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Chap 2 A

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views26 pages

Chap 2 A

Uploaded by

amareyeabtsega
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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ENERGY, ENERGY TRANSFER

& GENERAL ENERGY


ANALYSIS

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CHAPTER 2a
1
CONTENTS

 Forms of Energy
 Energy Transfer by Heat
 Energy Transfer by Work
 Mechanical Forms of Work
 The First Law of Thermodynamics
 Energy Conversion Efficiencies
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2
LESSON OBJECTIVES

At the end of this lesson, you should be able


to:
State the various forms of energy
Describe the nature of internal energy
Describe the energy transfer by heat and work
Define the concept of work and several forms of
mechanical work

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3
FORMS OF ENERGY

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FORMS OF ENERGY
 Energy exists in numerous forms (thermal, mechanical, chemical, kinetic,
potential, electric, magnetic & nuclear)
 The sum of the energies is the total energy, E (kJ)
 Or for a unit mass, E
e= (kJ/kg)
m
Grouping of
Energy forms
energy of a system as a whole with respect to some
macroscopic outside reference frames, e.g. KE, PE

• related to molecular structure of a system and the


microscopic degree of molecular activity
• independent of outside reference frames
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• the sum is the Internal Energy, U 5
FORMS OF ENERGY (cont’d)
Macroscopic forms of energy

Kinetic energy (KE) Potential energy (PE)


- result of motion relative to some - due to elevation in a gravitational
field (unit J)
reference frame (unit J)
1 PE = mgz
KE = mυ 2
2 ∆PE = PE2 − PE1 = mg (z 2 − z1 )
1
∆KE = KE2 − KE1 =
2
(
m υ 22 − υ12 )
where
g = gravitational acceleration, 9.81 m/s2
where h = elevation of center of gravity of a
υ = velocity of the system relative to system relative to some arbitrarily
some fixed reference frame (m/s) plane (m)
Open m = mass of an object (kg) 6
FORMS OF ENERGY (cont’d)
Due to internal
Microscopic forms of energy
structure of the matter

Sensible Energy Chemical energy: The


Latent Energy internal energy associated
- Kinetic energy of molecules with the atomic bonds in a
- Associated with
phase of a molecule.
system Nuclear energy: The
tremendous amount of
energy associated with the
strong bonds within the
nucleus of the atom itself.

The internal energy of a system is the sum of all forms of


the microscopic energies.
Thermal = Sensible + Latent
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7
Internal = Sensible + Latent + Chemical + Nuclear
FORMS OF ENERGY (cont’d)

Total Energy of a system

1
E = U + KE + PE = U + mυ 2 + mgz UNIT ?
2

Total Energy of a system per unit mass

1 2
e = u + ke + pe = u + υ + gz UNIT ?
2

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Energy in Closed System

The macroscopic kinetic energy is an organized form of energy and is much more useful than the
disorganized microscopic kinetic energies of the molecules.

Most of the closed system remains


stationary, so for that system;
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∆E = ∆U + ∆KE + ∆PE
FORMS OF ENERGY (cont’d)

Energy Interaction
 The only two forms of energy interactions
associated with a closed system are heat
transfer and work.

 Recognized as it crosses boundary,


represent energy lost or gain

 The difference between heat transfer and


work: An energy interaction is heat transfer if
its driving force is a temperature difference.
Otherwise it is work.
Energy can cross the
boundaries of a closed system
in the form of heat and work.
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ENERGY TRANSFER BY HEAT
Means of energy transfer caused by temperature
Heat Transfer difference between the system and the surroundings

Direction of heat transfer: Higher T


to Lower T

Energy is recognized as heat


transfer only as it crosses the
system boundary

Temperature difference is the driving force


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for heat transfer. The larger the temperature
difference, the higher is the rate of heat11
transfer.
ENERGY TRANSFER BY HEAT
(cont’d)
 Adiabatic process is a process during
which there is no heat transfer, Q=0

 How a process can be adiabatic?


