Thermodynamic - water/ice piston help

AI Thread Summary
An inventor proposes a heat engine utilizing water and ice as the working substance, leveraging water's expansion upon freezing to lift a piston. The engine operates in four steps: loading a weight onto the piston, freezing the water to lift the weight, unloading the weight, and melting the ice to reset the system. This design claims to perform unlimited work while absorbing a finite amount of heat per cycle. Calculations are needed to determine the work done in raising a 10 g mass and the mass required to halt the engine's operation by lowering the freezing point of water. The discussion highlights the importance of understanding water and ice compressibility for accurate calculations.
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An inventor proposes to make a heat engine using water/ice as the working substance inside a cylindrical piston and taking advantage of the fact that water expands as it freezes and can therefore lift a piston supporting some mass m. The engine process consists of four steps as shown in the schematic below.

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(i) Load: The weight to be lifted is placed on top of a piston over a cylinder of water held at a temperature of 1oC. The piston sits at height hw.
(ii) Lift: The system is then placed in thermal contact with a low temperature reservoir at −1oC until the water freezes into ice, lifting the weight to a height hi.
(iii) Unload: The weight is then removed at height hi while the ice remains frozen.
(iv) Reset: The ice is melted by putting it back in contact with the high-temperature reservoir at 1oC, returning the piston hw. Another mass is added to the piston and the cycle is ready to be repeated.

The inventor is pleased with this device because it can seemingly perform an unlimited amount of work (by lifting an unlimited mass m) while absorbing only a finite amount of heat each cycle.

Question
Assuming that the piston has a cross-sectional area of 10 cm2 and contains 50 cm3 of liquid H2O (i.e. homework = 5 cm), calculate:
(i) The work done by the piston in raising a mass of 10 g.
(ii) The mass required to stop the engine working (i.e., reduce the freezing point of the water to −1oC).
 
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Interesting idea. For your questions:
1. W=FD
2. You will have to look into the compressibility of water and ice.
 
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