Assumed violation of physics - Heat vs. Work

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the potential for using an efficient heat engine to power a high Coefficient of Performance (COP) heat pump, with participants exploring the relationship between heat engines and heat pumps in energy conversion. It is acknowledged that energy must be conserved, and the concept of over-unity is dismissed. Participants debate the efficiency of heat engines and heat pumps, noting that an efficient heat engine requires a large temperature difference while a heat pump operates best with a small temperature difference. The conversation highlights the limitations imposed by the second law of thermodynamics, emphasizing that any proposed system must adhere to these fundamental principles. Ultimately, the feasibility of achieving a net gain in energy through this setup remains contentious and is constrained by thermodynamic laws.
Low-Q
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I have had a discussion with some friends who is interesting in all sort of things of physics and experiments. We are interesting in energy research particulary, and looks for alternative energy sources that is "free of use", or at some degree an independent energy source.

We have been discussing heat pumps, and heat engines. And I know it has been discussed here as well. My friends and I do know that energy MUST be conserved. There is NO such thing as over unity. But still we do discuss the potential in a heat engine that is assisted by a heat pump.
What I have been told at physicsforums.com is that a heat pump with high COP, does work very bad as a heat engine - I'm told here that there is a reversed relationship between the COP number as a heat pump, and efficiency as a heat engine. So we can agree that using two identical heat pumps, where one of them is used as a heat engine, powered by the other heat pump, is not going to work - not even without loss.

However, we have been discussing back and forth wether it is possible to use an efficient heat engine to power the pump of a high COP heat pump.
I have compared this particular experiment with a water turbine that is harvesting the potential of the hight of a dam. The dam is continiously supplied with water from the river. The river itself is inefficient as power supply, so the dam is made to increase the level of water.
I think that the heat pump is doing something similar with the heat in the air. The pump has a cold and warm side when it is running, that is compared with the hight of a dam - one high and one low level which contains the potential energy in the water.

If now the heat engine is compared with the turbine in the hydro power plant, it harvest the potential difference, NOT between the cold and hot side of the heat pump, but between the hot OR cold side, and the surrounding air. The heat pump either supply the heat engine with high temperature which is doing work as it cools down to surrounding temperature, OR the heat pump takes away heat from the heat engine, and do work as the temperature rise up to surrounding temperature.

I would like to quote one of the people I'm discussing this with. He had (to me) a good point:

"Why wouldn't this work?

A heat engine converts heat into work, Right?

If, just for the sake of argument, or a place to start as an example, you have a very efficient heat engine that can convert 70% of the heat delivered to it into useful work output with 30% waste heat and a Heat Pump with a COP of 3 or higher.

The heat pump can remove 3 times more waste heat from the engine than the energy required to run the heat pump. (It can remove the 30% waste heat with just 10% of the heat engines 70% work output).

That leaves 60% work output from the heat engine to be used for other purposes such as generating electricity.

If the heat engine is running directly from ambient heat, then the heat pump is not needed as a source of heat/energy to run the engine. All it has to do is remove the waste heat not converted into work by the engine.

If you had an engine only 40% efficient leaving 60% waste heat to be removed, you would still only need 20% of the work output to remove the waste heat and have 20% left over for the production of electricity.

Heat pumps can have a COP of much grater than 3. Some are as high as 10.

And please say something other than it violates the second law of thermodynamics."

Do the sceptics to free energy ASSUME this particular setup will not work, because it fights all common sense of what is understood as violation of physics?

Vidar
 
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However, we have been discussing back and forth wether it is possible to use an efficient heat engine to power the pump of a high COP heat pump.
An efficient heat engine needs a large temperature difference. An efficient heat pump needs a small temperature difference. The actual pump design does not matter, the efficiency is limited by those temperature differences. You can extract work if you have both at the same time (with at least 3 reservoirs), but this will just give a heat engine, cooling a very hot reservoir and/or heating a very cold one.

Apart from an analysis of your specific setup (see above how this can be done), you can prove (using very basic assumptions about physics) that no setup of heat engines / pumps can ever do what you want: It would reduce entropy, and that cannot be reduced in closed systems.
 
You must be adding the wrong quantities together in order to arrive at your conclusion.
You seem to want to improve the efficiency of a heat engine by increasing the temperature difference over which it operates. You want to achieve this by pumping heat to a higher temperature heat reservoir. But the mechanical energy work needed to do this heat pumping could be no less than the extra mechanical work got out of your 'more efficient' heat engine - operating over a bigger temperature difference.

Maximum thermodynamic efficiency (work out for a given amount of thermal energy transferred) all depends upon temperature difference. And the temperature difference from a heat pump imposes a minimum amount of work in. You can't just pick arbitrary percentage figures for efficiencies out of the air and then put those figures into a sum to prove anything at all.
 
Let us start by replacing your dream figures with some realistic ones.

All heat engines work by taking in heat at a high temperature T1 and rejecting some of it at a lower temperature T2

The maximum possible efficiency is (T1-T2)/T1 x100 in %
Where temperature, T is measured in degrees Kelvin.
You would be very lucky to find a real engine that can achieve half this.

