Exergy PDF
Exergy PDF
Exergy is the theoretical limit for the work potential that can be obtained from a source or
a system at a given state when interacting with a reference (environment) at a constant
condition.
A system is said to be in the dead state when it is in thermodynamic equilibrium with its
environment. Unless otherwise stated, assume the dead state to be:
P0 = 1 atm and T0 = 25°C
A system delivers the maximum possible work as it undergoes a reversible process from
the specified initial state to the state of its environment (dead state). This represents the
useful work potential, or exergy, or availability.
Exergy is a property of the system-environment combination (not the system alone).
Exergy of Kinetic Energy
Kinetic energy can be converted to work entirely; thus:
V2
x KE ke kJ / kg
2
where V is the velocity of the system relative to the environment.
Exergy of Potential Energy
Potential energy is also a form of mechanical energy and can be converted to work
entirely; thus:
x PE pe gz kJ / kg
Some Definitions
Surroundings work: is the work done by or against the surroundings during a process.
This work cannot be recovered and utilized. For a cylinder-piston assembly, one can
write:
Wsurr P0 V2 V1
The difference between the actual work W and the surroundings work Wsurr is called the
useful Wu:
Wu = W – Wsurr = W - P0 (V2 – V1)
Reversible Work: Wrev is the max amount of useful work that can be produced (or the min
work needs to be supplied) as the system undergoes a process between the initial and
final states. When the final state is the dead state, the reversible work equals exergy.
Irreversibility: I is equal to the exergy destroyed; thus for a reversible process the
irreversibility or exergy destruction is zero.
I = Wrev,out – Wu,out
Note that the first term in the above equation, mcave (T1 – T0) = 38,925 kJ, is the total heat
transfer from the iron block to the engine. This means that only 21% of the heat
transferred from the iron block could have been converted to work.
The irreversibility for the process is determined from:
I = Wrev – Wu = 8191 – 0 = 8191 kJ
The entire work potential is wasted.
The Second Law Efficiency
The second law efficiency, ηII is the ratio of actual thermal efficiency to the maximum
possible (reversible) thermal efficiency under the same conditions:
Ts,2 = 1100 K
Ts,1 = 600 K
Sink T = 300K
Exergy of A Fixed Mass
Consider a stationary cylinder-piston assembly that contains a fluid of mass m at T, P, U,
and S. The system is allowed to undergo a differential change.
The energy balance for the system during this differential process can be expressed as:
Q W dU (1)
The system involves some boundary work:
W PdV P P0 dV P0 dV Wb ,useful P0 dV (2)
For a system, which is at temperature T, to have a reversible heat transfer with the
surroundings at T0, heat transfer must occur through a reversible heat engine (ηth = 1 –
TL/TH). For the reversible heat engine, one can write:
P P0 δWb, useful
T T0
P0
δQ
Heat δWHE
engine
T0
where Wtotal,useful is the total useful work delivered as the system undergoes a reversible
process from the given state to the dead state which is the exergy of the system. Total
exergy for a closed system including the potential and kinetic energies can be written as:
V2
X U U 0 P0 V V0 T0 S S 0 m mgz
2
on a unit mass basis, the closed system exergy is :
V2
u - u 0 P0 v v0 T0 s s 0 gz
2
where subscript 0 denotes the state of the system at the dead state.
Exergy by Heat Transfer
Heat is a form of disorganized energy, thus only a portion of it can be converted to work.
Heat transfer Q at a location at thermodynamic temperature T is accompanied by exergy
transfer:
T
X heat 1 0 Q
kJ
T
If the temperature of the heat source is changing with time, use:
T
X heat 1 0 Q
kJ
T
Exergy Transfer by Work
W Wsurr for boundary work
X work
W for other forms of work
where Wsurr = P0 (V2 – V1). Therefore the exergy transfer with work such as shaft work
and electrical work is equal to the work W.
Note that the work done or against atmosphere is not available for any useful purpose,
and should be excluded from available work.
The Decrease of Exergy Principle
Entropy and exergy for an isolated closed system can be related through an energy
balance and entropy balance as follows:
Exergy Balance: Closed System
Xin – Xout – Xdestroyed = ∆Xsystem
where; Xdestroyed = T0 Sgen
For a closed system that does not involve any mass flow. The exergy balance can be
written as:
T0
1 T Qk W P0 V2 V1 T0 S gen X 2 X 1
k
where the initial and final states of the control volume are specified , the exergy change
of the control volume is:
X 2 X 1 m2 2 m11
Steady-flow devices such as: turbines, compressors, nozzles, diffusers, heat exchangers,
pipes, and ducts do not experience no changes in their mass, energy, entropy, and exergy
content as well as their volumes. Therefore:
dVCV/dt = 0
and
dXCV/dt = 0
Thus, one can write:
T0
1 T Qk W m m X destroyed 0
k in out