Exergy: Measure of Work Potential
Exergy: Measure of Work Potential
Exergy: Measure of Work Potential
WORK POTENTIAL
EXERGY: WORK POTENTIAL OF ENERGY
Exergy (also called Availability or Work Potential): the maximum
possible work that can be obtained from a system at a given state in a
given environment; in other words, the most work you can get out of a
system
A system is said to be in the dead state when it is in thermodynamic
equilibrium with the environment it is in.
For constant-volume
systems, the total
actual and useful
works are identical
(Wu = W). 6
A heat engine receives heat from a source at 1200 K at a
rate of 500 kJ/s and rejects the waste heat to a medium at
300 K. The power output of the heat engine is 180 kW.
Determine the reversible power and the irreversibility rate
for this process.
7
A 500-kg iron block is initially at 200°C and is allowed
to cool to 27°C by transferring heat to the surrounding
air at 27°C. Determine the reversible work and the
irreversibility for this process.
8
SECOND-LAW EFFICIENCY, II
11
EXERGY CHANGE OF A SYSTEM
Exergy of a Fixed Mass: Nonflow
(or Closed System) Exergy
12
Closed system
exergy per unit
mass
Exergy
change of
a closed
system
Flow
exergy
Exergy change of flow
The exergy
associated with
flow energy is the
useful work that
would be
delivered by an
imaginary piston
in the flow section.
14
The energy and
exergy contents of
(a) a fixed mass
(b) a fluid stream.
15
A 200-m3 rigid tank contains compressed air at 1
MPa and 300 K. Determine how much work can
be obtained from this air if the environment
conditions are 100 kPa and 300 K.
16
Refrigerant-134a is to be compressed from 0.14 MPa
and 210°C to 0.8 MPa and 50°C steadily by a
compressor. Taking the environment conditions to be
20°C and 95 kPa, determine the exergy change of
the refrigerant during this process and the minimum
work input that needs to be supplied to the
compressor
The properties ofper
the unit mass
refrigerant at of
thethe
inletrefrigerant.
and the exit states
are
17
EXERGY TRANSFER BY
HEAT, WORK, AND MASS
Exergy by Heat Transfer, Q
Exergy
transfer by
heat
When
temperature is
not constant
Mechanisms
of exergy
transfer.
22
EXERGY BALANCE: CLOSED SYSTEMS
The heat transfer to
a system and work
done by the system
are taken to be
positive quantities.
Exergy Exergy
balance destroyed
for a outside
closed system
system boundaries
can be
when heat
accounted for
transfer is
by writing an
to the exergy
system balance on
and the the extended
work is system that
from the includes the
system. system and
its immediate 23
surroundings.
EXAMPLES
Consider steady heat transfer through a 5-m x 6-m brick wall of
a house of thickness 30 cm. On a day when the temperature of
the outdoors is 00C, the house is maintained at 270C. The
temperatures of the inner and outer surfaces of the brick wall
are measured to be 200C and 50C, respectively, and the rate of
heat transfer through the wall is 1035 W. Determine the rate of
exergy destruction in the wall, and the rate of total exergy
destruction associated with this heat transfer process.
24
EXERGY BALANCE: CONTROL VOLUMES
25
Exergy Balance for Steady-Flow Systems
Most control volumes encountered in practice such as turbines, compressors, nozzles,
diffusers, heat exchangers, pipes, and ducts operate steadily, and thus they experience
no changes in their mass, energy, entropy, and exergy contents as well as their volumes.
Therefore, dVCV/dt = 0 and dXCV/dt = 0 for such systems.
27
28