By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Classify thermodynamic systems and state variables
  • 2Apply the first law (delta-U = Q - W) to all processes
  • 3Compute work for isothermal and adiabatic processes
  • 4Relate Cp, Cv, and gamma using Mayer's formula
  • 5State the second law and calculate Carnot efficiency
💡
Why this chapter matters
Thermodynamics gives the universal laws of energy transformation. The first law (energy conservation with heat), the thermodynamic processes, and the second law with the Carnot engine explain heat engines, refrigerators, and the fundamental limit on efficiency.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Thermodynamics

'Thermodynamics is the only physical theory of universal content which, within the framework of the applicability of its basic concepts, I am convinced will never be overthrown.' — Albert Einstein

1. Chapter Overview

THERMODYNAMICS studies the RELATIONSHIPS between HEAT, WORK, and the INTERNAL ENERGY of systems. Unlike the thermal properties chapter (which focuses on specific phenomena), thermodynamics provides UNIFYING LAWS that apply to ALL macroscopic systems. This chapter covers the ZEROTH, FIRST, and SECOND LAWS of thermodynamics, thermodynamic PROCESSES, and the CARNOT ENGINE.


2. Thermodynamic Systems

TypeExchange with SurroundingsExamples
OpenBoth matter and energyBoiling water in an open pot
ClosedEnergy only, no matterGas in a sealed cylinder with a movable piston
IsolatedNeither matter nor energyGas in a perfectly insulated rigid container

State Variables and Equation of State

  • Intensive: Independent of system size (T, P, ρ)
  • Extensive: Depend on system size (V, U, S, n)
  • For an ideal gas: PV = nRT (equation of state)
  • Thermodynamic Equilibrium: Mechanical, thermal, and chemical equilibrium SIMULTANEOUSLY

3. Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics

  • Statement: If TWO systems are each in thermal equilibrium with a THIRD system, they are in thermal equilibrium WITH EACH OTHER.
  • Significance: Provides the basis for TEMPERATURE measurement — if thermometer reads T, any object in contact at equilibrium has the SAME temperature.

4. First Law of Thermodynamics

  • Statement: Energy can neither be created nor destroyed; it can only change forms.
  • Mathematical Form: ΔU = Q — W
    • ΔU = Change in INTERNAL ENERGY of the system
    • Q = Heat ADDED to the system
    • W = Work done BY the system
  • Sign convention: Q > 0 (heat added), W > 0 (work by system), ΔU > 0 (energy increase)

For Different Processes

ProcessConditionFirst Law
IsothermalΔT = 0, ΔU = 0Q = W
AdiabaticQ = 0ΔU = -W
IsochoricΔV = 0, W = 0ΔU = Q
IsobaricP = constantΔU = Q — PΔV

Worked Problem

Q: In a process, a gas absorbs 500 J of heat and does 200 J of work. Find ΔU. A: ΔU = Q — W = 500 — 200 = 300 J (internal energy increases).


5. Thermodynamic Processes

Isothermal Process (Constant Temperature)

  • For ideal gas: PV = constant (Boyle's law)
  • Work done: W = nRT ln(V₂/V₁)
  • Internal energy does NOT change for ideal gas (U depends only on T)

Adiabatic Process (No Heat Exchange)

  • PV^γ = constant (γ = C_p/C_v)
  • For monatomic gas: γ = 5/3, for diatomic: γ = 7/5
  • Work done: W = (P₁V₁ — P₂V₂)/(γ — 1) = nR(T₁ — T₂)/(γ — 1)
  • Temperature CHANGES during adiabatic compression/expansion

Isochoric Process (Constant Volume)

  • Work done = 0 (no volume change)
  • Heat added = Change in internal energy
  • P/T = constant (Gay-Lussac's law)

Isobaric Process (Constant Pressure)

  • Work done W = PΔV
  • V/T = constant (Charles' law)
  • Heat added = ΔU + PΔV

Cyclic Process

  • System returns to INITIAL state (ΔU = 0)
  • Net work done = Net heat exchanged (Q_net = W_net)
  • Efficiency η = W_net/Q_in

6. Specific Heat Capacities

  • Molar specific heat at constant volume (C_v): Q = nC_vΔT at constant V
  • Molar specific heat at constant pressure (C_p): Q = nC_pΔT at constant P
  • Relation: C_p — C_v = R (Mayer's formula)
  • For monatomic gas: C_v = 3R/2, C_p = 5R/2
  • γ (adiabatic index) = C_p/C_v

