Chapter 7
Chapter 7
Chapter 7
Thermodynamics
Thermodynamics 1
Introduction and basis for Second law
In Chaps. 5 & 6, the first law for processes
involving closed and open systems are based on
the conservation of energy principle.
Energy is a conserved property.
A process must satisfy the 1st law to occur.
But satisfying the 1st law does not mean that the
process will actually occur.
1st law places no restriction on the direction.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 2
A hot cup of coffee cools by virtue of heat
transfer to the surrounding.
The heat from the colder surrounding cannot
flow in the cup and make the coffee hot again
automatically.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 3
Gasoline is used as a car drives up a hill, but the
fuel level in the gasoline tank cannot be restored
to its original level when the car coasts down
the hill.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 4
The heating of a room by the passage of electric
current through the resistor.
The first law dictates the amount of electric
energy supplied to the resistance wires be equal to
the amount of energy transferred to the room air
as heat.
Transferring heat to a wire will not generate
electricity.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 5
The paddle wheel rotates as the mass falls and
stirs a fluid within an insulated container.
The reverse process, raising the mass by
transferring heat from the fluid to the paddle
wheel, does not occur in nature.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 6
From these examples, it is clear that processes
proceed in a certain direction and not in the
reverse direction.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 7
The reverse process discussed above violate the
second law of thermodynamics.
Violation of the 2nd law is detected using a
property called entropy.
A process cannot occur unless it satisfy the 1st
and 2nd law of thermodynamics.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 8
Use of Second Law of Thermodynamics
Identifying the direction of the process.
It also asserts that energy has quality as well as
quantity. The first law is concerned with quantity
of energy and the transformations of energy from
one form to another with no regard to its quality.
It is also used to determine the theoretical limits
for performance of various engineering systems
as well as predicting the degree of completion of
various chemical reactions.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 9
Thermal Reservoir (Heat reservoir)
A hypothetical body with a
Large thermal capacity (mass specific heat)
It can supply or absorb finite amounts of heat
without undergoing any change in temperature
Such a body is called a thermal energy reservoir.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 10
Examples
Oceans
Lakes
Rivers
Atmosphere
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 12
A body does not actually have to be very large to
be considered a thermal reservoir.
Any physical body whose thermal energy
capacity is large relative to the amount of energy
it supplies or absorb can be modeled as one.
Example match stick lit in a room
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 13
A reservoir that supplies energy in the form of
heat is called a source.
One that absorbs energy in the form of heat is
called a sink.
Conventions used
Heat supplied by the source QH
Heat absorbed by the sink QL
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 14
Heat Engines
The work can easily be converted to other forms of
energy, but converting other forms of energy to
work is not that easy.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 17
Characterization of Heat Engines
Heat engines differ considerably from one another,
but all can be characterized by the following
They receive heat from a high-temperature
source (solar energy, oil furnace, nuclear reactor,
etc.).
They convert part of this heat to work (usually
in the form of a rotating shaft).
They reject the remaining waste heat to a low-
temperature sink (the atmosphere, rivers, etc.).
They operate on a cycle.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 18
The term heat engine is often used in a border
sense to include all work producing devices that
does not operate in a thermodynamic cycle.
Eg., Gas turbines and car engines.
These devices operate in a mechanical cycle
but not in a thermodynamic cycle since the
working fluid does not undergo a complete
cycle.
In this chapter, we restrict ourselves to heat
engine which operate on a thermodynamic cycle.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 19
Starting position, intake stroke, and compression stroke.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 21
Thermal Efficiency of Heat Engine
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 22
Qin = amount of heat supplied to steam in boiler
from a high-temperature source (furnace).
dW
dQ
Wout Win Qin Qout
The net out put Wnet ,out Qin Qout
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 24
Qout represents the magnitude of the energy
wasted in order to complete the cycle. But Qout is
never zero; That is, only part of the heat transferred
to the heat engine is converted to work. Therefore
the thermal efficiency of a heat engine is defined as
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 25
The heat engines operate between a high-
temperature medium (or reservoir) at temperature
TH and a low-temperature medium (or reservoir) at
temperature TL.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 26
Wnet ,out
th
QH
QH QL
th
QH
QL
th 1
QH
Thermal efficiency is a
measure of how efficiently
a heat engine converts the
heat that it receives to
work.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 27
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 28
Device /system Thermal efficiency
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 29
Can we save QL
In a steam power plant, the condenser is the device
where large quantities of waste heat is rejected to
rivers, lakes, or the atmosphere. Then one may ask,
can we not just take the condenser out of the plant
and save all that waste energy?
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 30
Every heat engine must waste some energy by
transferring it to a low-temperature reservoir in
order to complete the cycle, even under idealized
conditions.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 31
Second Law of Thermodynamics :
Kelvin-Planck Statement
It is impossible to construct a device that will
operate in a cycle and produce no effect other than
the raising of weight and exchange of heat with a
single reservoir.
or
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.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 32
A heat engine must
exchange heat with a
low-temperature sink
as well as a high-
temperature source to
keep operating.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 33
(Q) Heat is transferred to a heat engine
from a furnace at a rate of 80 MW.
