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Power Cycle Lect - 3

The document describes power and refrigeration cycles. It discusses the Carnot vapor cycle which uses water as a working fluid to undergo phase changes from steam to liquid and back. It also describes the limitations of the Carnot cycle which led to the development of the Rankine cycle. The Rankine cycle has the same components as the Carnot cycle but continues the condensation process until the saturated liquid line is reached, resolving issues with the Carnot cycle. The document also discusses reversed Carnot and ideal refrigeration cycles.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
88 views

Power Cycle Lect - 3

The document describes power and refrigeration cycles. It discusses the Carnot vapor cycle which uses water as a working fluid to undergo phase changes from steam to liquid and back. It also describes the limitations of the Carnot cycle which led to the development of the Rankine cycle. The Rankine cycle has the same components as the Carnot cycle but continues the condensation process until the saturated liquid line is reached, resolving issues with the Carnot cycle. The document also discusses reversed Carnot and ideal refrigeration cycles.

Uploaded by

tensor9000
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 17

Power cycle and refrigeration Cycle

We consider power cycles where the working fluid undergoes a phase change. The best
example of this cycle is the steam power cycle where water (steam) is the working fluid.

Carnot Vapor Cycle

2
The heat engine may be composed of the following components.

The working fluid, steam (water), undergoes a thermodynamic cycle from 1-2-3-4-1. The
cycle is shown on the following T-s diagram.

3
Carnot Vapor Cycle Using Steam
700

600

500

6000 kPa
400

T [C]
300 2 100 kPa
3
200

100 1 4
0
0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 7.0 8.0 9.0 10.0

s [kJ/kg-K]

The thermal efficiency of this cycle is given as

Wnet Q
η th , Carnot = = 1 − out
Qin Qin
TL
= 1−
TH
Note the effect of TH and TL on ηth, Carnot.
•The larger the TH the larger the ηth, Carnot
•The smaller the TL the larger the ηth, Carnot

4
To increase the thermal efficiency in any power cycle, we try to increase the maximum
temperature at which heat is added.

Reasons why the Carnot cycle is not used:


•Pumping process 1-2 requires the pumping of a mixture of saturated liquid and saturated
vapor at state 1 and the delivery of a saturated liquid at state 2.
•To superheat the steam to take advantage of a higher temperature, elaborate controls are
required to keep TH constant while the steam expands and does work.

To resolve the difficulties associated with the Carnot cycle, the Rankine cycle was devised.

Rankine Cycle

The simple Rankine cycle has the same component layout as the Carnot cycle shown
above. The simple Rankine cycle continues the condensation process 4-1 until the
saturated liquid line is reached.

Ideal Rankine Cycle Processes


Process Description
1-2 Isentropic compression in pump
2-3 Constant pressure heat addition in boiler
3-4 Isentropic expansion in turbine
4-1 Constant pressure heat rejection in condenser 5
The T-s diagram for the Rankine cycle is given below. Locate the processes for heat transfer
and work on the diagram.

Rankine Vapor Power Cycle


500

6000 kPa
400

3
300
T [C]

200

10 kPa
100 2
4
0
1
0 2 4 6 8 10 12

s [kJ/kg-K]

6
Actual Gas Cycle
• Open cycle (intake, discharge)
• Working fluid is not a pure substance
• Heat input by combustion of fuel
• Involve friction
Reversed Carnot cycle -- ideal
1 1
COPR,Carnot= COPHP,Carnot=
TH
1−TL
TL −1 TH

Why isn’t this cycle possible in real life?


Ideal Refrigeration Cycle
1) x=1 (saturated vapor), P=Plow or
T=Tlow
2) P=Phigh, s2=s1 (constant entropy)
3) P=Phigh, x=0 (saturated liquid)
4) h3=h4 (constant enthalpy), P=Plow

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