1 3E-03 Fire Syringe RAPID COMPRESSION IS ADIABATIC GIVING RAPID RISE OF AIR TEMPERATURE IN THE CHAMBER WHICH EXCEEDS THE IGNITION TEMPERATURE OF THE FLAMMABLE.

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Presentation transcript:

1 3E-03 Fire Syringe RAPID COMPRESSION IS ADIABATIC GIVING RAPID RISE OF AIR TEMPERATURE IN THE CHAMBER WHICH EXCEEDS THE IGNITION TEMPERATURE OF THE FLAMMABLE MATERIAL. Compression and rise in air temperature What will happen to the combustible material when the plunger is rapidly pushed down ?

3B-04 Boiling Water in Cup Will the cup burn? A.yes. B.No. 2

3D-05 Solar Panel 3D-03 Radiation--Match iW3STzU&feature=results_main&playnex t=1&list=PLFA6F13ACB19C86BF "Archimedes heat ray", was used to focus sunlight onto approaching ships, causing them to catch fire. 3

Heat Engines A gasoline engine is a form of a heat engine, e.g. a 4-stroke engine INTAKE stroke: the piston descends from the top to the bottom of the cylinder, reducing the pressure inside. A mixture of fuel and air, is forced by atmospheric pressure into the cylinder through the intake port. The intake valve then close. COMPRESSION stroke: with both intake and exhaust valves closed, the piston returns to the top of the cylinder compressing the fuel-air mixture. POWER stroke: the compressed air–fuel mixture in a gasoline engine is ignited by a spark plug. The compressed fuel-air mixture expand and move the piston back EXHAUST stroke: during the exhaust stroke, the piston once again returns to top while the exhaust valve is open and expel the spent fuel- air mixture out through the exhaust valve(s). 4

3E09, 3E10, 2E12 Engines Steam Engine Stirling Engine running on a cup of hot water: When the yellow foam inside the engine is near the top of the cylinder most of the air is on the bottom side (the hot side) where it is heated. When the air gets hot it expands and pushes up on the piston. When the foam moves to the bottom of the engine it moves most of the air to the top of the engine. The top of the engine is cool, allowing the air inside the engine to cool off (reject heat to the environment) and the piston receives a downward push. 5

3E09, 3E10, 2E12 Engines Steam Engine Stirling Engine 1.A fire where the coal burns. 2.A boiler full of water that the fire heats up to make steam. 3.A cylinder and piston. Steam from the boiler is piped into the cylinder, causing the piston to move first one way then the other. This in and out movement (which is also known as "reciprocating") is used to drive... 4.A machine attached to the piston. That could be anything from a water pump to a factory machine... or even a giant steam locomotive running up and down a railroad. 6

Efficiency Efficiency is the ratio of the net work done by the engine to the amount of heat that must be supplied to accomplish this work. 7

A heat engine takes in 1200 J of heat from the high-temperature heat source in each cycle, and does 400 J of work in each cycle. What is the efficiency of this engine? a)33% b)40% c)66% Q H = 1200 J W = 400 J e = W / Q H = (400 J) / (1200 J) = 1/3 = 0.33 = 33% 8

How much heat is released into the environment in each cycle? a)33 J b)400 J c)800 J d)1200 J Q C = Q H - W = 1200 J J = 800 J 9

Carnot Engine The efficiency of a typical automobile engine is less than 30%. – This seems to be wasting a lot of energy. – What is the best efficiency we could achieve? – What factors determine efficiency? The cycle devised by Carnot that an ideal engine would have to follow is called a Carnot cycle. An (ideal, not real) engine following this cycle is called a Carnot engine. 10

If the process is adiabatic, no heat flows into or out of the gas In an isothermal process, the temperature does not change. – The internal energy must be constant. – The change in internal energy,  U, is zero. – If an amount of heat Q is added to the gas, an equal amount of work W will be done by the gas on its surroundings, from  U = Q - W. In an isobaric process, the pressure of the gas remains constant. – The internal energy increases as the gas is heated, and so does the temperature. – The gas also expands, removing some of the internal energy. Experiments determined that the pressure, volume, and absolute temperature of an ideal gas are related by the equation of state: PV = NkT where N is the number of molecules and k is Boltzmann’s constant. Different Thermal Process 11

1.Heat flows into cylinder at temperature T H. The fluid expands isothermally and does work on the piston. 2.The fluid continues to expand, adiabatically. 3.Work is done by the piston on the fluid, which undergoes an isothermal compression. 4.The fluid returns to its initial condition by an adiabatic compression. 12

Carnot Efficiency The efficiency of Carnot’s ideal engine is called the Carnot efficiency and is given by: This is the maximum efficiency possible for any engine taking in heat from a reservoir at absolute temperature T H and releasing heat to a reservoir at temperature T C. – The temperature must be measured in absolute degrees. Even Carnot’s ideal engine is less than 100% efficient. 13

A steam turbine takes in steam at a temperature of 400  C and releases steam to the condenser at a temperature of 120  C. What is the Carnot efficiency for this engine? a)30% b)41.6% c)58.4% d)70% T H = 400  C = 673 K T C = 120  C = 393 K e C = (T H - T C ) / T H = (673 K K) / (673 K) = 280 K / 673 K = = 41.6% 14

Quiz: If the turbine takes in 500 kJ of heat in each cycle, what is the maximum amount of work that could be generated by the turbine in each cycle? a)0.83 J b)16.64 kJ c)28 kJ d)208 kJ Q H = 500 kJ e = W / Q H, so W = e Q H = (0.416)(500 kJ) = 208 kJ 15

Entropy 16

Treat the room, the cup and the water and ice as one single system. The net change of the system entropy is: = 0.03 J/k, i.e. entropy is not a conservative quantity. It increased during this process. The above heat exchange process is a spontaneous process. One can make a more general statement: “entropy of an isolated system, i.e. no heat exchange with other systems, always increases, and processes which increase entropy can occur spontaneously”.isolated system This is the second law of thermodynamics. 17