 Well insulated system
 No temperature difference
 Adiabatic is not necessarily means
isothermal process. Temperature of the
system can still be changed by other
means

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12
ENERGY TRANSFER BY HEAT
(cont’d)
 Amount of heat transferred is denoted by Q (kJ)
 For a unit mass: Q
q= (kJ/kg)
m
 Sign Convention for Heat:
Q positive indicates heat input
Q negative indicates heat lost

Specifying the directions


of heat using in and out

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13
ENERGY TRANSFER BY HEAT
(cont’d)
MECHANISMS OF HEAT TRANSFER
Conduction Convection Radiation

The transfer of energy from the The transfer of energy between


more energetic particles of a a solid surface and the adjacent The transfer of energy due to the
substance to the adjacent less fluid that is in motion, and it emission of electromagnetic waves
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energetic ones as a result of involves the combined effects of 14
(or photons).
interaction between particles. conduction and fluid motion.
ENERGY TRANSFER BY WORK

 In mechanics, work is defined as the product of the force


and the displacement in the direction of the force.

WORK Energy transfer associated with a force acting


through a distance, e.g. rotating shaft, rising piston

 The work done by, or on, a system is defined as (unit kJ):


s2
W =∫ F .ds or Work done per unit mass w=
W
s1
m

 The work done per unit time is Power (unit kJ/s or kW):
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ENERGY TRANSFER BY WORK
(cont’d)
 Sign convention for work:
W positive indicates work done by system (work output)
W negative indicates work done on the system (work input)

Specifying the directions


of work using in and out
 The work done by, or on, a
system is defined as (unit
kJ):

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ENERGY TRANSFER BY WORK
(cont’d)
Heat vs. Work
 Both are recognized at the boundaries
of a system as they cross the
boundaries. That is, both heat and work
are boundary phenomena.
 Systems possess energy, but not heat
or work.
 Both are associated with a process, not
a state.
 Unlike properties, heat or work has no
meaning at a state.
 Both are path functions (i.e., their
magnitudes depend on the path followed Properties are point functions; but heat
during a process as well as the end and work are path functions (their
Open
states). magnitudes depend on the path 17
followed).
Moving Boundary Work

If the piston is allowed to move a distance dx in a quasi-equilibrium manner, the


differential work done by the system is

δW = F dx = pA dx = p dV
2
The total work done by the system is W = ∫ p dV (kJ)
1

Work done by the system can be interpreted as the area under


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the process path on a p-V diagram. 18
Moving Boundary Work

The total area under the curve 1-2


is: 2 2
Area = A = ∫ dA = ∫ pdV
1 1

Note:
P is the absolute pressure and is always positive.
When dV is positive, Wb is positive.
When dV is negative, Wb is negative

A gas can follow several different paths


as it expands from state 1 to state 2.
Each process path gives a different value
for the boundary work
Wb depends on the path (thus process)
and the end states
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Work is not a property 19
19
ENERGY TRANSFER BY WORK
(cont’d)
Electrical work

NN= Coulombs of electric charge


Electrical power

When potential difference and


current change with time

Electrical power in terms of


When potential difference resistance R, current I, and
and current remain constant potential difference V.

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20
EXAMPLE 2

Consider an electric
refrigerator located in a
room. Determine the
DIRECTION of work and
heat interactions (in our out)
for:
(a) Contents of the refrigerator

(b) All parts of refrigerators,


including the contents

(c) Everything contained within room


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21
during winter day
MECHANICAL FORMS OF
WORK
 There are two requirements for a work interaction between a system and
its surroundings to exist:
 there must be a force acting on the boundary.
 the boundary must move.

Work = Force × Distance When force is not constant

 In thermo, most of the work is mechanical work, which


associated with moving boundary work

 Other common forms of work


 Shaft work
If there is no movement, no
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 Spring work 22
work is done.
SHAFT WORK
A force F acting through a moment arm r
generates a torque T

This force acts through a distance s for


n revolution:

Shaft work is
Shaft work: proportional to the
torque applied and the
number of revolutions
of the shaft.

The power transmitted through the shaft is the shaft work done per unit time

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SPRING WORK
When the length of the spring changes by a
differential amount dx under the influence of a force
F, the work done is:

For linear elastic springs, the displacement x is


proportional to the force applied

k: spring constant (kN/m)

Substituting and integrating yield

The displacement of a linear


spring doubles when the force
x1 and x2: the initial and the final displacements
is doubled.
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NET WORK DONE BY A
SYSTEM
Different forms of work transfer could occur in a system simultaneously
during a process.

The total or net work done by the system = algebraic sum of all work

Wtotal = Wb + We + Wsh + Ws + ...

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Class Takeaway

1. How can a closed system and its surroundings interact?

2. What are the sign conventions used for energy transfer?

3. Express total energy and for each of the terms, indicate the unit.

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