Category: Concepts Of Thermodynamics And Properties Of Gases
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Carnot Corollaries
The two corollaries of the second law known as Carnot corollaries:
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THE CARNOT CYCLE
The efficiency of a heat engine cycle greatly depends on how the individual processes are executed. The net work can be maximized by using reversible processes. The best known reversible cycle is the Carnot cycle. Note that the reversible cycles cannot be achieved in practice because of irreversibilities associated with real processes. But, the reversible…
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REVERSIBLE AND IRREVERSIBLE PROCESSES
In reversible process things happen very slowly, without any resisting force, without any space limitation, everything happens in a highly organized way (it is not physically possible; it is an idealization). Internally reversible process—a system undergoes through a series of equilibrium states, and when the process is reversed, the system passes through exactly the same…
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Violation of Clausius Statement by Violating Kelvin–Plank’s Statement
From Figure 1.14 (a), let us assume that a heat engine receives heat QH from high temperature reservoir and converts it into work rejecting no heat to sink, thus violating Kelvin–Plank’s statement. Refrigerator receives heat QL from low temperature reservoir and supplies an amount (QH + QL) to high temperature reservoir when W = QH work is supplied to it. Thus, it operates to conform Clausius statement.…
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Equivalence of Kelvin–Planck and Clausius Statement
Violation of Kelvin–Plank Statement by Violating Clausius Statement From Figure 1.13 (a) let us assume that a heat pump receives heat QL from low temperature reservoir at TL and supplies it to high temperature sink at TH without any external work, thus violating the Clausius statement. A larger quantity of heat (QH + QL) is supplied to heat engine (by high temperature source at TH) which…
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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 a lower temperature body to higher temperature body. In other words, a refrigerator cannot be operated without external work supplied to refrigeration system. Heat flows from high temperature to low temperature reservoir.…
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Kelvin–Planck Statement
The Kelvin–Plank statement of the second law of thermodynamics refers to a thermal reservoir. A thermal reservoir is a system of infinite heat capacity that remains at a constant temperature even though energy is added or removed by heat transfer. A reservoir is an idealization, of course, but such a system can be approximated in…
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THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS
Second law of thermodynamics overcomes the limitations of first law of thermodynamics. First law of thermodynamics does not tell how much of heat is changed into work. Second law of thermodynamics shows that the total heat supplied to a system cannot be transferred solely into the work using single reservoir, i.e., some part of heat…
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Limitations of First Law of Thermodynamics
First law of thermodynamics does not tell about the following:
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Variable Flow Process
In some flow process, mass flow rate is not steady but varies with respect to time. In such a case, the difference in energy flow is stored in system as ΔEv. Rate of energy increase = Rate of energy inflow − Rate of energy outflow Example 1.14: An air conditioning system, as shown in Figure 1.8, handling 1…