So let us say your river water is at 15°C and you heat pump manages to raise some of it to 60°C, the standard temperature in a domestic hot water cylinder. Then you use this to run a heat engine.


Max Efficiency of heat engine = (333-288)/333 x100 = 13.5%

So a real heat engine might manage half this or nearly 7% efficiency.

What effect do these figures have on your ideas?
 
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Low-Q said:
If, just for the sake of argument, or a place to start as an example, you have a very efficient heat engine that can convert 70% of the heat delivered to it into useful work output with 30% waste heat and a Heat Pump with a COP of 3 or higher.
The maximum efficiency of a heat engine and the maximum COP of a heat pump are strongly dependent on the temperature of the cold and hot reservoirs. Assuming that the cold reservoir is a typical 300 K temperature, then for 70% efficiency the minimum hot reservoir temperature would be 1000 K. An ideal heat pump with a COP of 3 could only raise the temperature from 300 K to 450 K. The maximum COP for a cold reservoir of 300 K and a hot reservoir of 100 K is 1.43 which, not surprisingly, is 100%/70%.
 
DaleSpam said:
The maximum efficiency of a heat engine and the maximum COP of a heat pump are strongly dependent on the temperature of the cold and hot reservoirs. Assuming that the cold reservoir is a typical 300 K temperature, then for 70% efficiency the minimum hot reservoir temperature would be 1000 K. An ideal heat pump with a COP of 3 could only raise the temperature from 300 K to 450 K. The maximum COP for a cold reservoir of 300 K and a hot reservoir of 100 K is 1.43 which, not surprisingly, is 100%/70%.
How do these figures change with a COP 10 heat pump?

Or does the COP strongly depend on the load - this case the heat engine? Edit I think you answered this in your previous post...

Is it any theoretical posibility to make this work if we have no real limits in COP? The Carnot efficiency is approx 70%. Using this efficiency, and use a neccesary high COP of the heat pump.

PS! Either the hot or cold reservoir of the heat pump is independent as it is not in direct contact with the heat engine. If the hot reservoir is in contact with the heat engine, the cold reservoir is independent and only in contact with surrounding air.
MVR heat pumps can achieve COP up to 80 with outputs up tp 100MW...ofcourse this is industrial heat pumps where several compressors are connecten in series. These can get heat from temperatures below -40 degrees C using vacuum in the low pressure reservoir.

Vidar
 
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Thank you for wasting my time.

Having discussed real world heat engines I was going on to discuss real world heat pumps next.
 
Low-Q said:
How do these figures change with a COP 10 heat pump?
An ideal COP 10 heat pump with a cold reservoir at 300 K could only raise heat to a hot reservoir of 333 K. An ideal heat engine with those same reservoirs could have a maximum effeciency of 10%.

The point is that there are 4 quantites of interest: the heat pump COP, the heat engine efficiency, the hot reservoir temperature, the cold reservoir temperature. Once you set any two of those then the other two are fixed. They are fixed in such a way that, all things being ideal, you can raise the same amount of heat you lowered.

Low-Q said:
PS! Either the hot or cold reservoir of the heat pump is independent as it is not in direct contact with the heat engine. If the hot reservoir is in contact with the heat engine, the cold reservoir is independent and only in contact with surrounding air.
Not sure what you mean here. All heat engines and all heat pumps have a hot reservoir and a cold reservoir, that is part of the definition of heat engines and pumps. If you are not connecting the engine and the pump to the same pair of reservoirs then I am not sure what you are doing and why.
 
Upon re reading your question I think I understand the arrangement better now. Let's say that we have a hot reservoir at 1000 K and a cold reservoir at 300 K. Instead of connecting both the heat pump and the heat engine to both reservoirs you want to connect the heat engine to the hot, the heat pump to the cold, and both to an artificial shared reservoir which would be colder than the cold reservoir. Could the gain in efficiency for the heat engine compensate the work required for the pump.

Is that the arrangement?
 
  • #10
Studiot said:
Thank you for wasting my time.

Having discussed real world heat engines I was going on to discuss real world heat pumps next.

Send him the bill - @ £200 per hour, as a consutant. :wink:
 
  • #11
DaleSpam said:
Upon re reading your question I think I understand the arrangement better now. Let's say that we have a hot reservoir at 1000 K and a cold reservoir at 300 K. Instead of connecting both the heat pump and the heat engine to both reservoirs you want to connect the heat engine to the hot, the heat pump to the cold, and both to an artificial shared reservoir which would be colder than the cold reservoir. Could the gain in efficiency for the heat engine compensate the work required for the pump.

Is that the arrangement?
I will make a drawing of this. I will post it later. However you are (about) on the right track but not fully there yet I guess.

Vidar.
 
  • #12
Studiot said:
Thank you for wasting my time.

