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First Law of Thermodynamics

Class 11 Physics notes covering First Law, energy conservation, sign convention, cyclic processes, numericals and PYQs.

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The First Law of Thermodynamics is the energy-accounting law of physics. It connects heat supplied to a system, work done by the system and change in internal energy. Once this law is clear, every thermodynamics process becomes a balance sheet: energy entering the system either remains stored as internal energy or leaves as work output.

Introduction

The First Law of Thermodynamics is the principle of conservation of energy applied to heat, work and internal energy.

In mechanics, conservation of energy often appears as conversion between kinetic energy and potential energy. In thermodynamics, energy can cross the boundary of a system as heat or work, and the energy stored inside the system is called internal energy. The First Law tells us that these quantities cannot be chosen independently. If heat enters a gas and the gas expands, some part of the incoming energy may increase molecular energy and some part may push the piston outward.

A top student treats every problem as a system-boundary question. First choose the system. Then ask whether heat enters or leaves. Next ask whether work is done by the system or on the system. Finally calculate how internal energy changes. This discipline prevents almost every sign-convention mistake.

Heat Input

Energy enters because of temperature difference. It is written as positive when supplied to the system.

Work Output

Energy leaves as mechanical work when the system expands and pushes surroundings.

Internal Storage

Energy remains in the microscopic motion and interaction of molecules as internal energy.

First Law of Thermodynamics

The mathematical statement is ΔQ = ΔU + ΔW, where heat supplied equals increase in internal energy plus work done by the system.

Law When heat ΔQ is supplied to a system, part of it increases the internal energy by ΔU and the remaining part is used by the system to do work ΔW on the surroundings.

Meaning of Each Term

ΔQ

Heat exchanged with the system. It is positive when heat is supplied to the system and negative when heat is rejected by the system.

ΔU

Change in internal energy. It measures change in microscopic energy of molecules due to random motion and intermolecular interactions.

ΔW

Work done by the system on surroundings. For expansion of gas, it is usually positive in the convention used here.

Physical Interpretation

If you supply heat to gas in a cylinder, the gas may become hotter and it may also expand. Becoming hotter means internal energy increases. Expanding means gas does work on the piston. The First Law says the heat supplied must be equal to the total of these two energy effects.

Microscopic Interpretation

At molecular level, heat supplied increases molecular kinetic energy, changes molecular separation, or both. When a gas expands, molecules transfer momentum to the moving piston and energy leaves the gas as work. Therefore, the law is a bridge between microscopic molecular energy and macroscopic mechanical work.

Derivation Idea

The First Law is not derived from a more basic thermodynamic equation at Class 11 level; it is the conservation of energy written for thermodynamic systems. If energy ΔQ enters as heat and ΔW leaves as work, the remaining energy must appear as increase in internal energy. Hence ΔU = ΔQ - ΔW, or equivalently ΔQ = ΔU + ΔW.

Core Diagrams

These NCERT-style diagrams use black outlines and red arrows to show energy flow, work direction and P-V graph interpretation.

System Receiving Heat

SystemHeat Q in

System Doing Work

GasWork W out

Expansion Process

GasΔV > 0, W > 0

Compression Process

GasΔV < 0, W by gas < 0

Energy Flow Diagram

SystemΔQΔWBalance: ΔQ = ΔU + ΔW

Cyclic Process Loop

VPClosed loop: ΔU = 0

P-V Diagram

VPArea = ∫PdV

Constant Volume Process

VPV constant, W = 0

Constant Pressure Process

VPP constant, W = PΔV

Sign Convention

Sign convention is the most common source of errors in First Law questions. The physics convention used here is: heat supplied to the system is positive and work done by the system is positive.

CasePhysical meaningSignFirst Law effectMemory trick
Heat supplied to systemEnergy enters as heatΔQ positiveTends to increase ΔU or produce workHeat in is plus
Heat rejected by systemEnergy leaves as heatΔQ negativeTends to decrease ΔUHeat out is minus
Work done by systemExpansion pushes surroundingsΔW positiveSubtracts from internal energy in ΔU = Q - WOutput work is plus W
Work done on systemCompression by surroundingsΔW negative for work by systemIncreases internal energy if no heat escapesCompression makes W by gas minus

Separate Sign Tables

Heat Supplied

When a burner heats gas or a hot reservoir gives energy to the system, ΔQ is positive. Example: Q = +600 J.

Heat Rejected

When the system cools or gives heat to surroundings, ΔQ is negative. Example: Q = -250 J.

Work Done by System

Expansion work by gas is positive. Example: a piston moves outward and W = +400 J.

Work Done on System

Compression means surroundings do work on gas. Work by gas is negative. Example: W = -400 J.

