Chapter 5: Second Law of Thermodynamics
Chapter 5: Second Law of Thermodynamics
Chapter 5: Second Law of Thermodynamics
Thermodynamics
Chapter 5: Second
Law of
Thermodynamics
COURSE OUTCOME 1 CO1)
1.Chapter 1: Introduction to Thermodynamics
2. Chapter 2: The First Law and Other Basic Concepts
3.Chapter 3: Volumetric properties of pure fluids
4. Chapter 4: Heat effects
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INTRODUCTION TO THE SECOND LAW
A cup of hot coffee
does not get hotter in
a cooler room.
Transferring
heat to a
paddle wheel
will not cause
it to rotate.
These processes
Transferring cannot occur
heat to a wire even though they
will not are not in violation
generate
of the first law.
electricity.
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Processes occur in a
certain direction, and not
in the reverse direction.
A source
supplies
energy in the
Bodies with relatively large thermal form of heat,
masses can be modeled as thermal and a sink
energy reservoirs. absorbs it.
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Thermal efficiency
Schematic of
a heat engine.
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Can we save Qout? In a steam power plant,
the condenser is the
device where large
quantities of waste
heat is rejected to
rivers, lakes, or the
atmosphere.
Can we not just take the
condenser out of the
plant and save all that
waste energy?
The answer is,
A heat-engine cycle cannot be completed without unfortunately, a firm
rejecting some heat to a low-temperature sink. no for the simple
reason that without a
Every heat engine must waste heat rejection process
some energy by transferring it to a in a condenser, the
cycle cannot be
low-temperature reservoir in order
completed.
to complete the cycle, even under
idealized conditions.
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The Second Law of
Thermodynamics:
Kelvin–Planck Statement
It is impossible for any device
that operates on a cycle to
receive heat from a single
reservoir and produce a net
amount of work.
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The objective Heat
of a heat
pump is to Pumps
supply heat
QH into the
warmer
space. The work
supplied to a
heat pump is
used to extract
energy from the
cold outdoors
and carry it into
the warm
indoors.
Energy efficiency rating (EER): The amount of heat removed from the
cooled space in Btu’s for 1 Wh (watthour) of electricity consumed.
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The Second Law of Thermodynamics:
Clasius Statement
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Equivalence of the Two Statements
Irreversibilities
(a) Heat
transfer
through a
temperature
difference is
irreversible, Irreversible
and (b) the compression
reverse and
process is expansion
impossible. processes. 20
Internally and Externally Reversible Processes
• Internally reversible process: If no irreversibilities occur within the boundaries of
the system during the process.
• Externally reversible: If no irreversibilities occur outside the system boundaries.
• Totally reversible process: It involves no irreversibilities within the system or its
surroundings.
• A totally reversible process involves no heat transfer through a finite temperature
difference, no nonquasi-equilibrium changes, and no friction or other dissipative
effects.
Execution of
the Carnot
cycle in a
closed
system.
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THE CARNOT HEAT ENGINE
The Carnot
heat engine
is the most
efficient of
all heat
engines
operating
between the
same high-
and low- No heat engine can have a higher
temperature efficiency than a reversible heat engine
reservoirs. operating between the same high- and
low-temperature reservoirs.
Any heat Carnot heat
engine engine
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The Quality of Energy
Can we use
C unit for
temperature
The higher the temperature
here?
of the thermal energy, the
higher its quality.
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Summary
• Introduction to the second law
• Thermal energy reservoirs
• Heat engines
Thermal efficiency
The 2nd law: Kelvin-Planck statement
• Refrigerators and heat pumps
Coefficient of performance (COP)
The 2nd law: Clasius statement
• Perpetual motion machines
• Reversible and irreversible processes
Irreversibilities, Internally and externally reversible processes
• The Carnot cycle
The reversed Carnot cycle
• The Carnot principles
• The thermodynamic temperature scale
• The Carnot heat engine
The quality of energy
• The Carnot refrigerator and heat pump 30