Having discussed real world heat engines I was going on to discuss real world heat pumps next.
Sorry for wasting your time. Your earlier input is welcome. Send me a bill if I ruined your day:-D

Vidar
 
  • #13
If our teachers at school would send us bills for wasting their days back then I think we would be out of money by now. :D
 
  • #14
DaleSpam said:
you want to connect the heat engine to the hot, the heat pump to the cold, and both to an artificial shared reservoir which would be colder than the cold reservoir. Could the gain in efficiency for the heat engine compensate the work required for the pump.
Low-Q, I know you said this wasn't quite the arrangement you had in mind, but I had some time now and may not later (depending on weather). So I went ahead and analyzed this scenario. In the below W is work, Q is heat, T is temperature, a subscript E is for the heat engine, a subscript P is for the heat pump, a subscript C is for the cold reservoir, and a subscript H is for the hot reservoir.

The efficiency of an ideal heat engine is:
\frac{W_E}{Q_{HE}}=1-\frac{T_{CE}}{T_{HE}}

The COP of an ideal (refrigeration) heat pump is:
\frac{Q_{CP}}{W_P}=\frac{T_{CP}}{T_{HP}-T_{CP}}

Since the shared reservoir is the cold reservoir for both the pump and the engine we have T_{CE}=T_{CP}. In order to keep the shared reservoir cold we have Q_{CP}=Q_{HE}-W_E. Plugging all these in and simplifying we have that the overall efficiency is:
\frac{W_E-W_P}{Q_{HE}}=1-\frac{T_{HP}}{T_{HE}}

In other words, the overall ideal efficiency is the same as if you just skip the shared reservoir and the ideal heat pump and directly connect the ideal heat engine between the two non-shared reservoirs.

You can show me your envisioned arrangement and I can re-do my analysis accordingly, but I expect that the result will remain the same.
 
  • #15
Well, I was allowed to borrow an illustration from one of the members in another forum I am in.
Here is the illustration.:
image.jpg


For the record, we are NOT discussing over unity. Just very curious hobbyists.

BTW, your equation for heat engine equation seems to allow 100% efficiency. I believed the absolute maximum theoretical efficiency was about 70%...

Vidar
 
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  • #16
Low-Q said:
Here is the illustration.:
In that image the heat pump and the heat engine share both the same hot reservoir and the same cold reservoir. Everything in my posts 5 and 8 applies, specifically the maximum possible COP is 1/0.7=1.43 so you would have to use all of the work from the ideal heat engine to power the ideal heat pump.

Low-Q said:
BTW, your equation for heat engine equation seems to allow 100% efficiency.
How do you figure that?
 
  • #17
DaleSpam said:
In that image the heat pump and the heat engine share both the same hot reservoir and the same cold reservoir. Everything in my posts 5 and 8 applies, specifically the maximum possible COP is 1/0.7=1.43 so you would have to use all of the work from the ideal heat engine to power the ideal heat pump.

How do you figure that?

With independent I ment that the hot side of the pump and engine is both in free air. Their physical surfaces/heat sinks do not neccessarily have the same temperature even if the air around them have constant temperature. Only the cold sides have the same temperature.


Regarding the equation: If TCE is 0 K you have 1 and remove zero - 100% efficiency. If TCE is 20K and THE is 273K, the efficiency is 93%.

Vidar
 
  • #18
Low-Q said:
With independent I ment that the hot side of the pump and engine is both in free air. Their physical surfaces/heat sinks do not neccessarily have the same temperature even if the air around them have constant temperature. Only the cold sides have the same temperature.
The heat pump will have at least the same temperature difference then, and therefore it cannot be "better" than the heat engine - for ideal engines and the same air temperature, they just cancel.
Regarding the equation: If TCE is 0 K you have 1 and remove zero - 100% efficiency. If TCE is 20K and THE is 273K, the efficiency is 93%.
That is correct, a cold reservoir at absolute zero would allow 100% efficiency - as upper limit on the efficiency of real machines. An upper limit of 100% is trivial, but not problematic.
 
  • #19
Low-Q said:
With independent I ment that the hot side of the pump and engine is both in free air.
Yes, so free air is the hot reservoir for both. All of my comments in 5 and 8 apply. You have to use all of the work from the ideal heat engine to run the ideal heat pump.
 
  • #20
DaleSpam said:
maximum possible COP is 1/0.7=1.43 so you would have to use all of the work from the ideal heat engine to power the ideal heat pump.
I thought that COP was describing the relationship between input work and output heat of a heat pump. Say you have a heat pump with COP of 10, is it so that this heat pump suddenly drop its COP to 1.43 as soon as it is connected to a heat engine with 70% efficiency? And, does it increase COP to 20 as soon as it is connected to a heat engine with 5% efficiency?

Vidar
 
  • #21
Low-Q said:
I thought that COP was describing the relationship between input work and output heat of a heat pump.
Yes. Using my notation above COP_{heating}=Q_{HP}/W_P for a heat pump in heating mode.