Exam Traps

  • Do not change convention in the middle of the solution.
  • Do not assume heat supplied always increases internal energy; work may carry energy away.
  • Do not assume compression has positive work by gas; it is negative in this convention.
  • In a cyclic process, internal energy change is zero even if heat and work are nonzero.

Energy Conservation Principle

The First Law is a strict energy balance: energy cannot appear from nowhere and cannot disappear into nothing.

For a system, heat and work are transfer modes across the boundary. Internal energy is the energy stored inside. If more energy enters than leaves, internal energy increases. If more energy leaves than enters, internal energy decreases. If energy entering as heat equals energy leaving as work, internal energy remains constant.

ΔQ = ΔU + ΔW

Heat supplied equals increase in internal energy plus work done by system.

ΔU = ΔQ - ΔW

Internal energy increases when heat input exceeds work output.

W = ∫PdV

Work done by a gas equals area under the P-V curve.

ΔU = 0

For a cyclic process, final state equals initial state.

Q = W

For a complete cycle, net heat equals net work.

Real-life interpretation is simple: if you heat a pressure cooker, energy enters. Some energy increases internal energy of water and steam; if steam pushes out through the valve, energy also leaves as flow and work. In a car engine, fuel energy becomes heat, part of it becomes work, and the rest is rejected to surroundings. The First Law is the reason energy accounting is possible in engines, refrigerators, turbines and biological systems.

Applications of First Law

Different processes simplify the First Law in different ways. Recognising the process quickly is a scoring skill.

ApplicationConditionFirst Law ResultPhysical MeaningExam Clue
Constant volume processΔV = 0W = 0, so Q = ΔUHeat changes internal energy only.Rigid container, vertical P-V graph.
Constant pressure processP constantQ = ΔU + PΔVHeat both raises internal energy and does work.Horizontal P-V graph.
Expansion processΔV positiveW positiveSystem gives energy to surroundings as work.Piston moves outward.
Compression processΔV negativeW by system negativeSurroundings give energy to system as work.Piston moves inward.
Heating processQ positiveΔU depends on WSupplied heat may increase U and/or produce work.Burner, hot reservoir.
Cooling processQ negativeInternal energy often decreasesEnergy leaves as heat.System in colder surroundings.
Cyclic processFinal state = initial stateΔU = 0, Q = WNet heat becomes net work over cycle.Closed P-V loop.

Conceptual Examples

Gas in Rigid Cylinder

Volume is fixed, so no boundary work occurs. Heat supplied increases internal energy and temperature.

Gas Under Movable Piston

Heat supplied can expand the gas. Energy divides between internal energy rise and work output.

Rapid Compression

Heat exchange is small, so work done on gas mostly increases internal energy and temperature.

Heat Engine Cycle

After each cycle the working substance returns to its original state, so net internal energy change is zero.

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Cyclic Process

A cyclic process is a thermodynamic process in which the system returns to its initial state after a series of changes.

Because the final state is the same as the initial state, every state property returns to its original value. Internal energy is a state property, so the net change in internal energy over a complete cycle is zero. This is the key idea behind heat engines and refrigerators.

Cycle Result For a cyclic process, ΔU = 0. Therefore, from ΔQ = ΔU + ΔW, net Q = net W.

On a P-V diagram, a cyclic process appears as a closed loop. The area enclosed by the loop gives net work. A clockwise loop represents positive work done by the system, like a heat engine. An anticlockwise loop represents net work done on the system, like a refrigerator or heat pump.

Important PYQ Observations

  • In a cycle, do not put Q = 0. Put ΔU = 0.
  • Net heat and net work over a cycle are equal in magnitude and sign under the convention used here.
  • The working substance may absorb heat in one part and reject heat in another part.
  • Efficiency questions use net work output divided by heat absorbed from hot reservoir.

Common Mistakes and Memory Tricks

Mistake: Q = 0 in a cycle

Wrong. In a cycle, ΔU = 0. Net heat generally equals net work and may be nonzero.

Mistake: Work is always positive

Expansion work by gas is positive. Compression work by gas is negative.

Mistake: Heat always raises temperature

Heat can become work or can be involved in phase change. Internal energy rise depends on Q - W.

Memory Trick

Heat in fills the system. Work out empties it. So ΔU = heat in - work out.

50 Solved Numericals

Solutions are hidden so students can attempt first and then reveal the full method.

Numerical 1 Easy. A system receives 500 J heat and does 180 J work. Find the change in internal energy.
Show Solution

Given: Q = +500 J, W = +180 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = 500 - 180 = 320 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy increases by 320 J.

Numerical 2 Easy. A gas is compressed and 250 J work is done on it while no heat is exchanged. Find ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Adiabatic process: Q = 0. Work done on gas = 250 J, so W by gas = -250 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = 0 - (-250) = 250 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy increases by 250 J.

Numerical 3 Easy. A system rejects 120 J heat and does 80 J work. Find ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Q = -120 J, W = +80 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = -120 - 80 = -200 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy decreases by 200 J.

