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10 July, 11:28

Mr. White claims that he invented a heat engine with a maximum efficiency of 90%. He measured the temperature of the hot reservoir as 100o C and that of cold reservoir as 10o C. Find the error that he made and calculate the correct efficiency. Hint: The efficiency (e) of a Carnot engine is defined as the ratio of the work (W) done by the engine to the input heat QH : e=W/QH. W=QH - QC, where Qc is the output heat. That is, e=1-Qc/QH = 1-Tc/TH, where Tc for a temperature of the cold reservoir and TH for a temperature of the hot reservoir. The unit of temperature must be in Kelvin.

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  1. 10 July, 15:05
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    The error he made was that he didn't convert the unit of temperature to Kelvin.

    The correct efficiency is 24%

    Explanation:

    Parameters given:

    Temperature of hot reservoir = 100°C = 373 K

    Temperature of cold reservoir = 10°C = 273 K

    The efficiency of a heat engine is given as:

    E = 1 - (Qc/Qh) = 1 - (Tc/Th)

    Where

    Qc = Output heat;

    Qh = Input heat;

    Tc = Temperature of the cold reservoir;

    Th = Temperature of the hot reservoir.

    => E = 1 - (283/373)

    E = 1 - 0.76

    E = 0.24

    In percentage,

    E = 0.24 * 100 = 24%

    Hence, the efficiency of the engine is actually 24%.

    The error he made was that he didn't convert the temperature to Kelvin. If we leave the temperatures in °C, we have that:

    E = 1 - (10/100)

    E = 1 - 0.1 = 0.9

    In percentage,

    E = 0.9 * 100 = 90%
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