Chemistry, asked by Anonymous, 11 months ago

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Answered by ROCKSTARgirl
0
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An isothermal process is a change of a system, in which the temperature remains constant: ΔT = 0. This typically occurs when a system is in contact with an outside thermal reservoir (heat bath), and the change in the system will occur slowly enough to allow the system to continue to adjust to the temperature of the reservoir through heatexchange. In contrast, an adiabatic process is where a system exchanges no heat with its surroundings (Q = 0). In other words, in an isothermal process, the value ΔT = 0 and therefore the change in internal energy ΔU = 0 (only for an ideal gas) but Q ≠ 0, while in an adiabatic process, ΔT ≠ 0 but Q = 0.

SO,OPTION NO. C IS YOUR CORRECT ANSWER!

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ROCKSTAR GIRL*
Answered by GreenTree
0
Hola Mate !

Question:

For an irreversible isothermal expansion of an ideal gas, which of the following actions are correct ?

Answer: Option C

Explanation:

For an irreversible isothermal expansion of an ideal gas, only the option C action is correct .

Hope It Helps !

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