论文标题
调查学生对热引擎的理解:斯特林引擎的案例研究
Investigating student understanding of heat engine: a case study of Stirling engine
论文作者
论文摘要
我们报告了在高年级本科热物理学课程中的Stirling循环中,学生对热发动机的困难研究。三个班级进行了有关带有再生器的斯特林引擎的课堂测试,并要求学生进行最基本的活动之一 - 计算热发动机的效率。我们的数据表明,很多学生没有对热发动机的基本工程知识有强烈的概念性理解,包括再生器的功能以及活塞运动对发动机涉及的热量和工作的影响。最值得注意的是,尽管这三个类的科学误差率相似($ \ sim $ 10 \%),但这三个类别的工程误差率很高(高于50 \%),并且给出了对热引擎的工程知识的简单教程表现出明显较小的工程误差率,而工程误差率明显小于其他两个类别。此外,书面答案和测试后访谈都表明,大多数学生只能将Carnot的定理与Carnot Cycle相关联,但与其他两个热储层之间的其他可逆周期相关联,可能是因为传统热力学教科书中没有足够的周期。我们的结果表明,科学和工程知识都很重要,应包括在教学方法中,尤其是在在国家和地区教授的热力学课程中,传统上没有太多关注实验教育或工程培训。
We report on the study of student difficulties regarding heat engine in the context of Stirling cycle within upper-division undergraduate thermal physics course. An in-class test about a Stirling engine with a regenerator was taken by three classes, and the students were asked to perform one of the most basic activities---calculate the efficiency of the heat engine. Our data suggest that quite a few students have not developed a robust conceptual understanding of basic engineering knowledge of the heat engine, including the function of the regenerator and the influence of piston movements on the heat and work involved in the engine. Most notably, although the science error ratios of the three classes were similar ($\sim$10\%), the engineering error ratios of the three classes were high (above 50\%), and the class that was given a simple tutorial of engineering knowledge of heat engine exhibited significantly smaller engineering error ratio by about 20\% than the other two classes. In addition, both the written answers and post-test interviews show that most of the students can only associate Carnot's theorem with Carnot cycle, but not with other reversible cycles working between two heat reservoirs, probably because no enough cycles except Carnot cycle were covered in the traditional Thermodynamics textbook. Our results suggest that both scientific and engineering knowledge are important and should be included in instructional approaches, especially in the Thermodynamics course taught in the countries and regions with a tradition of not paying much attention to experimental education or engineering training.