Calculating Max Electricity Generated from Weights

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the maximum electricity that can be generated from a falling weight, specifically in the context of a pendulum-type clock being replaced with a generator. Participants explore the relationship between gravitational potential energy and electrical energy generation, including examples and calculations.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant proposes calculating maximum work using the formula mgΔh, where m is mass, g is gravitational acceleration, and Δh is the change in height.
  • Another participant clarifies that the maximum work obtainable is the change in gravitational potential energy when the weight falls from its highest to lowest point.
  • A participant expresses a desire for a specific example calculation involving a 1-ton weight falling from 100 feet to 0 feet, seeking clarity on how to derive kilowatts from that work.
  • One participant explains that gravitational potential energy decreases by mgΔh and that energy conversion to electricity is subject to real-world inefficiencies like friction.
  • Another participant elaborates on how power can be calculated by dividing the total work by the time taken for the weight to fall, noting that the rate of fall affects the power output.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally agree on the principles of gravitational potential energy and its conversion to work, but there are varying interpretations regarding the specifics of calculations and the effects of time on power generation. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the exact calculations and practical implementations.

Contextual Notes

Some participants note the dependence on definitions of mass and weight, as well as the arbitrary nature of height reference points. There are also unresolved considerations regarding the effects of acceleration and time on power output.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be useful for individuals interested in physics, engineering, or energy generation concepts, particularly those exploring the mechanics of gravitational potential energy and its applications in electricity generation.

optimizer
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Hi,
If I have a weight, an example could be the weights in a Pendulum type clock (weight could be pounds, or tons if we're talking Big Ben), is there a way to calculate the maximum amount of electricity the weight could be generating (kilowatts etc) if the clock was replaced with a generator of some sort.

Any links to examples scaled from micro to gigantic (to hammer it into my head) are welcome.
Thanks
 
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Well take the two extremes: the weight at its highest point, h1 and the weight at its lowest point, h2.

If allowed to fall from h1 to h2 (assuming this is around the surface of the earth) then the maximum work you could obtain would be [tex]mg\Delta h[/tex] where [tex]\Delta h[/tex] is h1-h2. (The change in gravitational potential energy)

This means that you don't have a pendulum just swinging. You have a pendulum at a height h1, you connect it to some sort of generator, let the weight fall to h2, at which point the change in gravitational potential energy will have gone to either doing work or wasted to friction.

A pendulum swings forever if there is absolutely no friction or anything else to stop it. As soon as you introduce a generator, it will cause the pendulum to slow down so the maximum work you'll get is just the change in gravitational potential energy.
 
Last edited:
Ah, sorry, I forgot to note I'm a Physics Dummy (one of those aged ones that's ready to learn after school days).

Thanks for the answer, it's getting me there.

Yes, so it's "maximum work" that I'm looking for, is it.
I don't know the mg-h formula (willing to research, but probably quicker to ask/learn).

I suppose I would like to see an example calculation that shows a 1 ton weight dropping from h1 (100') to h2 (0') and how much work that would achieve,
and a calculation to show how many kilowatts you could get from that work with a specific type of generator.

No pendulum!

Thanks
 
mgh is the gravitational potential energy of an object on the earth, where m is its mass, g is the acceleration due to gravity (9.8 m/s2, and h is the height of the object. The place where you put your height to be 0 is arbitrary so it's the change in height that really matters. Also the value of 9.8 m/s2 is at about the surface of the Earth so this formula isn't really accurate if you're dealing with large distances from the Earth. See: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/gpot.html#mgh

This problem is basic conservation of energy. If an object is dropped a distance [tex]\Delta h[/tex] then the object's gravitational potential energy decreases by [tex]mg\Delta h[/tex]. Conservation of energy says that energy can't just disappear. Where does it go? If you just drop an object it will go into kinetic energy. If in your case you want the object to somehow turn a generator to generate electricity then that energy will go into generating that electricity. Obviously in the real world some of the energy will go into things like friction so you can't perfectly convert all of the gravitational potential energy to useful work.

In your example, the weight of the object is 2000 lb (weight is equal to mg. pounds are a measure of weight, while kilograms are a measure of mass) The height difference is 100 feet. This means that the maximum work you can obtain would be (2000 lb)(100 ft) = 200,000 lb-ft.

Kilowatts are a measure of energy per time. One watt means one joule per second. lb-ft and Joules are a measure of energy.
 
dav2008 said:
This means that the maximum work you can obtain would be (2000 lb)(100 ft) = 200,000 lb-ft.

Kilowatts are a measure of energy per time. One watt means one joule per second. lb-ft and Joules are a measure of energy.
To expand, you could have the mass fall at any rate permitted by gravitational acceleration and produce any amount of power within those limits for that time.

For longer times, you can consider the acceleration's affect negligible and simply divide the work by the time to get average power. Ie, if you let it fall for 10 seconds, you'd get 200,000/10 = 20,000 lb-ft/sec for 10 seconds and if you let it fall for 20, you'd get 200,000/20= 10,000 lb-ft/sec for 20 seconds.

If you tried to absorb the energy much faster than about 5 seconds, you'd find that in order to get the mass to the ground in 5 seconds or less, you'd have to let it accelerate on its own, and not extract any power from it, then when it got near the ground, extract extra power to decelerate it. You'd end up with much lower power at the beginning and higher power at the end (but still the same total amount of work, of course).
 

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