7. Second Law of Thermodynamics

Statements

  • Kelvin-Planck Statement: It is IMPOSSIBLE to construct an engine that converts ALL heat from a single source into work (no 100% efficient engine)
  • Clausius Statement: It is IMPOSSIBLE for heat to flow spontaneously from a COLD body to a HOT body without external work

Reversible and Irreversible Processes

ReversibleIrreversible
Can be REVERSED without any change in system/surroundingsCannot be reversed
Infinitely SLOW (quasi-static)Natural processes (friction, diffusion)
No dissipationEnergy dissipates
IdealisationREAL processes

8. Heat Engines and the Carnot Engine

Heat Engine

  • Absorbs Q₁ from hot reservoir, does work W, rejects Q₂ to cold reservoir
  • Efficiency: η = W/Q₁ = 1 — Q₂/Q₁

Carnot Engine

  • The MOST EFFICIENT heat engine operating between two temperatures
  • Carnot cycle: Isothermal expansion → Adiabatic expansion → Isothermal compression → Adiabatic compression
  • Efficiency: η_carnot = 1 — T₂/T₁ (T₁ = hot, T₂ = cold, in KELVIN)
  • Key: Carnot efficiency depends ONLY on temperatures, NOT on the working substance

Worked Problem

Q: A Carnot engine operates between 500 K and 300 K. Find efficiency. A: η = 1 — T₂/T₁ = 1 — 300/500 = 1 — 0.6 = 0.4 = 40%.


9. Common Mistakes

  1. ΔU = Q — W, NOT Q + W: Always check the sign convention (some textbooks use Q + W with W as work done ON the system)
  2. Isothermal ≠ adiabatic: In isothermal, ΔT = 0 so ΔU = 0; in adiabatic, Q = 0 so ΔU = -W
  3. C_p — C_v = R applies ONLY to ideal gases: Real gases have different relationships
  4. 100% efficiency is impossible (2nd Law): No engine can convert all heat into work
  5. Carnot efficiency is the MAXIMUM possible: Real engines have lower efficiency

10. CBSE Exam Focus

  1. First law of thermodynamics — sign convention, numerical problems
  2. Isothermal and adiabatic processes — PV diagrams, work done
  3. Carnot cycle and efficiency derivation (5-mark)
  4. Second law statements — Kelvin-Planck and Clausius
  5. Heat engine numericals (3-mark)
  6. Mayer's formula C_p — C_v = R

11. Key Formulas

  • ΔU = Q — W
  • W_isothermal = nRT ln(V₂/V₁)
  • TV^(γ-1) = constant; PV^γ = constant (adiabatic)
  • C_p — C_v = R
  • γ = C_p/C_v
  • η = 1 — Q₂/Q₁ = 1 — T₂/T₁ (Carnot)
  • For monatomic: C_v = 3R/2, C_p = 5R/2

12. Self-Test (5+ Q&A)

Q1: 2 moles of ideal gas expand isothermally at 300 K from 5 L to 15 L. Find work done (R = 8.314 J/mol·K). A: W = nRT ln(V₂/V₁) = 2×8.314×300×ln(3) = 4988.4×1.099 = 5480 J.

Q2: A Carnot engine has 40% efficiency. If sink temperature is 300 K, find source temperature. A: η = 1 — T₂/T₁ → 0.4 = 1 — 300/T₁ → 300/T₁ = 0.6 → T₁ = 500 K.

Q3: In a cyclic process, the system absorbs 1000 J and rejects 600 J. Find work done and efficiency. A: W = Q₁ — Q₂ = 1000 — 600 = 400 J. η = W/Q₁ = 400/1000 = 40%.

Q4: What is the difference between isothermal and adiabatic processes? A: Isothermal: T constant, ΔU = 0, heat exchanged. Adiabatic: No heat exchange (Q = 0), temperature changes due to work.

Q5: Why can't a heat engine have 100% efficiency? A: Second Law of Thermodynamics (Kelvin-Planck statement). Some heat MUST be rejected to a cold reservoir; Q₂ cannot be zero.


13. Conclusion

Thermodynamics provides UNIVERSAL LAWS governing energy transformations. The First Law quantifies energy conservation including heat. The Second Law establishes the DIRECTION of natural processes and limits efficiency. The Carnot engine represents the IDEAL — a standard against which real engines are measured. These laws have far-reaching implications in engineering, chemistry, and even cosmology.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

