I know the formulas for efficiencies e of heat pump (it is e<=Tmax/(Tmax-Tmin)) and refrigerator (e<=Tmin/(Tmax-Tmin)), where Tmax and Tmin are temperatures of warmer and colder (respectively) involved containers. These formulas make me puzzled, as efficiencies seem to be possibly bigger than 1. Is that correct? If yes, what does it mean?
stewartcs
Oct6-08, 03:49 PM
I know the formulas for efficiencies e of heat pump (it is e<=Tmax/(Tmax-Tmin)) and refrigerator (e<=Tmin/(Tmax-Tmin)), where Tmax and Tmin are temperatures of warmer and colder (respectively) involved containers. These formulas make me puzzled, as efficiencies seem to be possibly bigger than 1. Is that correct? If yes, what does it mean?
The COP (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coefficient_of_performance) (coefficient of performance) for heat pumps and refrigerators can be greater than 1 (and normally are). You are mixing the idea of thermal efficiency (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_efficiency) of a heat engine with COP. They are not the same thing.
CS
russ_watters
Oct6-08, 06:07 PM
In a typical heat engine, you have a certain amount of thermal energy that is converted to mechanical energy. In a heat pump or refrigeration cycle, the working fluid is being circulated to move heat between a hot and cold well. There is no direct corellation between the energy required to circulate the working fluid and the energy it is carrying with it when you move it.