As far as I have seen, there is no experimental evidence that suggest heat energy is converted to work, and only evidence that heat energy is dissipated to colder bodies as the gas is expanding.
So I would like this discussion to stay focused on proving that heat energy is directly converted to gravitational potential energy as the gas expands against the piston and lifts a weight. A crankshaft need not be considered for this example, just a piston lifting a weight vertically.
My proposed hypothetical ideal cycle would therefore state that 100 percent efficiency would be reached if the heat energy could be recycled from the expanded gas with no reduction to Tmax, in order to be reapplied to the heat source and used again to full effect(an obvious impossibility).
Stroller wrote: ↑Tue May 21, 2024 5:24 amThe internal energy of the entire expanding volume isn't reduced, but the internal energy per unit volume is, because the total internal energy of the gas is spread out more, into a bigger space.It's the action of the expanding gas "consuming" energy that I am interested in. Is internal energy really reduced when the gas expands, other than by conduction losses to the surrounding colder surfaces of the engine. And if so, how exactly?
By the same token, the temperature of individual molecules of air doesn't change, but the bulk temperature of the gas does reduce, because the thermometer, or finger end, isn't getting hit so often because the molecules are more spread out or rarified in the expanded volume; the pressure falls.
This is why Charles Law holds experimentally (ignoring or minimising conduction losses with insulation)
T1/V1 = T2/V2
As the volume expands, the (bulk) temperature drops, along with the pressure, as we can see from the combined gas law
(P1V1)/T1 = (P2V2)/T2
Of course, in a real working Stirling engine, the heater is continuing to put energy into the gas while it's expanding, and this is a more complex case, because the rate of flow of energy across the wall of the cylinder will change if the temperature of the working gas inside is changing.
Tom Booth wrote: ↑Tue May 21, 2024 6:05 amThis statement (bold) is, or would be, a violation of conservation of energy.Stroller wrote: ↑Tue May 21, 2024 5:24 amThe internal energy of the entire expanding volume isn't reduced, but the internal energy per unit volume is, because the total internal energy of the gas is spread out more, into a bigger space.It's the action of the expanding gas "consuming" energy that I am interested in. Is internal energy really reduced when the gas expands, other than by conduction losses to the surrounding colder surfaces of the engine. And if so, how exactly?
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Your statement is basically that energy can GO OUT from the working fluid as WORK but all the energy is still in the working fluid but just spread out more.
That would double the total amount of energy.
Say 1000 joules gone out as "work" but the same 1000 joules still in the working fluid but just spread out in a greater volume.
So the original 1000 joules has split and turned into 2000, 1000 going out as "work" and 1000 remaining but just spread out in a larger volume.
Tom Booth wrote: ↑Tue May 21, 2024 6:16 amSame problem with this later statement regarding the temperature of individual molecules.Stroller wrote: ↑Tue May 21, 2024 5:24 amThe internal energy of the entire expanding volume isn't reduced, but the internal energy per unit volume is, because the total internal energy of the gas is spread out more, into a bigger space.It's the action of the expanding gas "consuming" energy that I am interested in. Is internal energy really reduced when the gas expands, other than by conduction losses to the surrounding colder surfaces of the engine. And if so, how exactly?
By the same token, the temperature of individual molecules of air doesn't change, but the bulk temperature of the gas does reduce, because the thermometer, or finger end, isn't getting hit so often because the molecules are more spread out or rarified in the expanded volume; the pressure falls.
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Unless, the expansion is "free expansion into a vacuum".
But we are discussing engines. Gas expanding and doing external work.
An "individual gas molecules" strikes the piston, the piston moves. Kinetic energy was transfered. The individual gas molecule looses energy, slows down, is now "colder", has, as an individual molecules LESS energy, not as you suggest above, that the temperature (energy) of the individual molecules stays the same.
That violates conservation of energy.
What you are claiming is the individual molecule transfered energy to the piston but still retains the same amount of energy, doubling the energy.
That would clearly be a violation of conservation of energy.
Unless of course you're talking about isothermal expansion, but that only means heat is added to compensate.
When a particle transfers heat to the piston and loose energy it then perhaps contacts the hot plate, gaining the energy back, but that is not energy simply "spreading out" into a larger volume.
In an adiabatic expansion, (doing work on a piston) not only is the energy "spread out" reducing the temperature, but the individual molecules cool down, move slower, loose energy as well.