MWadwell wrote:SWM wrote:No, Pressure is force across a surface. Pressure is not potential energy. It doesn't even have the same fundamental units. Heat is potential energy. There is a reason that it is called "thermodynamic potential energy".
Mmmm - I'm going to have to go back and have a stern talk to the professors that ran the
thermodynamics and fluid mechanics courses that I did at university, as (when talking about initial and final states of fluids and gases) enthalpy (which
includes pressure) was a factor. (BTW, I still have my textbooks if you want references.)
Also, regarding SI units - you are wrong.
Work is measured in Joules (as it is the amount of energy that has been exchanged with an object), and to find the work done on a gas, work is the integral between the initial and final volumes of the pressure -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanical_work#Work_by_a_gasIt may have been 20 years ago, but I still remember what a mechanical engineering degree is....
You are correct, Work is measured in Joules, or kg m^2 / s^2. But Pressure is measured in Pascals, or kg/m s^2. Not the same units! You would have to multiply Pressure by a Volume (or an equivalent set of factors) in order to get units of Work or Energy. You yourself say that work is the
integral of pressure over intial and final volume. Integral means a product between Pressure and Volume. Pressure is not equal to Work or Energy, as you said in previous posts.
Your professor was correct that pressure is a
factor in enthalpy, but it is not equal to enthalpy. Enthalpy is the Internal Energy plus the product of Pressure times Volume. Pressure is not potential energy; it is merely one of several factors in calculating the potential energy.
I believe we are in total agreement about the definitions of Pressure, Work, Energy, and Enthalpy. The only thing I have been disagreeing with were these statements you made: "pressure = energy = velocity = heat" and "Pressure is potential energy". I don't think you meant that literally, since you clearly do understand thermodynamics. But it is important to be clear in statements like this, and I wanted everyone else to understand that Pressure is not actually (by itself) equivalent to Energy. It is only a
factor in determining the Energy of a system.