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Energy

Energy. BA Design for Industry Year 3 John Errington MSc. You can’t see it or feel it – a charged battery doesn’t look more ‘energetic’ than a flat one. Energy has the ability to do work It is measured in Joules . Energy is conserved: Energy can not be lost.

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Energy

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  1. Energy BA Design for Industry Year 3 John Errington MSc

  2. You can’t see it or feel it – a charged battery doesn’t look more ‘energetic’ than a flat one. Energy has the ability to do work It is measured in Joules. Energy is conserved: Energy can not be lost. It can be stored, changed from one form to another, even ‘wasted’. All other forms of energy eventually end up as heat. What is energy?

  3. Work is done in changing the energy level of an object Pushing it makes it move & gives it kinetic energy Lifting it against gravity raises its potential energy Heating it raises its temperature (heat energy) Energy has the ability to do work Examples: Accelerating a car: petrol is burnt in the engine. The chemical energy stored in the fuel is used up making the car go faster. Raising a load: electricity is used to make the lift motor turn. Heating your food: charcoal burnt on a barbeque heats and cooks your sausages.

  4. What has most energy? • A 5kg weight 1m above the floor (PE) • A 41g golf ball travelling at 40 m/s (KE) • A jam doughnut • A spring compressed 0.1 m by a force of 20kg. • A cup of coffee (black, no sugar) • A Duracell D cell • A bicycle wheel spinning at 10 rps.

  5. Potential energy Potential energy is energy something has because of the state it is in. Easy example: You do work lifting your briefcase from the floor to the desk. You have ‘used up’ some energy to do that. The briefcase has gained energy. PE = mgh m=mass g=gravity h=height

  6. PE Calculation The briefcase weighs 5kg and the desk is 1m high. In lifting it to the desktop you have done work in fighting gravity. The briefcase now has a potential energy (relative to the floor) of PE = 5kg * g * 1m = 5 * 9.81 * 1 PE = 49 Joules.

  7. Kinetic Energy To make things move we need to do work – i.e. use energy. So moving things have energy called kinetic energy Ek = ½ mv2wherem = mass, v = velocity

  8. KE calculation A golf ball with a mass of 45g = 0.045 kg travels at 40 metres per second. Its KE is = 0.5 * 0.045 * 40 * 40 KE = 36 joules ( Remember Ek = ½ m v2 )

  9. KE of rotating body The kinetic energy stored in a flywheel isE = ½ I ω2 Where I = moment of inertia of the flywheel, given by I = k M r2 M = mass; r = radius; k = inertial constant (depends on shape) k = 1 for wheel loaded at rim; k = 0.5 for cylinder ω is the angular velocity of rotation given by ω = 2 π * speed in revs per second so ω = 2 π * 60 * speed in rpm You can see that to store the maximum energy in a flywheel we need a shape where most of the mass is at the edge; and to spin it very fast.

  10. Example of flywheel A bicycle is travelling at 30mph and has a wheel of radius 21cm and mass 200g. How much energy is stored? • Work out speed of rotation of wheel (convert miles per hour to metres per second) 30mph = 30 / 2.24 mps = 13.4 mps Circumference of wheel is C = 2 * .21 * pi = 1.32 m 13.4mps / 1.32m = 10 rps • Calculate moment of inertia I = kMr2 = 1 * .2 * 10 * 10 = 20 kg m2 (k = 1 for bicycle wheel) • Now calculate stored energy ω = 2 π * speed in rps = 2 π * 10 = 63 radians per second E = ½ I ω2= ½ * 20 * 63 * 63 = 39630 Joules.

  11. Conservation of energy • The total amount of energy in a closed system remains constant • The energy we use in lifting the briefcase is the same as the potential energy it has on the desk. • If it falls off its kinetic energy just before it lands is the same.

  12. Falling briefcase Before moving PE = 49 Joules So before landing KE = 49 joules But KE = ½ m v2 49 = 0.5 * 5kg * v2 v2 = 49 / 0.5 * 5kg = 19.6 v = 4.4 metres per second

  13. What happens when it hits the floor? • It stops • Its potential energy is zero • Its kinetic energy is zero • Where has the energy gone?

