Heat Engine Efficiency
Heat Engine Efficiency
Heat Engine Efficiency
FISIKA
LABORATORY MANUAL
I. OBJECTIVE
a. At the end of this topic students can understand and explain:
- Heat Engine Efficiency
II. INTRODUCTION
Heat Engine
A heat engine is a device that does work by extracting thermal energy from a hot
reservoir and exhausting thermal energy to a cold reservoir. In this experiment, the heat
engine consists of air inside a cylinder which expands when the attached can is immersed
in hot water. The expanding air pushes on a piston and does work by lifting a weight.
The heat engine cycle is completed by immersing the can in cold water, which returns
the air pressure and volume to the starting values.
The theoretical maximum efficiency of a heat engine depends only on the temperature
of the hot reservoir, TH, and the temperature of the cold reservoir, T C. The maximum
efficiency is given by
(
e= 1−
TC
TH )
×100 % eq 1
W
e= × 100 % eq 2
QH
where W is the work done by the heat engine on its environment and QH is the heat
extracted from the hot reservoir. At the beginning of the cycle, the air is held at a
constant temperature while a weight is placed on top of the piston. Work is done on the
gas and heat is exhausted to the cold reservoir. The internal energy of the gas (
Δ U =n C V ΔT ) does not change since the temperature does not change. According to the
First Law of Thermodynamics, Δ U =Q−W , where Q is the heat added to the gas and W
is the work done by the gas.
In the second part of the cycle, heat is added to the gas, causing the gas to expand,
pushing the piston up, doing work by lifting the weight. This process takes place at
constant pressure (atmospheric pressure) because the piston is free to move. For an
isobaric process, the heat added to the gas is Q P=n C P Δ T , where n is the number of
moles of gas in the container, C P is the molar heat capacity for constant pressure, and ΔT
is the change in temperature. The work done by the gas is found using the First Law of
Thermodynamics, W =Q−ΔU , where Q is the heat added to the gas and ΔU is the
change in internal energy of the gas, given by Δ U =n C V ΔT , where CV is the molar heat
capacity for constant volume.
5 7
Since air consists mostly of diatomic molecules, C V = R , and C P = R .
2 2
In the third part of the cycle, the weight is lifted off the piston while the gas is held at
the hotter temperature. Heat is added to the gas and the gas expands, doing work.
During this isothermal process, the work done is given by
W =nRTln ( )
Vf
Vi
eq 3
where Vi is the initial volume at the beginning of the isothermal process and V f is the
final volume at the end of the isothermal process. Since the change in internal energy is
zero for an isothermal process, the First Law of Thermodynamics shows that the heat
added to the gas is equal to the work done by the gas:
Δ U =Q−W =0 eq 4
In the final part of the cycle, heat is exhausted from the gas to the cold reservoir,
returning the piston to its original position. This process is isobaric and the same
equations apply as in the second part of the cycle.
III. PROCEDURE
a. Equipment
No Quantity Name
1 1 Heat Engine/Gas Law Apparatus
2 1 Large Rod Stand
3 1 Ohaus Slotted Mass Set (Need 200 g mass only)
4 1 Drilled Mass (10g)
5 1 Drilled Mass (20g)
6 1 Mass Hanger
7 2 Plastic containers (3 liters) for warm and cold water
8 1 Thread
9 1 90 cm Long Steel Rod
10 1 Rotary Motion Sensor
11 2 Temperature Sensor
12 1 Low Pressure Sensor
13 1 PASCO 850 Universal Interface
14 1 DataStudio Software
b. Laboratory Setup
Experiment Setup
1. Put the rod in the rod stand. Attach the Heat Engine to the rod by sliding the
Heat Engine’s rod clamp onto the rod. The Heat Engine should be oriented
with the piston end up and the Heat Engine should be positioned close to the
bottom of the rod stand (see Figure 1).