First law of thermodynamics
delta-U = Q - W
Q added to system positive; W done by system positive.
Process work
W_iso = nRT ln(V2/V1); PV^gamma = constant (adiabatic)
Isothermal keeps T constant; adiabatic has Q = 0.
Mayer's formula
Cp - Cv = R; gamma = Cp/Cv
Monatomic Cv = 3R/2; diatomic (room T) Cv = 5R/2.
Carnot efficiency
eta = 1 - T2/T1 = 1 - Q2/Q1
Temperatures in kelvin; depends only on reservoir temperatures.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Mixing up the first-law sign convention
This chapter uses delta-U = Q - W (W = work done BY the system). Check whether a problem uses Q + W instead.
WATCH OUT
Confusing isothermal and adiabatic processes
Isothermal: delta-T = 0 so delta-U = 0 and Q = W. Adiabatic: Q = 0 so delta-U = -W and temperature changes.
WATCH OUT
Applying Cp - Cv = R to real gases
Mayer's formula holds for ideal gases; real gases deviate.
WATCH OUT
Expecting 100% engine efficiency
The second law (Kelvin-Planck) forbids it; some heat must always be rejected to the cold reservoir.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1MEDIUM· Isothermal Work
2 moles of ideal gas expand isothermally at 300 K from 5 L to 15 L. Find the work done (R = 8.314).
Show solution
W = nRT ln(V2/V1) = 2 x 8.314 x 300 x ln(3) = 4988.4 x 1.099 = 5480 J.
Q2MEDIUM· Carnot
A Carnot engine has 40% efficiency with a sink at 300 K. Find the source temperature.
Show solution
eta = 1 - T2/T1: 0.4 = 1 - 300/T1, so 300/T1 = 0.6 and T1 = 500 K.
Q3MEDIUM· Cyclic
In a cyclic process a system absorbs 1000 J and rejects 600 J. Find the work done and efficiency.
Show solution
W = Q1 - Q2 = 1000 - 600 = 400 J. eta = W/Q1 = 400/1000 = 40%.
Q4EASY· First Law
A gas absorbs 500 J of heat and does 200 J of work. Find delta-U.
Show solution
delta-U = Q - W = 500 - 200 = 300 J; internal energy increases.
Q5EASY· Concept
Why can't a heat engine have 100% efficiency?
Show solution
By the second law (Kelvin-Planck statement), some heat must be rejected to a cold reservoir; Q2 cannot be zero, so efficiency is always less than 100%.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Systems: open, closed, isolated; state variables intensive or extensive.
  • Zeroth law defines temperature via thermal equilibrium.
  • First law: delta-U = Q - W (energy conservation).
  • Isothermal: delta-U = 0, Q = W; adiabatic: Q = 0, PV^gamma = constant.
  • Mayer: Cp - Cv = R; gamma = Cp/Cv (5/3 monatomic, 7/5 diatomic).
  • Second law: no 100% engine (Kelvin-Planck); heat flows hot to cold (Clausius).
  • Carnot efficiency eta = 1 - T2/T1 is the maximum possible.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 6-8 marks across the chapter

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Carnot cycle / heat engines3-51Efficiency derivation and numericals
Processes / work31Isothermal and adiabatic work
First law / specific heats2-31delta-U = Q - W and Mayer's formula
Prep strategy
  • Fix the first-law sign convention before solving
  • Memorise process conditions and work formulae
  • Learn Cp, Cv, gamma for monatomic and diatomic gases
  • Practise Carnot and cyclic-process efficiency problems

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Engines and power plants

The laws of thermodynamics set the efficiency limits of car engines, turbines, and power stations.

Refrigerators and heat pumps

Reversed heat-engine cycles move heat from cold to hot regions for cooling and heating.

Energy policy

Carnot efficiency shows why waste heat is unavoidable and drives the search for better energy use.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. State the first-law sign convention explicitly
  2. Identify the process type to pick the right work formula
  3. Convert temperatures to kelvin for Carnot efficiency
  4. Use eta = 1 - Q2/Q1 = 1 - T2/T1 carefully

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Compute entropy changes for reversible and irreversible processes.
  • Analyse the coefficient of performance of refrigerators and heat pumps.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 11 Physics examHigh
JEE Main and Advanced (Thermodynamics)High
NEET PhysicsMedium

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

In an isothermal process the temperature is kept constant (the system exchanges heat with surroundings slowly), so for an ideal gas internal energy does not change and all heat added equals work done: Q = W. In an adiabatic process no heat is exchanged (Q = 0), so any work done by the gas comes at the expense of its internal energy, and the temperature changes: delta-U = -W. On a PV diagram the adiabatic curve is steeper than the isothermal.

The Carnot cycle uses only reversible isothermal and adiabatic steps, so it wastes no energy to irreversibilities like friction or turbulence. Carnot's theorem proves no engine working between the same two temperatures can exceed its efficiency, eta = 1 - T2/T1. Real engines have irreversible processes and therefore always fall short of the Carnot limit.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 29 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
Editorial process →
Header Logo