  14. Waste heat • Heat energy is the least useful form of energy • All other forms of energy tend to be degraded to heat. • Heat energy is hard to confine, and tends to spread out until everything is at the same temperature. • Heat engines work on temperature differences

  15. Fallen briefcase • Some energy will appear as sound • Some energy may be used in breaking things and deforming the plastic • Some energy will be restored to the briefcase as it bounces up again • Eventually all the energy not used up in breaking things will appear as heat. • 49 J is enough energy to raise the temperature of a kg of water by about 0.01 degrees C.

  16. Energy of a hot body The amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1kg of water by 1 degree C is a kilocalorie. (1kcal = 4000J) So a cup of coffee (0.12 litre = 0.12kg) heated from room temperature at 20 deg C to 60 deg C (careful, its hot!) has Eheat = (60 – 20) * 0.12 kcal = 4.8 kcal Eheat = 4.8 * 4000 = 19,000J

  17. Energy of a doughnut • Food energy is measured in ‘Calories’ (actually kilocalories kcal) • A jelly (jam) doughnut has about 250 kcal • 1 kcal = 4180 joules, so • 1 JD = 1 Megajoule. This is the same energy as a 10kg mass at a height of 10,000m., or e.g. to accelerate a 350kg car to 70 mph.

  18. Energy stored in a stretched spring • Work is done in stretching or compressing a spring from its rest length • So a deformed spring has Potential Energy • The force exerted by the spring is proportional to the change in length x i.e. Fx x (Hooke’s law) • The amount of work done is force * distance

  19. Energy stored in a spring The force Fx exerted by a spring stretched by an amount x is Fx = ks x where ks is the spring constant. The energy stored is the average force F * distance stretched, x F = ½ (Fx + F0) and F0 = 0 i.e. Ex = ½ Fx x or Ex = ½ ks x * x

  20. Force Force is measured in Newtons The force exerted by gravity on a mass of 1 kg is 9.81 Newtons In holding a small apple you are exerting a force of about 1N

  21. Spring energy example A spring exerts a force of 20kg (200N) when compressed by 0.1m. What is the energy stored in the spring at this point? Use Ex = F x The force is 0 N for no compression and 200N at 0.1m compression Average force F = (F0 + Fx)/ 2 = 100N Ex = 100 * 0.1 = 10 J

  22. Converting energy How fast could this spring drive a model car weighing 100g (0.1 kg)? Stored energy = 10 J 10 = ½ m v2 10 = 0.5 * 0.1 * v2 200 = v2 v = 14 metres per second ( Assuming 100% conversion efficiency )

  23. Energy in stretched rubber band Rubber is a cross-linked polymer. In its rest condition the links are very disorganised. When stretched the links become more regular, and so have less entropy. This means there is a strong tendency for the rubber to return to its original state when released. A significant amount of the energy put in in stretching it is released as heat when the band is released.

  24. Entropy? • Entropy is a measure of how organized something is. • Take a set of billiard balls and put them in the triangle. They are highly organized – high entropy. • Put the billiard balls in your rucksack and shake it about. They are now randomly distributed – low entropy. • Everything tends to a state of low entropy.

  25. Stretching a rubber band Initially the band stretches very easily Then a stage is reached where it obeys Hookes law (20 – 40 on chart) Finally the molecules are very straight and the band becomes hard to stretch any further – it will snap if too much force is applied

  26. Rubber band energy example For a simple calculation ignore the early part of the graph as little energy is used here. To stretch from 0.2m = 0.1kg to 0.4m = 0.7kg requires an average force of F = (0.1 + 0.7) * 9.81 / 2 N = 4N Energy is ½ (0.4 – 0.2) * 4 = 0.4J

  27. Energy stored in a battery A Duracell ‘D’ cell provides a terminal voltage of 1.5V. It has a nominal capacity of 15.6 Ah at 10 ohms for 120 hours i.e. it can supply 0.156 A for 100h The maximum available stored energy is E (watt hours) = volts * amp – hours E = 1.5 * 15.6 = 23.4 watt hours Now 1 watt = 1 joule per second, so 1Wh = 3,600J Energy in joules is 23.4 * 3,600 = Eb = 84,240 J (or 1/12 of a jelly doughnut) NOTE THIS ENERGY CAN NOT ALL BE RELEASED IN A SHORT TIME!

