A heat engine is a cyclic device that takes heat
in from a
hot reservoir, converts some of it to work
, and rejects
the rest of it
to a cold reservoir so that at the end of a
cycle it is in the same state (and has the same internal energy) with
which it began. The net work done per cycle is (recall) the area inside
the
curve.
The efficiency of a heat engine is defined to be
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(249) |
It is impossible to construct a cyclic heat engine that produces no other effect but the absorption of energy from a hot reservoir and the production of an equal amount of work.
A refrigerator is basically a cyclic heat engine run backwards.
In a cycle it takes heat
in from a cold reservoir, does work
on it, and rejects a heat
to a hot reservoir. Its net effect is
thus to make the cold reservoir colder (refrigeration) by removing heat
from inside it to the warmer warm reservoir (warming it still further,
e.g. as a heat pump). Both of these functions have practical
applications - cooling our homes in summer, heating our homes in
winter.
The coefficient of performance of a refrigerator is defined to be
| (250) |
It is impossible to construct a cyclic refrigerator whose sole effect is the transfer of energy from a cold reservoir to a warm reservoir without the input of energy by work.
The Carnot Cycle is the archetypical reversible cycle, and a
Carnot Cycle-based heat engine is one that does not dissipate any energy
internally and uses only reversible steps. Carnot's Theorem
states that no real heat engine operating between a hot reservoir at
temperature
and a cold reservoir at temperature
can be more
efficient than a Carnot engine operating between those two reservoirs.
The Carnot efficiency is easy to compute (see text and lecture example). A Carnot Cycle consists of four steps:
| (251) |
Entropy
is a measure of disorder. The change in entropy of a system
can be evaluated by integrating:
| (252) |
| (253) |
We extend our definition of reversible processes. A reversible process is one where the entropy of the system does not change. An irreversible process increases the entropy of the system and its surroundings.
The entropy of the Universe never decreases. It either increases (for irreversible processes) or remains the same (for reversible processes).