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Exergy A Measure of Work Potential Exergy Property Availability or available work Work = f(initial state, process path, final state) Exergy Dead State When system is in thermodynamic equilibrium with the environment Same temperature and pressure as surroundings, no kinetic or potential energy, chemically inert, no unbalanced electrical, magnetic, etc effects… Exergy Exergy Useful work Upper limit on the amount of work a device can deliver without violating any thermodynamic law. (always a difference between exergy and actual work delivered by a device) Exergy associated with Kinetic and Potential Energy Kinetic energy Form of mechanical energy Can be converted to work entirely xke = ke = vel2 /2 (kJ/kg) Exergy associated with Kinetic and Potential Energy Potential Energy Form of mechanical energy Can be converted entirely into work xpe = pe = gz (kJ/kg) All ke and pe available for work Reversible Work and Irreversibility Exergy Work potential for deferent systems System operating between high temp and dead state Isentropic efficiencies Exit conditions differ Reversible Work and Irreversibility Reversible Work Irreversibility (exergy destruction) Surroundings Work Work done against the surroundings For moveable boundary Wsurr = P0(V2 – V1) Wuseful = W – Wsurr = W - P0(V2 – V1) Reversible Work and Irreversibility Reversible Work, Wrev Max amount of useful work produced Min amount of work that needs to be supplied between initial and final states of a process Occurs when process is totally reversible If final state is dead state = exergy Reversible Work and Irreversibility Difference between reversible work and useful work is called irreversibility Wrev – Wuseful = I Irreversibility is equal to the exergy destroyed Totally reversible process, I = 0 I, a positive quantity for actual, irreversible processes 2nd Law Efficiency Second Law Efficiency, ηII Ratio of thermal efficiency and reversible (maximum) thermal efficiency ηII = ηth/ηth, rev Or ηII = Wu/Wrev Can not exceed 100% 2nd Law Efficiency For work consuming devices For ηII = Wrev/Wu In terms of COP ηII = COP/COPrev General definition η = exergy recovered/exergy supplied = 1 – exergy destroyed/exergy supplied Exergy change of a system Property Work potential in specific environment Max amount of useful work when brought into equilibrium with environment Depends on state of system and state of the environment Exergy change of a system Look at thermo-mechanical exergy Leave out chemical & mixing Not address ke and pe Exergy of fixed mass Non-flow, closed system Internal energy, u Sensible, latent, nuclear, chemical Look at only sensible & latent energy Can be transferred across boundary only when temperature difference exists Exergy of fixed mass 2nd law: not all heat can be turned into work Work potential of internal energy is less than the value of internal energy Wuseful= (U-U0)+P0(V – V0)–T0(S – S0) X = (U-U0)+P0(V – V0)–T0(S – S0) +½mVel2+mgz Exergy of fixed mass Φ = (u-u0)+P0(v-v0)-T0(s-s0)+½Vel2+gz or Φ = (e-e0)+P0(v-v0)-T0(s-s0) Note that Φ = 0 at dead state For closes system ΔX = m(Φ2-Φ1) = (E2-E1)+P0(V2-V1)-T0(S2S1)+½m(Vel22-Vel12)+mg(z2-z1) ΔΦ = (Φ2-Φ1) = (e2-e1)+P0(v2-v1)-T0(s2-s1) for a stationary system the ke & pe terms drop out. Exergy of fixed mass When properties are not uniform, exergy can be determined by integration: X m dV V Exergy of fixed mass If the state of system or the state of the environment do not change, the exergy does not change Exergy change of steady flow devices, nozzles, compressors, turbines, pumps, heat exchangers; is zero during steady operation. Exergy of a closed system is either positive or zero Exergy of a flow stream Flow Exergy Energy needed to maintain flow in pipe wflow = Pv where v is specific volume Exergy of flow work = exergy of boundary work in excess of work done against atom pressure (P0) to displace it by a volume v, so x = Pv-P0v = (P-P0)v Exergy of a flow stream Giving the flow exergy the symbol ψ Flow exergy Ψ=(h-h0)-T0(s-s0)+½Vel2+gz Change in flow exergy from state 1 to state 2 is Δψ = (h2-h1)-T0(s2-s1)+ ½(Vel22 – Vel12) +g(z2-z1) Fig 7-23 Exergy transfer by heat, work, and mass Like energy, can be transferred in three forms Heat Work Mass Recognized at system boundary With closed system, only heat & work Exergy transfer by heat, work, and mass By heat transfer: Fig 7-26 Xheat =(1-T0/T)Q When T not constant, then Xheat =∫(1-T0/T)δQ Fig 7-27 Heat transfer Q at a location at temperature T is always accompanied by an entropy transfer in the amount of Q/T, and exergy transfer in the amount of (1-T0/T)Q Exergy transfer by heat, work, and mass Exergy transfer by work Xwork = W – Wsurr (for boundary work) Xwork = W (for all other forms of work) Where Wwork = P0(V2-V1) Exergy transfer by heat, work, and mass Exergy transfer by mass Mass contains exergy as well as energy and entropy X=m Ψ=m[(h-h0)-T0(s-s0)+½Vel2+gz] When properties change during a process then Vel dA X mass n c Ac X mass m X massdt t Exergy transfer by heat, work, and mass For adiabatic systems, Xheat = 0 For closed systems, Xmass = 0 For isolated systems, no heat, work, or mass transfer, ΔXtotal = 0 Decrease of Exergy Principle Conservation of Energy principle: energy can neither be created nor destroyed (1st law) Increase of Entropy principle: entropy can be created but not destroyed (2nd law) Decrease of Exergy Principle Another statement of the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics is the Decrease of Exergy Principle Fig 7-30 For an isolated system Energy balance Ein –Eout = ∆Esystem 0 = E2 –E1 Entropy balance Sin –Sout +Sgen =∆Ssystem Sgen =S2 –S1 Decrease of Exergy Principle Working with 0 = E2 –E1 and Sgen= S2 –S1 Multiply second and subtract from first -T0Sgen = E2 –E1 -T0(S2 –S1) Use X2–X1 =(E2-E1)+P0(V2-V1)-T0(S2-S1) since V1 = V2 the P term =0 Decrease of Exergy Principle Combining we get -T0Sgen= (X2–X1) ≤ 0 Since T is the absolute temperature of the environment T>0, Sgen ≥0, so T0Sgen≥0 so ∆Xisolated = (X2–X1)isolated ≤ 0 Decrease of Exergy Principle The decrease in Exergy principle is for an isolated system during a process exergy will at best remain constant (ideal, reversible case) or decrease. It will never increase. For an isolated system, the decrease in exergy equals the energy destroyed