  28. What has most energy? • A 5kg weight 1m above the floor (PE) 50J • A 41g golf ball travelling at 40 m/s (KE) 36J • A jam doughnut (chemical energy) 1MJ • A spring compressed 0.1 m by a force of 20kg. 10J • A cup of coffee (black, no sugar) (thermal) 19kJ • A Duracell D cell (electrical) 85kJ • A bicycle wheel spinning at 10 rps 40kJ

  29. Conversion efficiency Whenever energy is converted from one form to another there will be losses. For example when the spring propels the vehicle: most energy will be converted to kinetic energy some energy will be lost as heat, through friction • in the spring • in the drive • In moving the air The proportion of energy that does useful work is the conversion efficiency

  30. Rate of release of energy The amount of energy stored is not the only consideration in choosing an energy source for a project. Another important factor is how quickly the energy can usefully be released. In general the more slowly energy is released the more effective is the conversion efficiency. Most batteries can only deliver their maximum energy over a long time (>10h) Some systems are much better at releasing energy quickly (examples – explosives, springs)

  31. Releasing energy in a spring Suppose we take a tension spring 0.1m long and extend it to 0.2m with a force of 30N The stored energy is Ex = F x Joules F = average force = Fx / 2 = 15N x = 0.2 – 0.1 = 0.1m Ex = 15 * 0.1 = 1.5 Joules If the spring is released the energy is used in many different ways

  32. Some ways energy is released If the energy in the spring is used externally by releasing it in a controlled way most of the stored energy can be recovered. (e.g. clock) If the spring is released in an uncontrolled way none of the stored energy will be recovered, and the energy will be dissipated through: • Accelerating the spring • Overcoming air friction • Changing the shape of the spring • Heating the spring • Setting up vibrations in the spring

  33. Accelerating the spring If the spring has a mass of 0.1kg we can work out how it will accelerate when released. The stored energy of 1.5J is converted to kinetic energy Ek = ½ m v2 where v is the average velocity of the spring. 1.5 = ½ * 0.1 * v2 sov2 = 30 v = 5.5 Now one end of the spring is moving, the other stationary, so the average speed is half the speed of the free end. Thus the free end will be accelerated to about 11m/sec. ( This is the same result as we would have for a free object weighing 0.05kg so we can use the effective mass for the spring as ½ its real mass )

  34. Partitioning energy transfer If the free end of the spring is attached to a car with a mass of 0.2kg the same equations can be applied. 1.5J = ½ m v2 or v2 = 1.5 / 0.5 * m The total mass is 0.2 (car) + 0.05 (effective mass of spring) v2 = 1.5 / 0.5 * 0.25 whence v2 = 12 so v = 3.4 m/s The car now has an energy of Ek = ½ m v2 = 0.5 * 0.2 * 12 = 1.2J and so 1.5 – 1.2J = 0.3J is dissipated in the spring. The conversion efficiency is energy used / energy stored = 1.2 / 1.5 = 0.8 or 80%

  35. Other energy sources The same principle applies to other energy stores. For example a 1.2V NiMH battery is rated 1.8 Amp-hours at its “0.1C” rate. This means that the energy will be released evenly over 10 hours. If we try to release the energy much more quickly the current is reduced owing to the internal resistance of the cell. This causes the cell to get hot, wasting energy. If overstressed (>10C) the cell may be degraded, destroyed, or even explode.

  36. Limit to available energy from battery during rapid discharge

  37. Energy of a charged capacitor A capacitor works like a battery. It doesn’t store very much charge, but it can be charged and discharged very quickly. The energy of a charged capacitor is E = ½ C V2 where C = capacitance, V = voltage A 5F capacitor charged to 2.3V has a stored energy of 21J and typically can deliver 3A for 4 seconds. This is enough to accelerate a 500g car to 9m/sec

  38. Summary • Energy (Joules) comes in many different forms • Energy is conserved • Chemical energy sources are often more potent than other forms. (except fission / fusion) • Equations to work out how much energy • Conversion of energy • Slowly for better efficiency • Choose appropriate energy source for its application

  39. Examples of Energy storage Energy storage methods: Electrochemical:   Batteries   Fuel cells Electrical:   Capacitor   Superconducting magnetic energy storage (SMES) Mechanical:   Compressed air energy storage (CAES)   Flywheel energy storage   Hydraulic accumulator   Hydroelectric energy storage   Spring http://www.all-science-fair-projects.com/science_fair_projects_encyclopedia/Energy_storage

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