Fool wrote: ↑Sat Aug 12, 2023 10:10 am
It appears we have already seen how both, adding load and adding heat, appears on a PV diagram.
The load slows down the engine. The PV diagram fattens growing upwards and downwards. Producing a larger output of work per cycle. It is readable as a larger area enclosed by the cycle's path.
It also shows more heat going in and out by the paths getting closer to T-hot and T-cold. It shows that slowing down an engine allows more time for heating and cooling, and that
heat transfer actually happens by the closer approach of the gas temperature to the hot source and cold sink, for both in and out.
(...).
I'm not entirely sure, as your wording is a little ambiguous and possibly open to interpretation, or could use some clarification but I don't think I can agree with the part(s) I've quoted in BOLD.
It reads as though you are saying that as the working fluid temperature when hot, gets close to the heat source temperature heat transfer improves and when the working gas temperature, when cold, approaches the cold side T-cold temperature, heat transfer out is better, faster or more effective.
The wording is: "heat transfer actually happens
by the closer approach of the gas temperature to the hot source and cold sink, for both in and out"
I don't want to put words in your mouth but BY, seems to imply
because of or
by means of or
as a result of.
Rather than saying " It also shows more heat going in and out by the paths getting closer to T-hot and T-cold" I would say "energy".
OR
It also shows more energy going in
as heat and more energy going out
as work by the paths getting closer to T-hot and T-cold
Heat input per cycle may increase with increased load (work) but heat input per time interval when and if the engine slows down, is likely less. The engine has to slow down to allow the slow heat input to catch up with work output.
If the temperature of the heat input is increased then heat transfer is improved, takes place faster, RPM increases.
I have a feeling the PV tracing would tend to level off as the heat input and work output returned to a balance but I'm really not certain.
It certainly would be interesting to see an actual real time PV reading with variable load and heat input over time.
My assumption is that work out is indistinguishable from heat transfer out by conduction as both will result in a drop in temperature.
Pressure I'm not so sure about. But I really don't think "b]heat transfer actually happens by the closer approach of the gas temperature to the hot source and cold sink, for both in and out.[/b]
I think you may be seeing a correlation but have causation reversed or something.
What maybe LOOKS LIKE heat rejection to the sink because of apparent "better cooling" because the gas temperature is closer to the sink temperature cannot actually be
because the gas temperature is dropping down as cold as the sink.
IMO the gas temperature drops down more because of the increased energy output as work, not because of more effective energy output as heat lost to the sink.
My assertion is that it seems impossible to distinguish a temperature drop from actual heat loss to the sink from a temperature drop due to work output just by looking at a PV diagram.
Possibly you mean:
heat transfer actually happens AS EVIDENCED BY the closer approach of the gas temperature to the hot source and cold sink
???
Anyway, bottom line is I do not think you can automatically attribute the closer approach of the gas to the sink temperature to heat transfer out to the sink without ruling out energy transfer as work, and increasing the load has obviously increased work output which you seem to be neglecting as a probable cause of the increased cooling.