Numerical 4 Easy. A system has ΔU = 300 J and W = 100 J. Find heat supplied.
Show Solution

Given: ΔU = 300 J, W = 100 J.

Formula: Q = ΔU + W.

Solution: Q = 300 + 100 = 400 J.

Final Answer: Heat supplied = 400 J.

Numerical 5 Easy. In a cyclic process, a system does 700 J net work. Find net heat absorbed.
Show Solution

Given: Cyclic process: ΔU = 0, W = 700 J.

Formula: Q = W for a cycle.

Solution: Q = 700 J.

Final Answer: Net heat absorbed = 700 J.

Numerical 6 Easy. At constant volume, 900 J heat is supplied to a gas. Find work and ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Constant volume: ΔV = 0, Q = 900 J.

Formula: W = 0, ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: W = 0 and ΔU = 900 J.

Final Answer: Work = 0, internal energy increases by 900 J.

Numerical 7 Easy. A gas expands at constant pressure 1 × 105 Pa from 2 L to 5 L. Find W.
Show Solution

Given: P = 1 × 105 Pa, ΔV = 3 L = 3 × 10-3 m3.

Formula: W = PΔV.

Solution: W = 1 × 105 × 3 × 10-3 = 300 J.

Final Answer: Work done by gas = 300 J.

Numerical 8 Easy. A system receives 1000 J heat and its internal energy rises by 650 J. Find work done.
Show Solution

Given: Q = 1000 J, ΔU = 650 J.

Formula: W = Q - ΔU.

Solution: W = 1000 - 650 = 350 J.

Final Answer: Work done by system = 350 J.

Numerical 9 Easy. A refrigerator compartment loses 400 J heat to surroundings. If 150 J work is done on the compartment contents, find ΔU for the contents.
Show Solution

Given: Q = -400 J, W by contents = -150 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = -400 - (-150) = -250 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy decreases by 250 J.

Numerical 10 Easy. A gas does no work but its internal energy decreases by 200 J. Find Q.
Show Solution

Given: W = 0, ΔU = -200 J.

Formula: Q = ΔU + W.

Solution: Q = -200 + 0 = -200 J.

Final Answer: Heat rejected = 200 J.

Numerical 11 CBSE. A closed system absorbs 600 J heat. Its internal energy increases by 250 J. How much work is done by the system?
Show Solution

Given: Q = 600 J, ΔU = 250 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: W = Q - ΔU = 600 - 250 = 350 J.

Final Answer: Work done = 350 J.

Numerical 12 CBSE. During compression, 500 J work is done on a gas and 100 J heat leaves it. Find ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Q = -100 J, W by gas = -500 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = -100 - (-500) = 400 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy increases by 400 J.

Numerical 13 CBSE. A gas expands and does 220 J work. If ΔU = -50 J, find heat exchanged.
Show Solution

Given: W = 220 J, ΔU = -50 J.

Formula: Q = ΔU + W.

Solution: Q = -50 + 220 = 170 J.

Final Answer: Heat supplied = 170 J.

Numerical 14 CBSE. For a constant-volume process, explain numerically why all supplied heat changes internal energy if Q = 450 J.
Show Solution

Given: Constant volume means no boundary displacement.

Formula: W = PΔV = 0, ΔU = Q.

Solution: ΔU = 450 J.

Final Answer: All 450 J increases internal energy.

Numerical 15 CBSE. A gas in a cylinder expands by 0.004 m3 against constant pressure 2 × 105 Pa. Find work.
Show Solution

Given: P = 2 × 105 Pa, ΔV = 0.004 m3.

Formula: W = PΔV.

Solution: W = 2 × 105 × 0.004 = 800 J.

Final Answer: Work done by gas = 800 J.

Numerical 16 CBSE. A system receives 300 J heat and 200 J work is done on it. Find ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Q = +300 J, W by system = -200 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = 300 - (-200) = 500 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy increases by 500 J.

Numerical 17 CBSE. A cyclic engine absorbs 1200 J heat and rejects 800 J heat in one cycle. Find net work.
Show Solution

Given: Qnet = 1200 - 800 = 400 J, ΔU = 0.

Formula: For cycle, Qnet = Wnet.

Solution: Wnet = 400 J.

Final Answer: Net work output = 400 J.

Numerical 18 CBSE. A gas is heated at constant pressure. It absorbs 1000 J and does 350 J work. Find ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Q = 1000 J, W = 350 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = 1000 - 350 = 650 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy rises by 650 J.

Numerical 19 CBSE. A gas loses 600 J internal energy while doing 100 J work. Find Q.
Show Solution

Given: ΔU = -600 J, W = 100 J.

Formula: Q = ΔU + W.

Solution: Q = -600 + 100 = -500 J.

