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It's not as easy as you thought it would be.
when heat transfer with the environment has been significantly reduced.
can't maintain the temperature equilibrium
Do you actually believe that your experiment yielded any useful information? Let me assure you it did not.
Have you tried?
But they might by useful for anyone else trying to stabilize temperature of a system in a real world environment.
Yes. Read again my posts here.
If I can isolate the system completely by any way, I'd like to test it.
f I can isolate the system completely by any way, I'd like to test it.
So, heat flow can occur without temperature difference?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 26/08/2022 05:12:24f I can isolate the system completely by any way, I'd like to test it.It cannot be done, which is why heat experiments are very difficult.BC's slurry tank will get you some of the way, maybe with in 0.1°C of constant temperature, but you need to keep stirring the slurry to stop the bottom of the tank getting warmer. If you add more ice, you will cool the top below 0°C, so you have to choose the right moment to do your measurements. And you need to seal the top of your experimental rig to stop ambient air getting in. Problem is that with ±0.1°C uncertainly, you won't be working anywhere near close to the textbook statement of "equilibrium". And you still have the problem of not knowing the temperature in the middle of your experimental ice chunks, even if the exterior slurry is well mixed.So you would probably do better to use a thermostat tank of glycol antifreeze and a chiller coil to bring it down to zero. Keep stirring but at least you know it won't contain any chunks of sub-zero ice or anomalous convection. Then prepare your experimental ice by some magical method that doesn't involve a sub-zero chiller.
Yes.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 25/08/2022 23:23:08 But they might by useful for anyone else trying to stabilize temperature of a system in a real world environment.If that person hadn't previously been aware of an ice bath as a way to get some degree of temperature regulation.
I did not notice the post in which you adopted my suggestion and enclosed the whole apparatus in a tank containing a slurry of ice and water.Please point it out.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 10/05/2022 05:01:00Here's my idea to minimize noise over signal:- Prepare 50/50 ice-water mixture at around 0°C in a large plastic bowl. Let it in refrigerator for an hour to reach equilibrium.- Fill a metal cup with 90% water and 10% ice from the mixture.- Fill another metal cup with 10% water and 90% ice from the mixture.- Put both metal cups into the bowl containing the remaining of the mixture.- Let them in refrigerator for an hour to reach equilibrium.- See the result, if the ratio of ice-water in the cups change.OK. I've finished my first round of experiment as described above. But I can't get the metal cups, so I just used ordinary drinking glasses. I guess the heat conductance is enough for this experiment since they are quite thin. The temperature of the refrigerator is 4C, as shown by a thermometer left there for an hour. The result is the ice in both glasses decreased from initial ratio. So I moved the system to the freezer, which is kept at -4C, as measured by a thermometer left there for an hour. The result is the ice in both glasses increased from initial ratio. These results show that energy transfer between the system and the environment overwhelmed the energy transfered through the glasses. It means that the noise over signal ratio is too high to get reliable conclusion. Hence the experimental setups need to be improved. I also learned that gravity and buoyancy play significant role in determining the results, which need to be addressed in upcoming experiments.
Here's my idea to minimize noise over signal:- Prepare 50/50 ice-water mixture at around 0°C in a large plastic bowl. Let it in refrigerator for an hour to reach equilibrium.- Fill a metal cup with 90% water and 10% ice from the mixture.- Fill another metal cup with 10% water and 90% ice from the mixture.- Put both metal cups into the bowl containing the remaining of the mixture.- Let them in refrigerator for an hour to reach equilibrium.- See the result, if the ratio of ice-water in the cups change.
I have to admit the technique isn't really "mine". It was developed by some "famous names".https://www.nature.com/scitable/content/ice-calorimeter-developed-by-lavoisier-and-laplace-14898943/
The result is the ice in both glasses decreased from initial ratio.
What sort of lids did you use on the cups?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 27/08/2022 12:16:57What sort of lids did you use on the cups?Just a simple plastic plate. I thought the air below it would provide adequate heat insulation.
I'm now considering the matter for amusement only, but it does while away the time on the M25 when all else is silent and unmoving. Here's a suggestion:Using a well-stirred circulating glycol tank with an external chiller (thanks, BC) you can gradually reduce the temperature of a gently-stirred sample of pure water. The volume of the sample will increase as ice forms. Now hold the temperature at 0°C. If there is a heat flow between the water and the ice, the sample volume will change as the water melts the ice or vice versa.
So, the test samples weren't actually completely surrounded by ice/water?
No.
no
Uhm, your theory sounds interesting, have you tried it?
To attempt to use it to disprove the most fundamental statement of thermodynamics using domestic kitchen equipment, is beyond foolish.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 28/08/2022 12:56:51No.So, just to clarify things, when you said Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 26/08/2022 05:12:24Yes.You actually meantQuote from: Bored chemist on 26/08/2022 16:22:11no
I also learned that gravity and buoyancy play significant role in determining the results, which need to be addressed in upcoming experiments.