Chap 8 Lecture
Chap 8 Lecture
Chapter 8
EXERGY: A MEASURE OF WORK
POTENTIAL
Mehmet Kanoglu
University of Gaziantep
Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Objectives
Examine the performance of engineering devices in light
of the second law of thermodynamics.
Define exergy, which is the maximum useful work that
could be obtained from the system at a given state in a
specified environment.
Define reversible work, which is the maximum useful
work that can be obtained as a system undergoes a
process between two specified states.
Define the exergy destruction, which is the wasted work
potential during a process as a result of irreversibilities.
Define the second-law efficiency.
Develop the exergy balance relation.
Apply exergy balance to closed systems and control
volumes.
The exergies of
kinetic and
potential energies
are equal to
themselves, and
they are entirely
available for work.
The work
potential or
exergy of
potential energy
is equal to the
potential energy
itself.
Unavailable energy is
the portion of energy
that cannot be
converted to work by
even a reversible heat
engine.
SECOND-LAW EFFICIENCY, II
Second-law efficiency is a
measure of the performance of a
device relative to its performance
under reversible conditions.
General definition of
exergy efficiency
Second-law
efficiency of all
reversible
devices is
100%.
Closed system
exergy per unit
mass
Exergy
change of
a closed
system
Flow
exergy
Exergy change of flow
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12
13
14
15
Exergy Destruction
Mechanisms
of exergy
transfer.
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Exergy
balance for
a closed
system
when heat
transfer is to
the system
and the
work is from
the system.
Exergy
destroyed
outside system
boundaries can
be accounted for
by writing an
exergy balance
on the extended
system that
includes the
system and its
immediate
surroundings.
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EXAMPLES
Exergy balance for heat conduction
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54C
20.6 kJ
1 kJ
= 1 kJ
20C
Wpw,in=U=20.6 kJ
Wrev,in = 1 kJ
19.6 kJ
1 kg
140 kPa
20C
20C
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23
Turbine
Compressor
Heat
exchanger
Mixing
chamber
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EXAMPLES
Exergy analysis of a steam turbine
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Summary
Second-law efficiency