SBBlue
Automotive
- Oct 6, 2003
- 118
Glueontop discussed the ideal gas laws and Otto cycle thermodynamics, and concluded:
"These laws have been proven time after time for at least a hundred year. No one has ever prove them wrong, and no one ever will."
What you say is true. . . .but, as Paul Harvey would say, there's the "rest of the story" that needs to be told.
First, what you said about the ideal gas law and the Otto cycle could also be said of the open Brayton cycle, i.e., the Gas Turbine. Yet there is no question at all that water injection into the compressor of a gas turbine increases turbine efficiency. Here are some websites of companies that specialize in gas turbine "inlet fogging":
Second, your comments about the ideal gas law and the Otto cycle only apply to single substance systems.
Consider the following;
Take one pound of air at an atmospheric pressure of 14.7 psi and a temperature of 1000 deg F. Mix this with one pound of steam at a pressure of 14.7 psi and a temperature of 212 deg F. What do you get?
Clearly heat will be transferred from the hot air to the steam, and the temperature of the steam will obviously be equal to the temperature of the hot air. If you work out the problem with the steam tables and ideal gas tables, you will discover that the resulting mixture has a temperature of about 490 deg F and a pressure of about 15.3 psi.
Note that the temperature of the hot gas dropped after we added the steam to it, yet the pressure of the mixture increased. Obviously, if we couldn't get any work from either the steam or the hot air prior to mixture because they were already at atmospheric pressure, and there wouldn't be pressure difference. But we could get some work from the mixture, because the pressure of the mixture is above atmospheric pressure.
The ideal gas laws and otto cycle thermodynamic laws are certainly quite solid. However, if you start mixing different substances, some of the implications will be different.
Third ---
You must consider that there are other implications to efficiency then just pressure and temperature. You must consider the efficiency of the compressor and expander devices. If adding water to the compressor makes it more efficient, it may more than offset any peak temperature considerations. If you can make the compression isothermal by adding water, than the efficiency of the overall system may improve.
"These laws have been proven time after time for at least a hundred year. No one has ever prove them wrong, and no one ever will."
What you say is true. . . .but, as Paul Harvey would say, there's the "rest of the story" that needs to be told.
First, what you said about the ideal gas law and the Otto cycle could also be said of the open Brayton cycle, i.e., the Gas Turbine. Yet there is no question at all that water injection into the compressor of a gas turbine increases turbine efficiency. Here are some websites of companies that specialize in gas turbine "inlet fogging":
Second, your comments about the ideal gas law and the Otto cycle only apply to single substance systems.
Consider the following;
Take one pound of air at an atmospheric pressure of 14.7 psi and a temperature of 1000 deg F. Mix this with one pound of steam at a pressure of 14.7 psi and a temperature of 212 deg F. What do you get?
Clearly heat will be transferred from the hot air to the steam, and the temperature of the steam will obviously be equal to the temperature of the hot air. If you work out the problem with the steam tables and ideal gas tables, you will discover that the resulting mixture has a temperature of about 490 deg F and a pressure of about 15.3 psi.
Note that the temperature of the hot gas dropped after we added the steam to it, yet the pressure of the mixture increased. Obviously, if we couldn't get any work from either the steam or the hot air prior to mixture because they were already at atmospheric pressure, and there wouldn't be pressure difference. But we could get some work from the mixture, because the pressure of the mixture is above atmospheric pressure.
The ideal gas laws and otto cycle thermodynamic laws are certainly quite solid. However, if you start mixing different substances, some of the implications will be different.
Third ---
You must consider that there are other implications to efficiency then just pressure and temperature. You must consider the efficiency of the compressor and expander devices. If adding water to the compressor makes it more efficient, it may more than offset any peak temperature considerations. If you can make the compression isothermal by adding water, than the efficiency of the overall system may improve.