Title: Modes of Work Transfer
1Modes of Work Transfer
- P M V Subbarao
- Professor
- Mechanical Engineering Department
- I I T Delhi
ManyMore Needs/Happenings are Equivalent to
Displacement Work!!!
2Displacement Work
3Generalized Process in A Control Mass
- p p0 k (V-V0)
- p2 p02 k (V-V0)2
- Polytropic Nature of Fluid Process
- pVn Constant
- n Polytropic constant.
- n0 Constant Pressure Process.
- n? Constant Volume Process.
4The Polytropic Process by A Control Mass
- One in which the pressure-volume relation is
given as - pVnconstant
- n may have any value from minus to plus
infinity. - Work transfer during a polytropic process.
5- For a vapour (Real Gas) under going a process.
6Evolution of Wind Turbines
- Wind is a clean, safe, renewable form of energy.
- Although the use of wind power in sailing vessels
appeared in antiquity, the widespread use of wind
power for grinding grain and pumping water was
delayed until - the 7th century in Persia,
- the 12th century in England, and
- the 15th century in Holland.
- 17th century, Leibniz proposed using windmills
and waterwheels together to pump water from mines
in the Harz Mountains. - Dutch settlers brought Dutch mills to America in
the 18th century. - This led to the development of a multiblade wind
turbine that was used to pump water for
livestock. - Wind turbines were used in Denmark in 1890 to
generate electric power. - Early in the 20th century American farms began to
use wind turbines to drive electricity generators
for charging storage batteries.
7SOME TYPES OF WIND TURBINES HAWT
8SOME TYPES OF WIND TURBINES VAWT
9Schematic of Modern Wind Turbines
10Wind Flow Past A Locked Wind Turbine
11Work Transfer in A Wind Turbine Control Volume
12Work Transfer in a Flow Device Control Volume
13Continuous flow system Pressure at inlet is pi
and pressure at exist is po always. Fluid with
Vi,Ti enters and leaves with Vo and To. The
volume is subjected to a changing pressure field..
Outlet po, To, Vo
p
How to define the infinitesimal work?
14Work Transfer in a Flow Device Control Volume
15Acquisition of Work from Constant Volume Flow
Process
16The Hydro Power House
17Wind generation for developing countries
- Unlike the trend toward large-scale grid
connected wind turbines seen in the West. - The more immediate demand for rural energy supply
in developing countries is for smaller machines
in the 5 - 100 kW range. - These can be connected to small, localized
micro-grid systems and used in conjunction with
diesel generating sets and/or solar photovoltaic
systems. - The main area of growth being for very small
battery charging wind turbines (50 - 150 Watts). - In Inner Mongolia there are over 30,000 such
machines used by herders for providing power for
lighting, televisions, radios, etc. - Other applications for small wind machines
include water pumping, telecommunications power
supply and irrigation.
18Polytropic work Transfer in A Flow Device
19Shaft Work
Energy transmission with a rotating shaft is very
common in engineering practice.
A force F acting through a moment arm r generates
a torque T of
20Spring Work
21Work Done on Elastic Solid Bars
For linear elastic springs, the displacement x is
proportional to the force applied
22Work Transfer in Nature
How can a baby snail come out of a egg shell?
23Who controls the Growth Shape Equilibrium Shape
of A Crystal
24Why cutting of a solid consumes power?
25Who decides the beauty of Table Cloth ???
26The Role of Surface Tension in Engineering
- When splitting a solid, the amount of energy
required is 2sA, where 2A is the area created
(one A on each side). - This energy is less than that needed just to
break the bonds, since there is atomic and
electronic relaxation. - The surface energy is always positive because the
atoms are less bound at the surface. - The surface tension can be defined as the
reversible work of formation of a unit area of
surface at constant T, V, m. - The surface tension is the two-dimensional analog
to the pressure.
27Thermodynamic Definition of Surface Tension
The relative change in internal energy of a
control mass w.r.t. change in surface area at
constant temperature, volume.
Law of a Nature
The tendency to minimize surface energy is a
defining factor in the morphology and composition
of surfaces and interfaces. This Is important
for Solids Liquids.
28Values of Surface Tension for Selected Materials
Material g J/m2
Tungsten (solid) 2.9
Iron (solid) 2.2
Iron (liquid) 1.9
MgO 1.2
Mercury (liquid) 0.5
Water 0.07
Acetic acid 0.03
Nitrogen (liquid) 0.01
Helium (liquid) 0.0003
29Work Associated with the Stretching of a Liquid
Film
30The Faradays Work An Amazing form of Work
Transfer
- Consider a conducting rod PQ moving at a steady
speed V perpendicular to a field with a flux
densityB. - An electron (negative charge e) in the rod will
experience a force ( Bev) that will push it
towards the end P.
31Description of Work done by A Conductor
- The same is true for other electrons in the rod,
so the end P will become negatively charged,
leaving Q with a positive charge. - As a result, an electric field E builds up until
the force on electrons in the rod (unit length)
due to this electric field ( Ee) balances the
force due to the magnetic field
Force per unit charge on Rod of unit length
32For a rod of length L, define the EMF as
What happens when the EMF drives a current in an
external circuit? To do this, imagine that the
rod moves along a pair of parallel conductors
that are connected to an external circuit
33Electrical Loading of Conductor
The EMF will now cause a current to flow in the
external resistor R. This means that a similar
current flows through the rod itself giving a
magnetic force, BIL to the left.
34Quantification of the Faradays Work
L is now the separation of the two conductors
along which the rod PQ moves. An equal and
opposite force (to the right) is needed to keep
PQ moving at a steady speed.
In a time t, the rod moves a distance x
Vt Work done on the rod
35The Pairs of Work Transfers
Energy dissipated in R power x time EMF I
t Giving B I L V t EMF I t or,
as before, EMF B V L
http//tap.iop.org/fields/electromagnetism/414/pag
e_46948.html