Efficiency & Power
- The efficiency of a system is a measure of the amount of wasted energy in an energy transfer
- Efficiency is defined as:
The ratio of the useful energy output from a system to its total energy output
- If a system has high efficiency, this means most of the energy transferred is useful
- If a system has low efficiency, this means most of the energy transferred is wasted
- Efficiency can be represented as a decimal or as a percentage
- Efficiency can be calculated using energy or power
- The equations for efficiency are:
Worked example
An electric motor has an efficiency of 35%. It lifts a 7.2 kg load through a height of 5 m in 3 s.
Calculate the power of the motor.
Step 1: List the known quantities
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- Efficiency = 35%
- Mass, m = 7.2 kg
- Height, h = 5 m
- Time, t = 3 s
- Gravitational field strength, g = 10 N/kg
Step 2: Write down the efficiency equation
Step 3: Rearrange to make power input the subject
Step 4: Calculate the power output
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- Energy was transferred from the kinetic store of the motor to the gravitational potential store of the load
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- Therefore, the power output is
Step 5: Substitute values into power input equation
Examiner Tip
Efficiency can be in a ratio (between 0 and 1) or percentage (between 0 and 100%)
If the answer is required as a percentage, remember to multiply the ratio by 100 to convert it: if the ratio = 0.25, percentage = 0.25 × 100 = 25 %
Remember that efficiency has no units (just the % sign)