Publication | Closed Access
Availability and irreversibility in thermodynamics
185
Citations
2
References
1951
Year
EngineeringEnergy EfficiencyEngineering ThermodynamicsRefrigerationStabilityThermodynamic ModellingAvailable EnergySystems EngineeringTransport PhenomenaThermodynamicsEquilibrium Thermodynamic PropertyThermodynamic EquilibriumUniform MediumHeat TransferNon-equilibrium ThermodynamicsEntropyEntropy ProductionEquilibrium ThermodynamicsAvailable Energy ConceptThermal Engineering
The paper connects Gibbs’s available energy to stability criteria and extends the concept to systems interacting with a uniform medium or an additional temperature reservoir. The authors extend the analysis to transient and steady flows, defining and evaluating irreversibility as a measure of deviation from ideal behavior. They devise performance coefficients for various process classes and demonstrate the method’s generality through analysis of diverse thermodynamic phenomena.
Connexion is made between Gibbs's "available energy of the system and medium" and the criterion of stability. The available energy concept is developed for systems which communicate only with the uniform medium or atmosphere and for systems which communicate with an additional reservoir of specified temperature. The treatment is extended to problems of transient and steady flow. A measure of departure from the ideal, the irreversibility, is defined and examined for its significance. Performance coefficients are devised for several classes of processes. Finally, the generality of the method is exhibited by analysis of a variety of thermodynamic phenomena.
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