Low-Q said:
Say you have a heat pump with COP of 10, is it so that this heat pump suddenly drop its COP to 1.43 as soon as it is connected to a heat engine with 70% efficiency?
There isn't really any such thing as a heat pump with a COP of 10. There is a heat pump with a COP of 10 operating between two specified temperatures. The COP is strongly dependent on the two temperatures. If you have a perfect heat pump, the most efficient possible, then its COP depends only on the output temperatures as follows:

COP_{heating}=\frac{T_{HP}}{T_{HP}-T_{CP}}

It isn't that hooking a heat pump up to a heat engine reduces its efficiency, it is that a heat engine is most efficient for large heat differentials and a heat pump is most efficient for small heat differentials. So hooking a heat pump up to a good reservoir for an efficient engine will make a very inefficient heat pump.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coefficient_of_performance

Low-Q said:
And, does it increase COP to 20 as soon as it is connected to a heat engine with 5% efficiency?
If you had a hot reservoir at 316 K and a cold reservoir at 300 K then an ideal heat engine would be 5% efficient and an ideal heat pump would have a COP of 20. Again, it isn't because you connected the heat engine to a heat pump, it is because you connected them both to the same two reservoirs, this time a pair of reservoirs that is efficient for pumps but inefficient for engines.
 
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  • #22
DaleSpam said:
...All heat engines and all heat pumps have a hot reservoir and a cold reservoir, that is part of the definition of heat engines and pumps. If you are not connecting the engine and the pump to the same pair of reservoirs then I am not sure what you are doing and why.

I have a stupid question.

Is this statement really true ? : "...all heat pumps have a hot reservoir and a cold reservoir."

I mean, usually a heat pump takes heat from a cold space like outside (cold reservoir) and moves the heat into a warm space like inside to heat your home (hot reservoir). But...

That is just an application.

What I mean is,... A refrigerator is a heat pump also right? Different application but fundamentally the exact same machine.

The refrigerator is sitting in the house at room temperature. It isn't working between two reservoirs, is it ?
 
  • #23
I also have a stupid question. One thing is COP and efficiency. Another thing is the actual output energy at that efficiency. Two heat engines with same efficiency, operating at the same temperatures, can deliver different mechanical energy - that is dependent on the engines sizes. Two COP 3 heat pumps can deliver different amount of heat with different sizes. Or what? It will probably not change anything ...
 
  • #24
Tom Booth said:
What I mean is,... A refrigerator is a heat pump also right? Different application but fundamentally the exact same machine.

The refrigerator is sitting in the house at room temperature. It isn't working between two reservoirs, is it ?
Yes, it is. The room temperature air outside the refrigerator is the hot reservoir, the chilled air inside the refrigerator is the cold reservoir. All heat pumps move heat between two reservoirs, as I said above, it is their defining feature.
 
  • #25
DaleSpam said:
Yes, it is. The room temperature air outside the refrigerator is the hot reservoir, the chilled air inside the refrigerator is the cold reservoir. All heat pumps move heat between two reservoirs, as I said above, it is their defining feature.

Well...

What if I don't plug my refrigerator in ? Where are the hot and cold reservoirs then ?
 
  • #26
Low-Q said:
I also have a stupid question. One thing is COP and efficiency. Another thing is the actual output energy at that efficiency. Two heat engines with same efficiency, operating at the same temperatures, can deliver different mechanical energy - that is dependent on the engines sizes. Two COP 3 heat pumps can deliver different amount of heat with different sizes. Or what? It will probably not change anything ...
Yes, power and efficiency are different things.
 
  • #27
Tom Booth said:
What if I don't plug my refrigerator in ? Where are the hot and cold reservoirs then ?
If you don't plug it in then it isn't a heat pump, it is a paperweight.

In any case, the hot and cold reservoirs remain the same, the air outside the fridge is the cold reservoir and the air inside is the hot reservoir.
 
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  • #28
DaleSpam said:
If you don't plug it in then it isn't a heat pump, it is a paperweight.

In any case, the hot and cold reservoirs remain the same, the air outside the fridge is the cold reservoir and the air inside is the hot reservoir.

What if I strip the refrigerator down so there is no inside or outside. Take the doors off ?
 
  • #29
Tom Booth said:
What if I strip the refrigerator down so there is no inside or outside. Take the doors off ?
Then it definitely isn't a heat pump any more, it is really just a paperweight. Again, the hot and cold reservoirs are part of the definition of a heat pump.

What is the point of these questions?
 
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  • #30
I submit that it's time for this thread to be locked.
 
  • #31
DaleSpam said:
Then it definitely isn't a heat pump any more, it is really just a paperweight.

Well, now that we have the doors off, let's try plugging it back in.

Is it a heat pump again instead of a paperweight ?

I think so. But it is just pumping heat from the condenser coil to the expansion coil. Taking heat out of point A in the reservoir to point B. Moving heat from one location to another within a single "reservoir" No ?

Again, the hot and cold reservoirs are part of the definition of a heat pump.

It depends on what definition you read and how good the dictionary is.

What is the point of these questions?

The point is that a heat pump and an engine working together, regardless of if that is considered possible or not, does not necessitate that both work between the same two "reservoirs".

I also kind of object to the use of the colloquial term "reservoir" as used in relation to HEAT as the term "Heat reservoir" was coined when heat was still considered an actual fluid. A reservoir being by definition, a place or container for storing a fluid. Heat is not a fluid and continuing to think of heat in terms of a fluid is false and numbs the brain.

By way of explanation, I just came here out of curiosity to see why the topic starter (Low-Q) wanted to use the diagram I posted in another forum.

