AE231 LectureNotes Chapter8
AE231 LectureNotes Chapter8
AE231 LectureNotes Chapter8
Lecture Notes
Exergy
When a new energy source is discovered, the first thing done is to estimate
the amount of energy contained in the source. But, this information alone is
not enough to decide whether to build a power plant on that site. What we
really need to know is the work potential of the source—that is, the amount
of energy we can extract as useful work. The rest of the energy is eventually
discarded as waste energy and is not worthy of our consideration. Thus, we
need to have a property to enable us to determine the useful work potential
of a given amount of energy at some specified state. This property is exergy,
which is also called the availability or available energy in some textbooks.
1
The concept of exergy is defined as the possible work we can extract from a
given physical setup when it is allowed to interact with the ambient and the
process end state is at P0 , T0 .
Then, the question is what is the maximum amount of work this system can
do?
To answer this question, now let’s consider a piston cylinder device the work-
ing fluid in which undergoes an expansion process.
P0, T0
1 2
2
Now, put the equation for q12 into the 1st law and rearrange the terms
The only way to maximize w12 is to have a reversible process where sgen = 0.
Note: During this process (1 → 2), some portion of work is used against the
surroundings’ pressure P0 . That is, when the gas in the piston–cylinder device
expands, part of the work done by the gas is used to push the atmospheric
air outside the device. If the atmospheric pressure P0 is constant, then
The difference between the actual work w12 and the surroundings work
wsurr (= wagainst the surroundings pressure ) is called the useful work.
φ ≡ (e − e0 ) − T0 (s − s0 ) + P0 (ν − ν0 ) (8.11)
where the 0’s denote the surroundings’ conditions. Then, the maximum
(reversible) useful work is
rev
w12,useful = φ1 − φ2 . (8.12)
3
Exergy is the maximum useful work that could be obtained from a system
at a given state thinking that it would go through a reversible process and at
the end it would be in equilibrium with the surroundings.
or
rev
i12 = w12,useful − w12,useful (8.14)
Hence,
i12 = T0 sgen (8.15)
For a reversible process i12 = 0, whereas for an irreversible process i12 > 0.
Then, let’s redefine the irreversibility:
Heat exchange between the system and the reservoir q12,R is given.
end states of which are given and the surroundings’ conditions are given. Sup-
pose that the system exchanges heat with the surroundings and a reservoir.
In addition to these, reservoir temperature TR and heat transfer between the
system and the reservoir q12,R are given. Then,
4
where q12,surr is the heat transfer between the system and the surroundings.
Then, the question is what is the maximum amount of work this system can
do?
To answer this question, let’s start by considering the 1st law for this system,
which is
q12 − w12 = e2 − e1 where q12 = q12,surr + q12,R (8.18)
From the 2nd law, we get q12,surr and put it into the 1st law. Then, we have
T0
w12 = e1 − e2 − T0 (s1 − s2 ) + q12,R 1 − − T0 sgen (8.20)
TR
and for a reversible process
rev T0
w12 = e1 − e2 − T0 (s1 − s2 ) + q12,R 1 − (8.21)
TR
Note: When there is a reservoir, the reversible useful work can be expressed
as
rev T0
w12,useful = φ1 − φ2 + q12,R 1 − (8.24)
TR
And the irreversibility is
rev
i12 = w12 − w12 (8.25)
or
rev
i12 = w12,useful − w12,useful (8.26)
5
Hence,
i12 = T0 sgen (8.27)
Using Eq. 8.26, the irreversibility can be expressed by
T0
i12 = φ1 − φ2 − P0 (ν1 − ν2 ) + q12,R 1 − − w12 (8.28)
TR
When there is more than one reservoir, the total irreversibility, I, for a closed
system with boundary work becomes
X T0
I12 = m(φ1 − φ2 ) − P0 (V1 − V2 ) + Qi 1 − − W12 (8.29)
i
Ti
Heat transfer rate of the system Q̇ and the heat exchange rate between
the system and the surroundings Q̇sys,surr are given,
And, the question is what is the maximum amount of work this system can
produce?