Final Answer: Heat rejected = 500 J.

Numerical 20 CBSE. At constant pressure, volume changes from 10 L to 6 L under 1 × 105 Pa. Find work by gas.
Show Solution

Given: V1 = 10 L, V2 = 6 L, ΔV = -4 × 10-3 m3.

Formula: W = PΔV.

Solution: W = 1 × 105 × (-4 × 10-3) = -400 J.

Final Answer: Work by gas = -400 J; work on gas = 400 J.

Numerical 21 NEET. An ideal gas expands isothermally and absorbs 500 J heat. Find ΔU and W.
Show Solution

Given: Isothermal ideal gas: ΔU = 0, Q = 500 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: 0 = 500 - W, so W = 500 J.

Final Answer: ΔU = 0, W = 500 J.

Numerical 22 NEET. In an adiabatic expansion, a gas does 300 J work. Find change in internal energy.
Show Solution

Given: Adiabatic: Q = 0, W = 300 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = -300 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy decreases by 300 J.

Numerical 23 NEET. A gas receives 700 J heat and 400 J work is done on it. Find ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Q = +700 J, W by gas = -400 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = 700 - (-400) = 1100 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy increases by 1100 J.

Numerical 24 NEET. A system completes a cycle and rejects 200 J net heat. Find net work by system.
Show Solution

Given: Cycle: ΔU = 0, Q = -200 J.

Formula: Q = W.

Solution: W = -200 J.

Final Answer: Net work is done on system; work by system = -200 J.

Numerical 25 NEET. A gas expands from 1 L to 3 L at pressure 5 × 105 Pa. If Q = 1500 J, find ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: ΔV = 2 × 10-3 m3, P = 5 × 105 Pa, Q = 1500 J.

Formula: W = PΔV, ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: W = 1000 J. ΔU = 1500 - 1000 = 500 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy increases by 500 J.

Numerical 26 NEET. During a process, ΔU = 0 and W = -250 J. Find Q and identify compression or expansion.
Show Solution

Given: ΔU = 0, W = -250 J.

Formula: Q = ΔU + W.

Solution: Q = -250 J. Negative W means compression.

Final Answer: Heat rejected = 250 J; compression occurs.

Numerical 27 NEET. A gas is heated at constant volume. If temperature rises, what are W and sign of ΔU?
Show Solution

Given: Constant volume, heating.

Formula: W = 0, ΔU = Q.

Solution: Heat supplied is positive, so ΔU positive.

Final Answer: W = 0, internal energy increases.

Numerical 28 NEET. An ideal gas is compressed isothermally and 600 J work is done on it. Find heat exchanged.
Show Solution

Given: Isothermal ideal gas: ΔU = 0. W by gas = -600 J.

Formula: Q = ΔU + W.

Solution: Q = 0 - 600 = -600 J.

Final Answer: Heat rejected = 600 J.

Numerical 29 NEET. A gas absorbs 900 J and expands doing 900 J work. What is the process implication for ideal gas?
Show Solution

Given: Q = W = 900 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = 0. For ideal gas, temperature is constant.

Final Answer: Ideal gas process is isothermal if only temperature decides U.

Numerical 30 NEET. If a system's internal energy decreases by 100 J while 300 J heat leaves, find work.
Show Solution

Given: ΔU = -100 J, Q = -300 J.

Formula: W = Q - ΔU.

Solution: W = -300 - (-100) = -200 J.

Final Answer: Work by system = -200 J; 200 J work done on it.

Numerical 31 JEE Main. Pressure changes linearly from 1 × 105 Pa to 3 × 105 Pa as volume increases from 2 L to 6 L. Find work.
Show Solution

Given: P1 = 1 × 105 Pa, P2 = 3 × 105 Pa, ΔV = 4 × 10-3 m3.

Formula: W = PavgΔV.

Solution: Pavg = 2 × 105 Pa. W = 800 J.

Final Answer: Work = 800 J.

Numerical 32 JEE Main. A rectangular P-V cycle has pressures 1 × 105 Pa and 4 × 105 Pa, volumes 1 L and 5 L. Find net work if clockwise.
Show Solution

Given: ΔP = 3 × 105 Pa, ΔV = 4 × 10-3 m3.

Formula: Net work = area of rectangle.

Solution: W = 3 × 105 × 4 × 10-3 = 1200 J.

Final Answer: Net work = +1200 J.

Numerical 33 JEE Main. For a cycle, net heat absorbed is 1500 J. Find net work and ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Cyclic process: ΔU = 0, Q = 1500 J.

Formula: Q = W.

Solution: W = 1500 J.

Final Answer: Net work = 1500 J, ΔU = 0.

Numerical 34 JEE Main. A gas expands against constant external pressure 2.5 × 105 Pa by 8 L and loses 500 J heat. Find ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Q = -500 J, ΔV = 8 × 10-3 m3, P = 2.5 × 105 Pa.