4. Position the piston about 2 or 3 cm from the bottom of the cylinder and attach
the tube from the can to one port on the Heat Engine and attach the tube
from the pressure sensor to the other port on the Heat Engine.
5. Connect the Pressure Sensor to Channel A, the two Temperature Sensors to
Channels B and C, and the Rotary Motion Sensor to Channels 1 and 2 on the
computer interface.
6. Put hot water (about 80oC) into one of the plastic containers (about half full).
Put ice water in the other plastic container. The large (about 3 liter)
containers keep the hot and cold temperatures constant during the heat
engine cycle.
7. Place one temperature sensor in the hot water and place the other temperature
sensor in the cold water. Note that the temperature sensors are labeled hot
and cold in the software program so you will have to pay attention to which
sensor you put in the hot water and which is in the cold water.
8. Run DataStudio.
9. Load the file called "HeatEngineCycle". This file is set up to record a graph
of air pressure inside the cylinder versus volume (i.e., a P-V diagram).
Experiment Procedure
1. Perform the following cycle without hesitating between steps. You may
want to practice a few times before recording a data run. Start with the can in
the cold water. This starting point will be called point A. Record the height
of the bottom of the piston. Start recording data on the computer.
2. Print the graph of the cycle. Label the four corners of your graph as A, B, C,
and D. Identify the temperatures at points A, B, C, and D. Put arrows on the
cycle to show the direction of the process.
3. Identify the types of processes (i.e., isothermal, etc.) and the actual physical
performance (put mass on, put in hot bath, etc.) for A to B, B to C, C to D,
and D to A.
4. Identify and label the two processes in which heat is added to the gas.
Experiment Result
Cold Temperature Tc
Hot Temperature Th
Temperature pos A Ta
Temperature pos B Tb
Temperature pos C Tc
Temperature pos D Td
Pressure pos A Pa
Pressure pos B Pb
Pressure pos C Pc
Pressure pos D Pd
Radius of Can r Can
Radius of Cylinder r Cylinder
Init Piston Height h0
Can Height h
c. Analysis
V = ( π r h ) can+ ( A ho )cylinder
2
QB →C = ()
7 PD V D
2 TD
( T C−T D )
f. Calculate QH = QB C + QC D.
3. Calculate the work done by the gas by measuring the Area inside the curve.
4. Calculate the efficiency e = work done by gas/ heat extracted from hot
reservoir.
W
e= × 100 %
QH
How does this compare with the ideal efficiency from Step 1?
5. Calculate the actual work done on the 200 g mass using W = mgh. Be
careful to use only the change in height of the mass. How does this compare
to the work done by the gas from part 3? Does the gas do any work other
than lifting the 200 g mass?
6. Mix some of the ice water with the hot water and vice versa so the two
reservoirs are closer to the same temperature. Perform the cycle again. How
high is the weight lifted now? What is the theoretical efficiency using the
new temperatures?
IV. REFERENSES
[1] PASCO Scientific. [Online]. Instruction Manual and Experiment Guide for the PASCO
scientific model SF-8607 dan SF-8608. Available:
https://www.pasco.com/file_downloads/product_manuals/Basic-Current-Balance-
Manual-SF-8607.pdf December 07,2015 [February 11, 2015]
[2] Meade, 2007. “Foundations Of Electroncs 4”. Thomson. US.
[3] Floyd, 2005. “Electric Circuit Fundamental 7”. Prentice Hall. US
[4] Floyd, 2000. “Principle of Electrical Circuit 5”. Prentice Hall. US
[5] Tony R K. 2006. “Lessons In Electric Circuit Volume I DC and Volume II AC” 5. Design
Science License. US
[6] http://www.school-for-champions.com/science/electricity_ohms_law.htm
[7] http://www.allaboutcircuits.com/vol_1/chpt_5/1.html
[8] http://thomasyg.staff.gunadarma.ac.id/Downloads/files/8195/Regresi+dan+Korelasi.pdf
V. APPENDICES