Naturally I find the topic mater interesting and couldn't help getting drawn in. My apologies.

A heat pump, stripped of all its non-essentials does not IMO depend for its operation in any way on the existence of two pre-existing "reservoirs".

Take the actual working unit out of whatever its in and set it on a table in a room where everything is the same temperature and there are no TWO separate Hot and Cold areas of any kind with any temperature difference that can be measured with a thermometer.

Plug it in and a temperature difference is CREATED.

The condenser coil gets hot and the expansion coil gets cold. If you want to call these coils "reservoirs" I guess that's fine but I think it is very misleading. At any rate, the heat pump does not depend on this temperature difference for its operation. It creates the temperature difference where there wasn't one before.

To insist that it is more or less efficient depending on the temperature of the two "reservoirs" is, I think, also misleading. It works to create a temperature difference sitting on a table. The idea of efficiency to heat your home or cool your food has to do with the specific application. Sitting on a table, not applied to anything, not being used to heat or cool any two different spaces it works to create a temperature difference where there was none before just the same.
 
  • #32
Tom Booth said:
To insist that it is more or less efficient depending on the temperature of the two "reservoirs" is, I think, also misleading. It works to create a temperature difference sitting on a table. The idea of efficiency to heat your home or cool your food has to do with the specific application. Sitting on a table, not applied to anything, not being used to heat or cool any two different spaces it works to create a temperature difference where there was none before just the same.

I think you just want to argue definitions instead of understanding the concept. The heat pump, after you throw it on the table, is now in ONE reservoir. You cannot create a temperature difference with only one reservoir. You could argue that it is creating a temperature difference between the input/output sides, and that would be true, but the room overall is your reservoir and you would not have any net change in the temperature in the room. (Except for the addition of heat by the workings of the pump.)
 
  • #33
Tom Booth said:
It depends on what definition you read and how good the dictionary is.
...
A heat pump, stripped of all its non-essentials does not IMO depend for its operation in any way on the existence of two pre-existing "reservoirs".
If you can find a mainstream scientific source which defines a heat pump differently then please provide the reference. Otherwise we will stick with the standard definition:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_pump
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/thermo/heatpump.html
http://www.ecourses.ou.edu/cgi-bin/ebook.cgi?doc=&topic=th&chap_sec=05.5&page=theory
http://www.ohio.edu/people/piccard/phys202/carnot/carnot.html

Tom Booth said:
The point is that a heat pump and an engine working together, regardless of if that is considered possible or not, does not necessitate that both work between the same two "reservoirs".
I agree. That is simply how Low-Q drew the arrangement. I even proposed and analyzed an alternate arrangement where they only shared one reservoir. But Low-Q's arrangement clearly has both the heat pump and the heat engine connected to the same two heat reservoirs. I would be glad to discuss and analyze alternate arrangements.

However, in order to be a heat engine and in order to be a heat pump each must be connected to two reservoirs. They need not be the same reservoirs, but each needs two, by definition.

Tom Booth said:
To insist that it is more or less efficient depending on the temperature of the two "reservoirs" is, I think, also misleading.
It isn't misleading in the least, it is completely factual. Engineers have been analyzing, designing, and building heat pumps based on this fundamental fact for decades. All heat pumps ever constructed share this feature: the greater the temperature difference between the hot and cold reservoirs the less heat is transferred for the same amount of work input by the formula above*. Your complaint to the contrary is unfounded and goes against both fact and theory.

*Actually, this is for an ideal heat pump. Real heat pumps are even LESS efficient.
 
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  • #34
Drakkith said:
I think you just want to argue definitions instead of understanding the concept.

Not really. But if we are going to talk sensibly then there needs to be some clarity regarding terminology. Sometimes the terminology or how exactly it is defined limits conceptualization to certain predetermined pathways.

The diagram is just a kind of energy flow chart. I just dashed it off. I'm not sure that Low-Q in his enthusiasm actually understood it fully. I never really explained it in the other forum where it was posted.

The actual working principle was outlined in an article by Tesla. I'm not so sure myself that the concept could actually work but so far I've seen no mention here of the working principle it is supposed to represent.

The heat pump, after you throw it on the table, is now in ONE reservoir.

So we are in agreement on that point.

You cannot create a temperature difference with only one reservoir.

You could argue that it is creating a temperature difference between the input/output sides,

Of course I would. Wouldn't you ? (And it is).

and that would be true

Naturally.

but the room overall is your reservoir and you would not have any net change in the temperature in the room.

True. But so what ?

I can still take the condenser coil and the expansion coil and twist one or the other or both around one or both ends of the heat engine and the heat engine will still run. All within the same "reservoir" as we have already agreed.

At any rate, Tesla's idea as represented in the diagram could not really be understood, I don't think, if it cannot be grasped that the only REAL permanent "reservoir" of heat represented in that diagram is Ambient Heat. Both the heat pump and the engine are operating within that one environment.

There is a "Heat Sink" of sorts which might be considered a "reservoir". About as much so as the evaporator coil of a heat pump sitting on a table. But we have dispensed with that notion.

