Heat Engines (DP IB Physics)
Revision Note
Heat Engines
A heat engine is a device that converts thermal energy into mechanical work
Heat engines operate through a series of thermodynamic processes which form a closed cycle
A closed cycle is one in which the system returns to its initial state
A simple heat engine consists of a gas in a cylinder with a piston
A simple heat engine converts thermal energy into mechanical work
The steps in the operation of a cyclic heat engine process are:
Extract heat from a hot reservoir
A hot reservoir (a source of thermal energy) at a high temperature transfers heat into the engine
Use some of the extracted heat to perform work
The gas does mechanical work as it expands which pushes the piston out
Release excess heat into a cold reservoir
The gas is allowed to cool at constant volume, meanwhile, heat is released to the surroundings
Some of the energy transferred into the engine is released into a cold reservoir (a sink for excess heat) at a lower temperature
Repeat cycle
Once the heat has been extracted, the piston is pushed down to compress the gas back to its original state
The process can then be repeated as many times as needed, continuously converting heat into mechanical work
For a cyclic heat engine process, the p-V diagram will form a closed loop
The area inside the loop is equal to the net work done during one cycle
The net work done by the engine is:
Where:
= useful work output of the heat engine (J)
= heat transferred from hot reservoir to engine (J)
= heat transferred from engine to cold reservoir (J)
Efficiency of Heat Engines
The goal of a heat engine is to transfer thermal energy into useful mechanical work as efficiently as possible
The thermodynamic efficiency of a heat engine can be calculated using
efficiency =
Where:
= efficiency of a heat engine
= useful work output (J)
= total energy input from the hot reservoir (J)
= energy lost to the cold reservoir (J)
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