1 / 17

Control Volumes

Control Volumes. Thermodynamics Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 9. PAL # 8 Specific Heat. Piston of N 2 compressed polytropically Can find work from polytropic eqn. W = mR(T 2 -T 1 )/(n-1) Final pressure: P 1 V n 1 =P 2 V n 2 P 2 = (V 1 /V 2 ) 1.3 (P 1 ) = (2 1.3 )(100) =

idola-yang
Télécharger la présentation

Control Volumes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Control Volumes Thermodynamics Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 9

  2. PAL # 8 Specific Heat • Piston of N2 compressed polytropically • Can find work from polytropic eqn. • W = mR(T2-T1)/(n-1) • Final pressure: • P1Vn1=P2Vn2 • P2 = (V1/V2)1.3 (P1) = (21.3)(100) = • Final temperature • P1V1/T1 = P2V2/T2 • T2 = (P2/P1)(V2/V1)T1 = (246.2/100)(0.5)(300) =

  3. PAL # 8 Specific Heat • Work is: • W = (0.8)(0.2968)(369.3-300) / (1-1.3) = • Can get DE from cv • Average T = (369+300)/2 = 335 K • DU = mDu = mcvDT • DU = (0.8)(0.744)(369.3-300) = • Q = 54.8 – 41.2 =

  4. Control Volume • For a control volume, mass can flow in and out • Mass flow rate depends on: • Velocity normal to Ac: Vn • Note that: • V = velocity • V =volume

  5. Flow • Mass flowing through a pipe • Not easy to solve • Velocity is not Vavg = V = (1/Ac) ∫ Vn dAc • We can now write:

  6. Volume • The volume flow rate is just: • Related to the mass flow rate just by the density: • In m3/s

  7. Conservation of Mass • We examine: • Mass streams flowing out = mout • So then: • m’in – m’out = dmcv/dt

  8. Common Cases • For the steady flow case: S m’in = S m’out • For systems with just a single stream: r1V1A1 = r2V2A2 • For incompressible fluids, r1 = r2 V’1 = V’2

  9. Flow Work • The amount of energy needed to push fluid into a control volume is the flow work: • Can think of it as a property of the fluid itself

  10. Energy • Our previous result for fluid energy was: • We can add the flow work, but note: • We designate the total fluid energy per unit mass by q: q = h + V2/2 + gz • Now we don’t have to worry about the flow work

  11. Energy and Mass Flow • The total is: E’mass = m’q = m’(h + V2/2 +gz) • If V and z are small: • True for most systems

  12. Steady-Flow Systems • Once they are up and running the properties of the fluid at a given point don’t change with time q – w = Dq = Dh + DV2/2 + gDz • Energy balance for a steady flow system per unit mass

  13. Steady Flow Heat and Work • Heat • This is the net heat Q’in-Q’out • Work • Boundary work = 0, flow work part of enthalpy • Remaining work:

  14. Steady Flow Energies • Enthalpy • Dh is difference between inlet and exit • Kinetic energy • Often very small • Potential energy • 10’s or 100’s of meters

  15. Automotive Cooling System

  16. Example: Radiator • Assume cooling fluid is water • Flow velocity about 1 m/s • Maximum height differential about 1 meter • gz = (9.8)(1) /(1000) = 0.0098 kJ/kg

  17. Next Time • Read: 5.4-5.5 • Homework: Ch 5, P: 17, 21, 36, 75

More Related