To answer this question, let’s begin with the 1st law for a steady-state process:
X Vi2 Ve2
X
Q̇ − Ẇ + ṁi hi + + gzi − ṁe he + + gze = 0 (8.30)
i
2 e
2
6
And the 2nd law is
Q̇surr Q̇R X X
Ṡgen = + + ṁe se − ṁi si (8.31)
Tsurr TR e i
From the 2nd law we get Q̇sys,surr and put it into the 1st law:
X Vi2 Ve2
X
T0
Ẇ = ṁi hi + +gzi −T0 si − ṁe he + +gze −T0 se +Q̇sys,R 1− −T0 Ṡgen
i
2 e
2 TR
(8.32)
The only way to maximize Ẇ is to have a reversible process where Ṡgen = 0
(recall that all other terms in the equation are fixed, given). Then, the
maximum amount of work this system can do is:
X Vi2 Ve2
X
rev T0
Ẇ = ṁi hi + +gzi −T0 si − ṁe he + +gze −T0 se +Q̇sys,R 1−
i
2 e
2 TR
(8.33)
7
When there is more than one reservoir, the irreversibility rate becomes
˙
X X X T0
I= ṁi ψi − ṁe ψe + Q̇sys,Rj 1 − − Ẇ (8.38)
i e j
TRj
Heat transfer to/from the system Q12 and the heat exchange between
the system and the surroundings Q12,sys,surr are given,
And, the question is what is the maximum amount of work this system can
produce?
To answer this question, let’s begin with the 1st law for a transient process:
X Vi2 Ve2
X
Q12 −W12 + mi hi + +gzi − me he + +gze = U2 −U1 +(KE2 −KE1 )+(PE2 −PE1 )
i
2 e
2
(8.39)
where Q12 = Q12,sys,surr + Q12,sys,R .
8
From the 2nd law we get Q12,sys,surr and put it into the 1st law:
X Vi2 Ve2
X
W12 = mi hi + + gzi − T0 si − me he + + gze − T0 se
i
2 e
2
+ [U1 − U2 + (KE1 − KE2 ) + (PE1 − PE2 ) − T0 (S1 − S2 )]
T0
+ Q12,sys,R 1 − − T0 Sgen
TR
(8.41)
9
Or
I12 = T0 Sgen (8.46)
Consider two heat engines, both having a thermal efficiency of 0.30, as shown
in the figure below. One of the engines (engine A) is supplied with heat from
a source at 600 K, and the other one (engine B) from a source at 1000 K.
Both engines reject heat to a medium at 300 K.
QH,A QH,B
QL,A QL,B
TL = 300 K
10
At first glance, both engines seem to convert to work the same fraction of
heat that they receive; thus they are performing equally well. When we take
a second look at these engines in light of the second law of thermodynam-
ics, however, we see a totally different picture. These engines, at best, can
perform as reversible engines, in which case their efficiencies would be
rev TL 300
ηth,A = 1 − =1− = 50%
TH A 600
rev TL 300
ηth,B = 1 − =1− = 70%
TH B 1000
It is obvious from this example that the first-law efficiency alone is not a
realistic measure of performance of engineering devices. To overcome this
deficiency, we define a second-law efficiency ηII as the ratio of the actual
thermal efficiency to the maximum possible (reversible) thermal efficiency
under the same conditions:
ηth
ηII = (8.47)
ηth,rev
Based on this definition, the second-law efficiencies of the two heat engines
discussed above are
0.30 0.30
ηII,A = = 0.60 and ηII,B = = 0.43
0.50 0.70
That is, engine A is converting 60% of the available work potential to useful
work. This ratio is only 43% for engine B.
Remarks:
For cyclic devices such as refrigerators and heat pumps, the second-law
efficiency is
β
ηII = for refrigerators/air conditioners
βrev
β0
ηII = 0 for heat pumps
βrev
11
More generally,
Wuseful
for work-producing devices, such as turbines, ηII = rev
Wuseful
W rev
for work-consuming devices, such as compressors ηII = useful
Wuseful
References:
12