The heat pump in the diagram is maintaining an artificial heat sink within the ambient environment. That is not really a "reservoir". Not in the sense that term is generally used. Naturally, this artificial sink would have to be protected. Insulated. Like an ice box. The only heat entering the ice box would be the waste heat from the engine.

I'm not at all sure that Low-Q fully understood all that. Maybe it isn't essential to his argument. I don't know. I thought some clarification might be in order anyway.

To understand what Tesla was driving at, it is also important to understand that heat is not really a fluid that flows from hot to cold like water. That was central to his argument. But that is essentially what is meant when using the term "reservoirs". Heat is energy which can be transmuted into other forms of energy.

It is the role of a heat engine to transmute heat into some other useful form of energy.

Not all the heat running the engine flows from the heat source into the heat sink. If the heat engine is efficient then it won't be dumping much waste heat into the "ice box".
 
  • #35
Tom you seem to have written a lot without saying anything at all. What is the point of your posts? That heat isn't a fluid? That's pretty obvious. Was there some other point you wanted to make? Please elaborate if so. It appears as if you just want to argue what a reservoir is when we already have a perfectly good definition and description of one.
 
  • #36
DaleSpam said:
If you can find a mainstream scientific source which defines a heat pump differently then please provide the reference. Otherwise we will stick with the standard definition:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_pump
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/thermo/heatpump.html
http://www.ecourses.ou.edu/cgi-bin/ebook.cgi?doc=&topic=th&chap_sec=05.5&page=theory
http://www.ohio.edu/people/piccard/phys202/carnot/carnot.html

One of your sources states clearly: "A heat pump is a device which applies external work to extract an amount of heat QC from a cold reservoir and delivers heat QH to a hot reservoir"

Fair enough. But I would argue that that is a definition of its usual function. Not what it actually does or can do.

The heat pump can still operate even if used outside its intended function.

Rather than using a heat pump to extract heat from a cold environment and deliver it to a hot environment, as defined above, you could just as well use it to extract heat from a hot environment and deliver it to a cold one. That doesn't meet the definition of heat pump but it would still work. You can also just run it in one environment which is stable in temperature throughout and make it unstable. Create a temperature difference where there was none.

Perhaps if used in an unusual way it would be better to call it something else. A "generic vapor compressor unit" perhaps. or come up with some other applicable term. A rose by any other name is still a rose.

In my opinion the best definition is simply what is implied by its name. Heat Pump.

It pumps heat from point A to point B Period.

...But Low-Q's arrangement clearly has both the heat pump and the heat engine connected to the same two heat reservoirs.

That is a result of his haste or enthusiasm to use the diagram before I explained it in detail in the other forum. As he did not clarify the nature of the apparent cold reservoir, I have made an effort to do so.

However, in order to be a heat engine and in order to be a heat pump each must be connected to two reservoirs. They need not be the same reservoirs, but each needs two, by definition.

By definition a computer monitor is not a television set. But the definition is FUNCTIONAL.

Otherwise at heart, they are both simply cathode ray tubes.

I do not agree that a heat pump "MUST be connected to two reservoirs". To meet the usual definition Yes. To actually function as a machine No.

It isn't misleading in the least, it is completely factual. Engineers have been analyzing, designing, and building heat pumps based on this fundamental fact for decades. All heat pumps ever constructed share this feature: the greater the temperature difference between the hot and cold reservoirs the less heat is transferred for the same amount of work input by the formula above*. Your complaint to the contrary is unfounded and goes against both fact and theory.

My argument is not about the factuality of the above statement but with the implication that there MUST BE a HOT and a COLD "reservoir" for a bare bones vapor compressor unit to operate and create a temperature difference.

If you think this is really a necessity or the machine can't work then I would suggest that you strip one down and plug it in and see what happens.

A central air unit (heat pump) sits where ?

Generally it sits outside behind the house in the ambient environment.

You can only get it to deliver heat to the house by using fans and running ductwork but without the ductwork, just sitting outside it will still operate and create a temperature differential.

It doesn't deliver the heat to the "reservoir" inside the house as intended so I guess you can't really call it a heat pump any more and it is no longer "efficient" at heating the house without the ductwork but it is creating heat and cold under the hood just as well as ever. Ductwork or no ductwork. Its actual capability to produce hot and cold from the warm ambient environment has not diminished in the least by removing the ductwork.
 
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  • #37
Drakkith said:
Tom you seem to have written a lot without saying anything at all. What is the point of your posts? That heat isn't a fluid? That's pretty obvious. Was there some other point you wanted to make? Please elaborate if so. It appears as if you just want to argue what a reservoir is when we already have a perfectly good definition and description of one.

Not what a reservoir IS.

You wrote a few minutes ago:

You cannot create a temperature difference with only one reservoir.

You could argue that it is creating a temperature difference between the input/output sides,

and that would be true

A temperature difference is a temperature difference isn't it ?

The input/output sides are both within the one reservoir. Right ?

It seems to me that you certainly can indeed "create a temperature difference with only one reservoir" I don't know if it is the terminology that needs clarification or what but it appears you contradict yourself. Is it possible or isn't it ? Does a temperature difference exist or not ?