Formula: W = PΔV, ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: W = 2000 J. ΔU = -500 - 2000 = -2500 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy decreases by 2500 J.

Numerical 35 JEE Main. A gas is taken from A to B by two paths. If ΔU is 400 J for one path, what is ΔU for the other?
Show Solution

Given: Same initial and final states.

Formula: Internal energy is a state function.

Solution: ΔU is independent of path.

Final Answer: Change in internal energy = 400 J.

Numerical 36 JEE Main. A gas receives 2000 J in a process. Its P-V work from graph is 750 J. Find ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Q = 2000 J, W = 750 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = 1250 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy increases by 1250 J.

Numerical 37 JEE Main. A process on P-V graph is vertical upward. What is work if pressure changes but volume is constant?
Show Solution

Given: Vertical line means volume constant.

Formula: W = area under P-V curve = 0 because ΔV = 0.

Solution: No boundary work.

Final Answer: W = 0.

Numerical 38 JEE Main. A process on P-V graph is horizontal rightward at 3 × 105 Pa from 1 L to 4 L. Find W.
Show Solution

Given: Constant pressure, ΔV = 3 L = 3 × 10-3 m3.

Formula: W = PΔV.

Solution: W = 3 × 105 × 3 × 10-3 = 900 J.

Final Answer: Work = 900 J.

Numerical 39 JEE Main. A gas is compressed adiabatically by 1000 J work input. Find Q, W by gas and ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Q = 0, work input = 1000 J, so W by gas = -1000 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = 0 - (-1000) = 1000 J.

Final Answer: Q = 0, W = -1000 J, ΔU = +1000 J.

Numerical 40 JEE Main. A gas rejects 400 J heat and its internal energy decreases by 900 J. Find W.
Show Solution

Given: Q = -400 J, ΔU = -900 J.

Formula: W = Q - ΔU.

Solution: W = -400 - (-900) = 500 J.

Final Answer: Work done by gas = 500 J.

Numerical 41 JEE Advanced. A system moves from A to B along path 1 absorbing 900 J and doing 500 J work. Along path 2, work is 300 J. Find heat along path 2.
Show Solution

Given: Path 1: Q1 = 900 J, W1 = 500 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W and same between A and B.

Solution: ΔU = 900 - 500 = 400 J. For path 2, Q2 = ΔU + W2 = 400 + 300 = 700 J.

Final Answer: Heat along path 2 = 700 J.

Numerical 42 JEE Advanced. A clockwise cycle absorbs 2000 J heat from source and rejects 1400 J heat. Find work and efficiency.
Show Solution

Given: Qin = 2000 J, Qout = 1400 J.

Formula: W = Qin - Qout, efficiency = W/Qin.

Solution: W = 600 J. Efficiency = 600/2000 = 0.30.

Final Answer: Work = 600 J; efficiency = 30%.

Numerical 43 JEE Advanced. For a gas, Q = 500 J along A to B and Q = -200 J along B to A. Find net work in the cycle if directions form a complete cycle.
Show Solution

Given: For complete cycle, ΔU = 0. Qnet = 500 - 200 = 300 J.

Formula: Wnet = Qnet.

Solution: Wnet = 300 J.

Final Answer: Net work by system = 300 J.

Numerical 44 JEE Advanced. In a process, pressure varies as P = aV with a = 2 × 108 SI units. Volume changes from 1 L to 3 L. Find work.
Show Solution

Given: P = aV, a = 2 × 108, V1 = 10-3 m3, V2 = 3 × 10-3 m3.

Formula: W = ∫PdV = ∫aVdV = a(V22 - V12)/2.

Solution: W = 2 × 108[(9 - 1)×10-6]/2 = 800 J.

Final Answer: Work = 800 J.

Numerical 45 JEE Advanced. A gas is heated so that Q = 1200 J. It expands with work 300 J and also drives an electrical load with 200 J output. Find ΔU if total work by system includes both.
Show Solution

Given: Q = 1200 J, Wtotal = 300 + 200 = 500 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: ΔU = 1200 - 500 = 700 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy increases by 700 J.

Numerical 46 Difficult. A gas first expands doing 400 J work with Q = 700 J, then is compressed with 250 J work done on it and rejects 100 J heat. Find total ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Step 1: Q1 = 700 J, W1 = 400 J. Step 2: Q2 = -100 J, W2 = -250 J.

Formula: ΔU = Q - W for each step.

Solution: ΔU1 = 300 J. ΔU2 = -100 - (-250) = 150 J. Total = 450 J.

Final Answer: Total internal energy increases by 450 J.

Numerical 47 Difficult. A gas is taken around a cycle. During three parts, works are 500 J, -200 J and 100 J. Find net heat.
Show Solution

Given: Cycle: ΔU = 0. Net W = 500 - 200 + 100 = 400 J.

