VincentG wrote: ↑Wed Apr 24, 2024 6:43 pm
If your asking me, conversion of heat into work is a "refrigeration effect" of a sort.
I'm still working out exactly what I am asking so bear with me lol. And I mean thermal efficiency.
Air cools down when it expands, and heats when it's compressed. If the air cools down further than it would normally have just by expansion alone, then it will have a lower peak temperature when it is recompressed again. This would be the reduction of internal energy. Otherwise, if it just cools down as the adiabatic index says, the internal energy is constant, but now it's spread out and temperature is lower while the gas occupies a larger area.
If the air cools down further than the adiabatic index says it should(and internal energy is decreased), is that due to the gas performing work on the piston, or the piston performing work on the gas?
The gas performing work on the piston.
Along with the additional work due to the piston driving the crankshaft that drives a generator or whatever else.
If it's due to the piston performing work on the gas, then it can only reduce power output, right?
If it's due to the gas performing work on the piston, does that increase or reduce the heat passing through the engine.
Reduce,
since the heat is converted to work.
And if an engine is 100% thermally efficient, does that mean all the heat disappears as it's converted to work and the room is not heated at all?
Yes
Or does(should) that mean all the heat is allowed to pass to the sink and heat the room while work is simultaneously extracted?
No. That is the old caloric theory.
I think maybe these questions are best answered by considering air-cycle refrigeration or air conditioning.
Most "normal" vapor compression air conditioning systems use a compressor to compress a gas to a higher pressure, (leaving out phase change. Let's just stick with a gas cycle.)
The gas is compressed which increases its temperature. While still under compression it is allowed to cool or actively cooled with a heat exchanger. Then the compressed gas is released through a valve and allowed to expand, that is, to escape from the compressed condition. This is called Joule-Thomson refrigeration. Just ordinary expansion through a valve.
Here is a very simple example:
https://youtu.be/2hYQtB4QkEY?si=qZC2D4L2wiSfi8W2
The gas gets pretty cold when it expands by this method, which as can be seen from the video, takes nothing more than an ordinary shop compressor.
But that is NOT "air cycle" refrigeration.
Air cycle refrigeration is often used for cryogenics. Serious cold.
Air cycle refrigeration can produce ultra cold temperatures. Way colder than the "snow" produced by that guys shop compressor.
The only difference really is that instead of just allowing the gas to expand into the open air like in the video, the air is used to drive an air motor on the way out of the air tank making it do additional work as it expands.
The air motor drives some load. Let's say, some fans, or a generator or even just a break that does nothing but provide resistance so that the gas does additional work driving the air motor and the load as it escapes from the tank.
So the gas doesn't escape from the tank through a valve and get cold, instead it escapes through an air motor making the gas do work as it expands and it gets much much colder.
The additional work done by the gas in such a way, causes the gas to cool down much more than it would otherwise, by just escaping from being under pressure. Doing the additional work driving the air motor converts additional heat into work so that the gas cools down to the cryogenic range.
Technically the "air motor" is called an expansion engine or expansion turbine, but people often get confused by this thinking the expansion engine does the work of expanding the gas. In actuality the gas expands doing the work to drive the expansion engine.
As I've related before, this can be done to some extent using just an ordinary compressor and any ordinary air motor.
But to be really effective the air motor would need to be insulated so that it doesn't absorb heat from the surroundings.
If the motor is not insulated the surrounding ambient heat will reduce the cooling effect. The ambient heat would heat the air and prevent it from getting really super intensely cold.
So returning to your last question:
And if an engine is 100% thermally efficient, does that mean all the heat disappears as it's converted to work and the room is not heated at all?
Yes. Assuming the work is not converted right back into heat in some way.
Or does(should) that mean all the heat is allowed to pass to the sink and heat the room while work is simultaneously extracted?
That is the Carnot theory. Some people still believe that is the case. Just like water can turn a turbine and the turbine turns a generator and the water does not "disappear". That is what Carnot believed when he wrote his book. That is the Caloric theory of heat that says heat is a fluid like water that runs down from hot to cold.
Heat, however, is actually just energy. When energy is transformed, it ceases to exist in its original form. So you cannot transform heat into work and have the heat go out to a sink and simultaneously go out as work. That would be doubling the energy to 200%
It would be like you walking out of a room through two different doors at the same time. You'd have to be in two places at the same time. Impossible.
100% going to work and 100% still going to a sink as heat. It's impossible. It's a violation of the conservation of energy. You can't just double your energy out of nothing.
When heat is transformed into work, the "heat" no longer exists.
The ENERGY exists.
Well does energy really exist? I don't know.
I have a hard time sometimes fathoming in what way "potential energy" is "stored" in a rock taken to the top of a hill. If you break the rock open, will you find this "potential energy" inside?
All I know is air-cycle air conditioning works. It is used on most aircraft. It works by making the gas do work.
The Claude method of liquifying gas works.
It works by making the gas do work as it expands in a cylinder, just like gas expanding and doing work as it expands in the cylinder of a Stirling engine. Not as high pressure, not cryogenic cooling, but same principle. When a gas expands and does work at the same time it cools down much much more than by just expansion alone.