If you can't create a temperature difference with only one reservoir but there is a temperature difference nevertheless then where is the other reservoir ?
 
  • #38
A temperature difference is a temperature difference isn't it ?

The input/output sides are both within the one reservoir. Right ?

It seems to me that you certainly can indeed "create a temperature difference with only one reservoir" I don't know if it is the terminology that needs clarification or what but it appears you contradict yourself. Is it possible or isn't it ? Does a temperature difference exist or not ?

If you can't create a temperature difference with only one reservoir but there is a temperature difference nevertheless then where is the other reservoir ?

I can see two different scenarios here.

1) You genuinely want to understand the thermodynamics of heat flow.

2) You just want to argue the toss and and trying to revise standard definitions to suit your case.

I am happy to help in (1) but not (2).
 
  • #39
If a heat pump is put on a table and switched on, it will just develop one hot plat and one cold plate. It still pumps heat - just aimlessly, not achieving anything.
 
  • #40
Good morning SophieCentaur

If a heat pump is put on a table and switched on, it will just develop one hot plat and one cold plate.

That's true because the heat pump has created a hot reservoir and a cold reservoir.
It maintains these according to the Second Law by the input of work.

This part of thermodynamics is actually very easy to understand for those who want to ( as you clearly do).
 
  • #41
After reading the last posts I have a strong feeling that the inner workings of a heat pump is often misunderstood.
At least I see myself looking at a heat pump as something that can make a temperature difference between expansion- and condensing parts that is greater than the input work. Naturally I think so when a heat pump (If used as a heat source for the house), can deliver more heat pr. input Watt than a resistive electric heater does.

So if I understand the replies from DaleSpam, I could likely used a regular resistive heater to power that heat engine, and have the same consume/output as if I was using the condenser or expansion part of a heat pump, or even both, to run the heat engine.

The heat engine in a closed loop will take heat from the hot condenser and deliver it to the cold expander. This will prevent the condenser to be too hot to be able to condense the working fluid, and prevent the expander to be too cold to expand the working fluid.
Initially, the pump must do work in order to maintain the pressure difference between high pressure hot condenser and low pressure cold expander. That input work increase as the temperatur difference gets higher - COP drops. If a heat engine is trying to equalize those two temperatures, the pump will have less temperature difference which will reduce input work - COP rise, but also the heat engine will have less temperature difference to work on and then decrease its efficiency. This is how I understand a closed insolated loop.

However, the confusion comes when I look at the power requirements for a resistive heater to heat up a given insolated space (house) versus the power requirements for a heat pump to deliver the same heat into the same space. The heat pump heats up the house on expence of the outside temperature, while the resistive heater does not.
Since the air outdoor has a pretty large volume, it will practically not change its temperature. That reservoire is too large for the heat pump to cool it considerably down.
The same reservoire is also too large for the heat engine heat it up.

This gives me headache :cry:
 
  • #42
Studiot said:
A temperature difference is a temperature difference isn't it ?

The input/output sides are both within the one reservoir. Right ?

It seems to me that you certainly can indeed "create a temperature difference with only one reservoir" I don't know if it is the terminology that needs clarification or what but it appears you contradict yourself. Is it possible or isn't it ? Does a temperature difference exist or not ?

If you can't create a temperature difference with only one reservoir but there is a temperature difference nevertheless then where is the other reservoir ?

I can see two different scenarios here.

1) You genuinely want to understand the thermodynamics of heat flow.

2) You just want to argue the toss and and trying to revise standard definitions to suit your case.

I am happy to help in (1) but not (2).

As far as what you quoted of my post, I'm simply trying to get Drakkith to clarify his position when he wrote:

The heat pump, after you throw it on the table, is now in ONE reservoir.

You cannot create a temperature difference with only one reservoir.

You could argue that it is creating a temperature difference between the input/output sides,

and that would be true

To me the statement is contradicting itself. If he agrees that the heat pump is "now in one reservoir" just sitting on a table creating a temperature difference "between the input/output sides" than how can he say in the same breath "You cannot create a temperature difference with only one reservoir." ?

Something doesn't click. I would simply like to reach a mutual understanding or at lest some clarity about whatever it is he's trying to say. Is that too much to ask ?
 
  • #43
Tom Booth said:
A temperature difference is a temperature difference isn't it ?

The input/output sides are both within the one reservoir. Right ?

It seems to me that you certainly can indeed "create a temperature difference with only one reservoir" I don't know if it is the terminology that needs clarification or what but it appears you contradict yourself. Is it possible or isn't it ? Does a temperature difference exist or not ?

If you can't create a temperature difference with only one reservoir but there is a temperature difference nevertheless then where is the other reservoir ?

Oh. You are going to be difficult in this manner. Ok then. Let me be clear. You cannot create a temperature difference between two reservoirs if you don't have 2 reservoirs.
 
  • #44
Where is this thread supposed to be going? The definitions are actually quite clear and there is plenty if evidence that there's no paradox or law-breaking. Some if the contributors just need to re-visit the thermodynamics in a rigorous way. They can then stop worrying and imagining they have found a loophole in Science.
 
