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Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS STATE the First Law of Thermodynamics. • Using the First Law of Thermodynamics, ANALYZE an open system including all energy transfer processes crossing the boundaries. • Using the First Law of Thermodynamics, ANALYZE cyclic processes for a thermodynamic system. • Given a defined system, PERFORM energy balances on all major components in the system. • Given a heat exchanger, PERFORM an energy balance across the two sides of the heat exchanger. IDENTIFY the path(s) on a T-s diagram that represents the thermodynamic processes occurring in a fluid system.

Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

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Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS. STATE the First Law of Thermodynamics. Using the First Law of Thermodynamics, ANALYZE an open system including all energy transfer processes crossing the boundaries. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

Lesson 7FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

• STATE the First Law of Thermodynamics.

• Using the First Law of Thermodynamics, ANALYZE an open system including all energy transfer processes crossing the boundaries.

• Using the First Law of Thermodynamics, ANALYZE cyclic processes for a thermodynamic system.

• Given a defined system, PERFORM energy balances on all major components in the system.

• Given a heat exchanger, PERFORM an energy balance across the two sides of the heat exchanger.

• IDENTIFY the path(s) on a T-s diagram that represents the thermodynamic processes occurring in a fluid system.

Page 2: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

First Law of Thermodynamics

Energy can neither be created nor destroyed, only altered in form.

Page 3: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

First Law of Thermodynamics• Energy Transfer

– Mass and energy crossing the control boundary– External work and/or heat crossing the boundary– Change of stored energy within the control volume.

• Mass Flow of Fluid - Associated with the kinetic, potential, internal, and "flow" energies that affect the overall energy balance of the system

• Energy balanced by the exchange of external work and/or heat

Page 4: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

Conservation of Energy

• Open System Σ(all energies in) = Σ (all energies out) + Δ(energy stored in system)

(Σ E in = Σ Eout + ΔE storage)

• Closed System– No mass crosses the boundary, but work and/or heat do

• Isolated System – Mass, work and heat do not cross the boundary - the

only energy exchanges taking place are within the system

Page 5: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

First Law of Thermodynamics

Page 6: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

First Law of Thermodynamics

Page 7: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

First Law of Thermodynamics

Page 8: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

Energy Balance – Control Volume

• A fixed region in space is established with specified control boundaries

• The energies that cross the boundary of this control volume, including those with the mass crossing the boundary, are then studied and the balance performed.

Page 9: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

Control Volume Concepts

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Open System Control Volumes

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Open System Control Volumes (Cont.)

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Multiple Control Volumes in Same System

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Energy Across the Boundary• Forms of energy crossing the control boundary with the mass

are given as m (u + Pv + ke + pe).

• Enthalpy, has been defined as h = u + Pv. This results in the above expression being written as m (h + ke + pe).

• Externally applied work (W) (or “Shaft Work”) also may cross the system boundary.

• In order to complete and satisfy the conservation of energy relationship, energy that is caused by neither mass nor shaft work is classified as heat energy (Q).

Page 14: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

Energy Relationship in Symbolic Form

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Processes• In some processes, the relationships between pressure,

temperature, and volume are specified as the fluid goes from one thermodynamic state to another.

• The most common processes– Isothermal - Constant Temperature– Isobaric - Constant Pressure– Isovolumetric - Constant Volume

• Cyclic Process - Fluid passes through various processes and returns to the same state it began with

Page 16: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

T-s Diagram with Rankine Cycle

Page 17: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

Rankine Cycle

ab: Liquid is compressed with no change in entropy (by ideal pump).

bc: Constant pressure transfer of heat in the boiler. Heat is added to the compressed liquid, two-phase, and superheat states.

cd: Constant entropy expansion with shaft work output (in ideal turbine).

da: Constant pressure transfer of heat in the sink. Unavailable heat is rejected to the heat sink (condenser).

Page 18: Lesson 7 FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

Typical Steam Plant Cycle

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Steam Plant System Components• Heat source to produce the thermal energy (e.g. nuclear or fossil fuel)

• A steam generator to change the thermal energy into steam energy

• Pumps to transfer the fluid back to the heat source (reactor coolant pumps in a nuclear reactor)

• Pressurizer to ensure that the primary system maintains its desired pressure

• Piping to ensure the fluid passes through each stage of its cyclic process.