Formula: Qnet = Wnet.

Solution: Qnet = 400 J.

Final Answer: Net heat absorbed = 400 J.

Numerical 48 Difficult. A system has ΔU = -300 J while work done on it is 700 J. Find heat exchanged.
Show Solution

Given: ΔU = -300 J, W by system = -700 J.

Formula: Q = ΔU + W.

Solution: Q = -300 - 700 = -1000 J.

Final Answer: Heat rejected = 1000 J.

Numerical 49 Difficult. A gas expands from 2 L to 8 L. Pressure falls linearly from 6 × 105 Pa to 2 × 105 Pa. Heat supplied is 3000 J. Find ΔU.
Show Solution

Given: Pavg = 4 × 105 Pa, ΔV = 6 × 10-3 m3, Q = 3000 J.

Formula: W = PavgΔV, ΔU = Q - W.

Solution: W = 2400 J. ΔU = 3000 - 2400 = 600 J.

Final Answer: Internal energy increases by 600 J.

Numerical 50 Difficult. A heat engine performs 900 J work per cycle and rejects 2100 J heat. Find heat absorbed.
Show Solution

Given: Cycle: ΔU = 0. W = 900 J, Qout = 2100 J.

Formula: Qin - Qout = W.

Solution: Qin = 900 + 2100 = 3000 J.

Final Answer: Heat absorbed = 3000 J.

50 PYQs and Exam Questions

Answers are hidden. Click only after attempting the question.

Q1 CBSE. State the First Law of Thermodynamics in words.
Show Answer

Explanation: The First Law states that heat supplied to a system is used to increase internal energy and to do work by the system.

ΔQ = ΔU + ΔW.

Q2 CBSE. Why is the First Law called a statement of conservation of energy?
Show Answer

Explanation: It says energy is neither created nor destroyed in a thermodynamic process; it only changes form between heat, work and internal energy.

It is conservation of energy applied to thermodynamics.

Q3 CBSE. What does ΔU represent in the First Law?
Show Answer

Explanation: ΔU represents change in internal energy of the system, the microscopic energy stored in molecular motion and interactions.

It is a state-function change.

Q4 CBSE. For a constant-volume process, what is the work done?
Show Answer

Explanation: At constant volume, boundary displacement is zero, so P-V work is zero.

W = 0.

Q5 CBSE. What is the relation between Q and W in a cyclic process?
Show Answer

Explanation: In a cycle, the system returns to its initial state, so ΔU = 0.

Q = W.

Q6 NEET. Which quantity is zero for a cyclic process? (A) Q (B) W (C) ΔU (D) P
Show Answer

Explanation: Internal energy is a state function and final state equals initial state.

Answer: (C) ΔU.

Q7 NEET. If heat supplied is 100 J and work done by gas is 40 J, ΔU is: (A) 140 J (B) 60 J (C) -60 J (D) -140 J
Show Answer

Explanation: Using ΔU = Q - W = 100 - 40 = 60 J.

Answer: (B) 60 J.

Q8 NEET. In an adiabatic process: (A) Q = 0 (B) W = 0 (C) ΔU = 0 (D) P = 0
Show Answer

Explanation: Adiabatic means no heat exchange.

Answer: (A) Q = 0.

Q9 NEET. In an isochoric process, heat supplied equals: (A) Work (B) Change in internal energy (C) Pressure (D) Zero
Show Answer

Explanation: Isochoric means constant volume, so W = 0 and ΔU = Q.

Answer: (B) Change in internal energy.

Q10 NEET. If work is done on a gas adiabatically, its internal energy: (A) Decreases (B) Increases (C) Remains zero (D) Cannot change
Show Answer

Explanation: Q = 0 and W by gas is negative; therefore ΔU = -W is positive.

Answer: (B) Increases.

Q11 JEE Main. The area under a P-V curve represents what?
Show Answer

Explanation: The area under the P-V curve gives ∫PdV, the work done by the gas in a quasi-static process.

Answer: Work done.

Q12 JEE Main. For a complete P-V cycle, why is ΔU zero?
Show Answer

Explanation: The initial and final states are the same, and internal energy depends only on state.

Answer: State function returns to original value.

Q13 JEE Main. A clockwise P-V cycle has positive or negative work?
Show Answer

Explanation: A clockwise cycle encloses positive area for work done by the system.

Answer: Positive work.

Q14 JEE Main. If a gas goes from A to B by different paths, which quantity remains same: Q, W or ΔU?
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Explanation: Only internal energy change depends only on endpoints.

Answer: ΔU.

Q15 JEE Main. For constant pressure expansion, write the expression for work.
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Explanation: At constant pressure, the area under the P-V graph is a rectangle.

Answer: W = P(V2 - V1).