If the rate of waste heat rejection to
a nearby river is 50 MW, determine
the net power output and the thermal
efficiency for this heat engine.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 34
Q&H 80 MW and Q&L 50 MW
80 - 50 MW 30 MW
Then the thermal efficiency is
W&net ,out 30 MW
th & 0.375 37.5%
Q H
80 MW
Discussion: The heat engine converts 37.5
percent of the heat it receives to work.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 35
(Q) A car engine with a power output of
50 kW has a thermal efficiency of
24 percent. Determine the fuel
consumption rate of this car if the
fuel has a heating value of 44,000
kJ/kg (that is, 44,000 kJ of energy is
released for each kg of fuel burned).
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 36
The amount of energy imput
W& 50 kW
&
QH net ,out
208.3 kW
th 0.24
To supply energy at this rate, the 50 kW
engine must burn fuel at a rate of
Q&H 208.3 kW
m& 0.00473 kg/s
qH 44,000 kJ/kg
Basic components of a
refrigeration system
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 39
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 40
QL is the magnitude of
the heat removed from the
refrigerated space at
temperature TL.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 44
Fridge Deep freezer
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 45
Heat Pumps
Is a device that transfer heat from a low-
temperature medium to a high-temperature one.
The objective of a heat pump is to maintain a
heated space at a high temperature.
This is accomplished by absorbing heat from a
low-temperature source, such as well water or
cold outside air in winter, and supplying this
heat to the high-temperature medium such as a
house.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 47
Schematic diagram of
a heat pump
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 48
Refrigerator Heat pump
1. Maintaining 1. Maintaining heated
refrigerated space at space at a high
low temperature. temperature.
2. Discharging heat to 2. Extracting heat
high temperature from a low
medium is a temperature space
necessary part of is a necessary part
operation. of operation.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 49
The measure of performance of a heat pump is also
expressed in terms of the coefficient of
performance COPHP.
Desired output QH
COPHP
Required input Wnet ,in
QH 1
COPHP
QH - QL 1 QL
QH
A comparison of COPR and COPHP for fixed values
of QH and QL reveals that
COPHP COPR 1
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 50
COPHP is always greater than 1 since COPR is a
positive quantity.
Worst condition it works as resistance heater,
supplying as much energy to the house as it
consumes.
It may go below 1, if outside air temperature is
too low.
Most of the heat pumps available in market are
having COP of 2 to 3.
Air-source heat pumps and geothermal heat
pumps.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 51
Geothermal Heat Pump
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 55
(a) The coefficient of performance of the
refrigerator is
Q&L 360 kJ/min 1 kW
COPR & 3
Wnet ,in 2 kW 60 kJ/min
That is, 3 kJ of heat is removed from the
refrigerated space for each kJ of work supplied.
(b) The rate at which heat is rejected to the room is
Q&H Q&L W&
net ,in
60 kJ/min
360 kJ/min+ 2 kW 480 kJ/min
1 kW
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 56
Discussion: Notice that both
the energy removed from the
refrigerated space as heat and
the energy supplied to the
refrigerator as electrical work
eventually show up in the
room air and become part of
the internal energy of the air.
This demonstrates that energy
can change from one form to
another, can move from one
place to another, but is never
destroyed during a process.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 57
(Q) A heat pump is used to meet the heating
requirements of a house and maintain it at 20C. On
a day when the outdoor air temperature drops to
2C, the house is estimated to lose heat at a rate of
80,000 kJ/h. If the heat pump under these
conditions has a COP of 2.5, determine (a) the
power consumed by the heat pump and (b) the rate
at which heat is absorbed from the cold outdoor air.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 58
(a) The power consumed by heat pump is
determined from the COP
&
Q 80,000 kJ/h
&
Wnet ,in H
32,000 kJ/h
COPR 2.5
(b) The house is losing heat at a rate of 80,000 kJ/h.
If the house is to be maintained at a constant
temperature of 20C, the heat pump must
deliver heat to the house at the same rate, that
is, at a rate of 80,000 kJ/h. Then the rate of
heat transfer from the outdoor becomes
Q&L Q&H W&
net ,in
80,000 32,000 kJ/h = 48,000 kJ/h
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 59
Discussion: Note that 48,000
of the 80,000 kJ/h heat
delivered to the house is
actually extracted from the cold
outdoor air. Therefore, we are
paying only for the 32,000-kJ/h
energy that is supplied as
electrical work to the heat
pump. If an electric resistance
heater were used instead, we
would have to supply the
entire 80,000 kJ/h to the
resistance heater as electric
energy.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 60
Second Law of Thermodynamics :
Clausius Statement
It is impossible to construct a device that operates
in a cycle and produces no effect other than the
transfer of heat from cooler body to a hotter body.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 62
Both the KelvinPlanck and the Clausius
statements of the second law are negative
statements, and a negative statement cannot
be proved.
Like any other physical law, the second law of
thermodynamics is based on experimental
observations.