  • #45
Well you can create a temperature difference in the same reservoir or room in two objects but to do that you have to supply constant power to them for them to either stay hot or cold.Basically that is useless work as the temperature will try to reach equilibrium all the time.
That's like building a sand castle in heavy rain and storm you can do that but the rain will constantly wash away your castle and you will have to constantly build it up .

But I think the situation when two objects can have different temperatures in the same room is just because of air that air cannot make the temperatures equal out as fast because of it's properties while if you would have the same reservoir or room only this time not filled with air but water it would be a different situation the heat difference between something hot and cold would be almoust none.

@Low-Q yes your right that a electrical heater will consume more power to create the same amount of heat than a heat pump as the heat pump is not creating the heat just transporting it from one place to another, just like a cargo train isn't creating it's cargo just transporting it.
And if you have a heat pump heated house there is a temperature difference but then you break your window at come home after one day and there is no more temperature difference as the air outside and inside has reached equilibrium , the efficiency has decreased dramatically as it now is like a hydro dam with no dam at all , all the water is in the same level in our case temperature.

But basically I think the discussion between do we need two reservoirs or not is useless as in all cases there are two or more reservoirs of different temperatures like the one in your house and the one outside and then the one outside and the one in your basement or your fridge.
 
  • #46
sophiecentaur said:
If a heat pump is put on a table and switched on, it will just develop one hot plate and one cold plate. It still pumps heat - just aimlessly, not achieving anything.

Thank you.

But it is achieving something if you have an application for "one hot plate and one cold plate".
 
  • #47
Well it has an application , but a pretty useless and inefficient one.
That's why they came up with the idea of putting a door to the fridge. :D Also I believe the same reason is used for windows just instead having empty holes for light to come in.

But actually I believe there is a situation where Tom's case applies , when they use the water cooled or other chemical cooled CPU coolers.
Because basically the inner space of the pc case with all the chipset and main cpu that is being cooled is not isolated from the outside where the radiator or heat exchanger is located so basically it's a little bit similar to pumping out water from a hole and displacing it right next to that hole and then very soon afterwards it goes through the soil and gets back into the hole.
Pretty inefficient as it's like having a fan in a vacuum , you can still spin it but without much use.
That's why I believe the huge server rooms are isolated from the outside and use heat pumps or we could say air conditioners to move the excess heat generated by the server equipment to the outside of the building as just having a small water cooled cpu head that displaces the heat right next to the server board wouldn't go through as the temperature of the server room would rise constantly until reach equilibrium or almoust close with the temperature of the cpu itself and then the local heat pump would have no use anymore. Just like in the scenario with the heat pump in one reservoir on table that you mentioned.
 
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  • #48
Studiot said:
That's true because the heat pump has created a hot reservoir and a cold reservoir.

So are we going with the idea that the condenser coil and the expansion coil of a stripped down vapor-compression unit running on the kitchen table constitute hot and cold reservoirs ?

The surrounding reservoir of ambient heat in the kitchen itself we can just ignore.
 
  • #49
sophiecentaur said:
Where is this thread supposed to be going? The definitions are actually quite clear and there is plenty if evidence that there's no paradox or law-breaking. Some if the contributors just need to re-visit the thermodynamics in a rigorous way. They can then stop worrying and imagining they have found a loophole in Science.
Good point. However I am not searching for loopholes in science, just searching for an energysource in the air which a heat pump can harvest in order to power a heat engine. As many links, explanations from you guys has shown, it will not be possible.

@ Crazymechanic:
To use the cargo train as an example, that train is supplying the heat engine. I understand now that the heat engine is also a train which moves the same cargo back to its origin. The net movement of the cargo is zero - so no work has been done. The pump/engine system will therfor not work with only two reservoires.
To make this work we need a third reservoir. The ground for example. Its temperature will not change as much as the air temperature outside. At very hot or very cold days, the heat engine can be ran by those two reservoires. It powers the heat pump which removes heat from the house at warm days, and supply heat to the house at cold days. Lucky for us, the heat engine will increase its efficiency as the temperature difference is increasing.

Vidar
 
  • #50
@Tom , no I don't think we can call those reservoirs as the classical understanding of a reservoir is something that is a closed room or space and it has to have some isolation from the surrounding.
When a heat pump is left in an open space with no isolation between the two sides it's not a heat pump any more by definition , just like if you have a jail and then you have a city the isolation of these two are the walls and guards of the jail if you take those away then there are no two spaces anymore all is one, the people just merge with all the consequences from that.@Low-Q , well I believe that what you wanted to make sounds similar to a hydro dam the water goes through the turbine gives it's potential to the turbine and then when it passes out of the dam at the lower side you somehow take it up to the high side of the dam again so that it could do the job one more time and repeat this in a loop but the problem is if you have to bring the water up you have to use energy and in the end the energy extracted from the falling water compared to the energy used to pump the fallen water back up would pretty much equal out. That's why a heat pump or a hydro dam can only create excess energy if the temperature/water difference is supplied by an external force like sun and water evaporation or sun and temperature difference between the two sides of the heat pump and then the pumps has only to move that heat but only in one direction.
 
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