Q16 JEE Advanced. Can heat supplied to a system be completely converted into work in one process?
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Explanation: For an ideal gas isothermal expansion, ΔU = 0, so Q = W for that process. Broader engine-cycle limitations come from the second law.

Answer: In a process yes under suitable conditions; not as a complete cyclic engine with single reservoir.

Q17 JEE Advanced. A system has the same initial and final states through two paths. Compare ΔU.
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Explanation: ΔU is a state-function change, so it is identical for both paths.

Answer: Same for both paths.

Q18 JEE Advanced. Why does free expansion into vacuum do no work?
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Explanation: External pressure is zero, so W = PextΔV = 0.

Answer: No opposing pressure, no work output.

Q19 JEE Advanced. If a gas expands adiabatically, why does temperature fall?
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Explanation: It does work without receiving heat, so internal energy decreases. For ideal gas, lower internal energy means lower temperature.

Answer: Work is done at the cost of internal energy.

Q20 JEE Advanced. In a cyclic heat engine, what does the enclosed area on P-V graph represent?
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Explanation: The enclosed area equals net work done per cycle.

Answer: Net work output if clockwise.

Q21 IB. Explain the First Law using energy stores and transfers.
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Explanation: Heating and working are transfers across the system boundary, while internal energy is the system's microscopic energy store.

Answer: Energy input by heating minus work output changes internal energy.

Q22 IB. Why are Q and W not state functions?
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Explanation: They depend on the route taken between states, not only on initial and final equilibrium states.

Answer: They are process quantities.

Q23 IB. What is meant by work done by a gas?
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Explanation: It is energy transferred from the gas to surroundings when the gas expands against external pressure.

Answer: Boundary work during expansion.

Q24 IB. Why is a rigid sealed container useful for measuring ΔU from heat?
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Explanation: Rigid walls make volume constant, so boundary work is zero and supplied heat equals internal energy change.

Answer: W = 0, so ΔU = Q.

Q25 IB. What happens to net internal energy change over one full thermodynamic cycle?
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Explanation: The system returns to its starting state, so internal energy returns to its original value.

Answer: Net ΔU = 0.

Q26 ICSE. Write the First Law formula with signs for work done by system.
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Explanation: With work done by system positive, internal energy change equals heat supplied minus work done.

Answer: ΔU = Q - W.

Q27 ICSE. What is positive heat?
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Explanation: Positive heat means heat is supplied to the system from surroundings.

Answer: Energy enters as heat.

Q28 ICSE. What is negative work by a gas?
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Explanation: Negative work by a gas means the gas is compressed and work is done on it.

Answer: Compression work.

Q29 ICSE. Why does temperature rise when gas is compressed quickly?
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Explanation: Quick compression is approximately adiabatic; work done on gas increases internal energy.

Answer: Work input raises internal energy.

Q30 ICSE. Can a system do work without heat supply?
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Explanation: Yes, in adiabatic expansion a gas can do work using its internal energy.

Answer: Yes.

Q31 IGCSE. Name the energy transfer when a gas pushes a piston outward.
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Explanation: The gas transfers energy mechanically to the surroundings.

Answer: Work.

Q32 IGCSE. If a gas is heated but piston does not move, where does energy go?
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Explanation: Since no boundary work is done, supplied heat increases internal energy.

Answer: Internal energy increases.

Q33 IGCSE. What is meant by energy conservation in thermodynamics?
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Explanation: Total energy is conserved; heat, work and internal energy changes balance.

Answer: Energy is transformed, not destroyed.

Q34 IGCSE. What happens to work when volume change is zero?
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Explanation: Boundary work is zero because W = PΔV.

Answer: W = 0.

Q35 IGCSE. Why can a gas cool while expanding?
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Explanation: During expansion, gas does work; if heat input is insufficient, internal energy and temperature decrease.

Answer: Work output can reduce internal energy.

Q36 A-Level. Write the integral expression for P-V work.
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Explanation: For a quasi-static process, work is the integral of pressure with respect to volume.

Answer: W = ∫PdV.

Q37 A-Level. Why does the First Law not specify direction of heat flow?
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Explanation: The First Law is energy conservation only; direction and feasibility require the Second Law.

Answer: It balances energy but does not set process direction.

Q38 A-Level. Explain why ΔU is independent of path while Q is path dependent.
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Explanation: Internal energy is a property of state; heat is a transfer during a process and changes with path.

Answer: State function versus process quantity.

Q39 A-Level. For an ideal gas isothermal expansion, explain Q = W.
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Explanation: Temperature is constant, so internal energy change is zero. From the First Law, Q = W.

Answer: Supplied heat becomes boundary work.

Q40 A-Level. For adiabatic compression of an ideal gas, explain the sign of ΔU.
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Explanation: Q = 0 and work is done on gas, so W by gas is negative and ΔU is positive.

Answer: Internal energy increases.