Till date, no experiment has been conducted that
contradicts the second law, and this should be
taken as sufficient proof of its validity.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 63
Equivalence of the Two Statements
The KelvinPlanck and the Clausius statements
are equivalent in their consequences.
Either statement can be used as the expression of
the second law of thermodynamics.
Any device that violates the KelvinPlanck
statement also violates the Clausius statement,
and vice versa.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 64
Proof that the violation of the Kelvin-Planck
statement leads to the violation of Clausius statement
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 65
Proof that the violation of the Clausius statement
leads to the violation of Kelvin-Planck statement
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 66
Perpetual-Motion Machines (PMM)
A process cannot take place unless it satisfies both
the first and second law of thermodynamics. Any
device that violates either law is called a
perpetual-motion machine.
A perpetual-motion machine of the first kind
(PMM1) would create work from nothing thus
violating the first law.
A perpetual-motion machine of second kind
(PMM2) would extract heat from a source and
then convert this heat completely into other forms
of energy, thus violating the second law of
thermodynamics.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 67
Consider the steam power plant as shown below.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 71
A reversible process is defined as a process that
can be reversed without leaving any trace on the
surroundings.
That is, both the system and the
surroundings are returned to their initial
states at the end of the reverse process.
This is possible only if the net heat and net
work exchange between the system and the
surroundings is zero for the combined
(original and reverse) process.
Processes that are not reversible are called
irreversible processes.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 72
It should be pointed out that a system can
be restored to its initial state following a
process, regardless of whether the process is
reversible or irreversible.
But for reversible processes, this restoration
is made without leaving any net change on
the surroundings.
Whereas for irreversible processes, the
surroundings usually do some work on
the system and therefore does not return
to their original state.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 73
An example of an irreversible process
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 82
An example for totally and internally reversible heat
transfer process
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 84
Why to bother with fictitious (reversible)
process?
First, they are easy to analyze, since a
system passes through a series of equilibrium
states during a reversible process;
second, they serve as idealized models to which
actual processes can be compared.
Engineers are interested in reversible
processes because work producing devices that
operate on reversible processes deliver the most
work, and work consuming devices that operate
on reversible processes consume the least work.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 85
When the compression process is non-
quasiequilibrium, the molecules before the
piston face cannot escape fast enough, forming
a high pressure region in front of the piston. It
takes more work to move the piston against this
high pressure region.
When an expansion process is non-
quasiequilibrium, the molecules before the
piston face cannot follow the piston fast enough,
forming a low pressure region behind the piston.
The lower pressure that pushes the piston
produces less work.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 86
The Carnot Cycle
French military engineer Nicolas Sadi Carnot
(1769-1832) was among the first to study the
principles of the second law of
thermodynamics.
Carnot was the first to introduce the concept
of cyclic operation and devised a reversible
cycle.
Reversible cycles can be benchmarks for
actual cycles. And it can be limiting case for
both heat engine and refrigerator.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 87
Probably the best known reversible cycle
is the Carnot cycle, first proposed in 1824
by French engineer Sadi Carnot.
The theoretical heat engine that operates on
the Carnot cycle is called the Carnot heat
engine.
The Carnot cycle is composed of four
reversible processes two isothermal and
two adiabatic and it can be executed either
in a closed or a steady-flow system.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 88
Consider a closed system that consists of a gas
(not necessarily an ideal gas) contained in an
adiabatic pistoncylinder device. The insulation of
the cylinder head is such that it may be removed to
bring the cylinder into contact with reservoirs to
provide heat transfer.
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 89
Reversible Isothermal Expansion (Process 1-2)
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 90
Reversible Isothermal Compression (Process 3-4)
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 91
The area under curve
1-2-3 is the work done by
the gas during the
expansion part of the
cycle.
The area under curve
3-4-1 is the work done on
the gas during the
compression part of the P diagram of the Carnot
cycle. cycle
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 94
The Reversed Carnot Cycle
The Carnot heat-
engine cycle is a
totally reversible
cycle. Therefore, all
the processes that
comprise it can be
reversed, when all the
process are reversed it
becomes the Carnot
refrigeration cycle. P diagram of the reversed
Carnot cycle
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 95
A heat engine that operates on a Carnot cycle
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 96
A Refrigerator that operates on a Carnot cycle
Thermodynamics Chapter 7 97
The Carnot Principles (Corollaries)
Two conclusions pertain to the thermal efficiency
of reversible and irreversible heat engines, and
they are known as the Carnot principles.
The efficiency of an irreversible heat engine is
always less than the efficiency of a reversible
one operating between the same two reservoirs.
Q1
T1 , T2
Q2
Q2
T2 , T3 ,
Q3
Q1
and T1 , T3
Q3
QH f (TH )
--------- (7.4)
QL f (TL )
QH TH
--------- (7.5)
QL rev TL
1 1
COPR and COPHP
QH QL
1 1
QL QH
Therefore,
v3 v4 v3 v2
or --------- (7.11)
v2 v1 v4 v1