How Much Electricity is Needed to Produce 1kg of Paper?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the amount of electricity needed to produce 1 kg of paper in a paper mill setting. The context includes specific operational parameters of the mill, such as power consumption and production rates.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the relationship between power, work, and time in the context of electricity consumption for paper production. Questions arise regarding the conversion of production rates to appropriate units and the calculation of work in terms of energy.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the problem, with some clarifying the need for specific units and others questioning how to relate production rates to energy consumption. There is a mix of understanding and confusion, with one participant indicating a resolution to their earlier uncertainty.

Contextual Notes

Some participants express uncertainty about the necessary conversions and the definitions of terms like work and energy in this context. There is also mention of needing to clarify units and relationships between different physical quantities.

aud11888
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ok, so I know that a paper mill requires 5000kW to operate at full capacity, the mill produces 14 tons of paper per hour, electricity is purchased at $.10/kW*hr, and the paper is sold at $5/kg.

knowing this i need to find how much electricity is need to produce 1kg of paper.

so far, I've found how much time it will take to produce 1kg of paper by converting 14tons/hr to 14000kg/hr. Using Power = work/time i should be able to find the electricity needed, but i don't know how to calculate the value for work.. Work should be in Kw*hr i think
 
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They mean find how much Electric *Energy* it takes to make 1kg of paper.
yes, you want units of kW*hr/kg. You need to multiply or divide to get rid of $ .
 
A: how much time (in terms of seconds) does it take to produce 1 kg of paper.

B: a watt is a joule per second

C: so how many joules?
 
yea, i definitely still don't get it.. i found how many kg/sec it will be producing but how am i supposed to convert that to watts without knowing m^2/s that the mill is putting out?
 
nevermind, stupid question, i got it now
 

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