Q41 Assertion-Reason. Assertion: In a cyclic process, ΔU = 0. Reason: Internal energy is a state function.
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Explanation: Both statements are true and the reason correctly explains the assertion.

Answer: Both true; reason is correct.

Q42 Assertion-Reason. Assertion: Heat supplied always increases internal energy. Reason: Heat is a form of energy transfer.
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Explanation: Reason is true, but assertion is false because supplied heat can be used fully or partly for work.

Answer: Assertion false, reason true.

Q43 Assertion-Reason. Assertion: Work done in a constant-volume process is zero. Reason: Boundary displacement is zero.
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Explanation: Both are true and the reason correctly explains the assertion.

Answer: Both true; reason is correct.

Q44 Assertion-Reason. Assertion: In adiabatic expansion, temperature of ideal gas may fall. Reason: Gas does work at the expense of internal energy.
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Explanation: Both statements are true and the reason explains the assertion.

Answer: Both true; reason is correct.

Q45 Assertion-Reason. Assertion: Q and W are exact differentials. Reason: They depend only on initial and final states.
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Explanation: Both assertion and reason are false in this context; heat and work are path dependent process quantities.

Answer: Both false.

Q46 Case Study. A gas in a sealed piston-cylinder receives heat and expands slowly. Identify heat, work and internal energy terms.
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Explanation: Heat is positive, work by gas is positive, and internal energy change depends on Q - W.

Answer: Q > 0, W > 0, ΔU = Q - W.

Q47 Case Study. A pressure cooker is heated while volume remains almost fixed before whistle. Apply First Law qualitatively.
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Explanation: Boundary work is nearly zero, so heat mainly increases internal energy of contents and raises temperature/pressure.

Answer: Approximately ΔU = Q.

Q48 Case Study. An insulated cylinder is compressed quickly. Apply First Law.
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Explanation: Insulated means Q = 0; compression means W by gas is negative; therefore ΔU increases.

Answer: ΔU positive.

Q49 Case Study. A heat engine returns to its initial state after each cycle. What does the First Law imply?
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Explanation: Since ΔU = 0 over a cycle, net heat absorbed equals net work output.

Answer: Qnet = Wnet.

Q50 Case Study. A gas expands freely into vacuum in an insulated container. Predict Q, W and ΔU for ideal gas.
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Explanation: Insulated gives Q = 0. Vacuum gives W = 0. Therefore ΔU = 0.

Answer: Q = 0, W = 0, ΔU = 0.

Q51 Conceptual. Can ΔU be positive when heat is rejected?
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Explanation: Yes. If enough work is done on the system, internal energy can increase despite heat loss.

Answer: Yes, work input can dominate.

Q52 Conceptual. Can Q be zero while ΔU changes?
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Explanation: Yes. In an adiabatic process, work transfer can change internal energy.

Answer: Yes.

Q53 Conceptual. Can W be zero while Q is nonzero?
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Explanation: Yes. At constant volume, heat can change internal energy without boundary work.

Answer: Yes.

Q54 Conceptual. Why must the system be specified before applying the First Law?
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Explanation: Signs and energy transfers depend on what crosses the chosen system boundary.

Answer: System choice defines Q, W and ΔU.

Q55 Difficult Numerical. A gas absorbs 300 J and does 500 J work. What happens to internal energy?
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Explanation: ΔU = 300 - 500 = -200 J, so internal energy decreases.

Answer: ΔU = -200 J.

Quick Revision Notes

Important Formulas

  • ΔQ = ΔU + ΔW
  • ΔU = ΔQ - ΔW
  • W = ∫PdV
  • At constant pressure: W = PΔV
  • At constant volume: W = 0
  • For cyclic process: ΔU = 0
  • For cyclic process: Q = W

Important Facts

  • Heat and work are path functions.
  • Internal energy is a state function.
  • Work by system is positive during expansion.
  • Work by system is negative during compression.
  • Heat supplied is positive; heat rejected is negative.
  • Area under P-V curve gives work.
  • Area enclosed by P-V loop gives net cyclic work.

Most Common Mistakes

  • Using Q = W for every process instead of only when ΔU = 0.
  • Forgetting litre to cubic metre conversion in PΔV work.
  • Using final pressure instead of graph area when pressure varies.
  • Calling heat a stored quantity instead of energy transfer.
  • Mixing physics and chemistry sign conventions without stating them.

Exam Tips

  • Write the convention before solving: W positive for work done by system.
  • For a cycle, immediately write ΔU = 0.
  • For a rigid container, immediately write W = 0.
  • For adiabatic process, immediately write Q = 0.
  • For P-V graph questions, calculate area carefully.

If Thermodynamics is not clear and you are looking for a Physics Tutor, contact Kumar Sir.

Phone: +91-9958461445   Email: kumarsirphysics@gmail.com

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