Fool wrote: ↑Mon Jul 01, 2024 7:19 am
So why does a heat engine require a temperature difference? Could it be that it needs a pressure difference and heat going in and out provides those differences?
Heat going in provides a pressure difference, sure.
But if that pressure difference results in work being done, then the work in joules is deducted from the heat input (turned "internal energy") in joules.
Conservation of energy.
You cannot input 100 joules of heat and take out 100 joules of heat and expect to produce any work, you can only expand and contract a gas, taking out all the heat, if it is doing nothing. No work.
You can input 100 joules of heat and get 50 joules of work and throw away the other 50 joules as heat if you want to.
That you have to throw away 99.5 joules of heat to get 0.5 joules of work from an input of 100 joules, in an "ultra LTD" for example (Carnot limit) is what I object to, and cannot demonstrate experimentally, even if I try.
If, as I've said before, "rejection" is interpreted as not letting the heat in due to low heat capacity that makes a little more sense but is ultimately meaningless.
You could burn down a building and run an LTD on some of the heat radiating off that 200 yards away or something.
You utilize 0.00000000001% of the heat from the burning building, but that heat (the other 99.9999999999 whatever%) is not getting anywhere near the engine.
So interpreting "rejection" as never entering the working fluid doesn't make any sense.
If it is low heat capacity, having 99.5% of the heat going through the working fluid doesn't make sense.
The whole Carnot limit proposition is silly nonsense.