Ideas of Black Body Radiation, Wien's Displacement Law, Stefan's Law, Liquids and Gases, Thermal Expansion of Solids, Green House Effect, Specific Heat Capacity, Heat and Temperature.

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Get the free view of Chapter 11, Thermal Properties of Matter Physics [English] Class 11 additional questions for Mathematics Physics [English] Class 11 CBSE, and you can use Shaalaa.com to keep it handy for your exam preparation.

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