brainzlol Posted January 6, 2013 Posted January 6, 2013 When water turns to ice it expands by approx 9%. This expansion does exert a very large force...don't know how much? Can an engine be made to use this force? The motor needs to amplify the small/slow "travel", at the expense of the large force. I know we have to spend energy to cool the water, (but we then dump the ice, not reheat it) Any ideas please? Thanks brainzlol (on twitter)
Enthalpy Posted January 7, 2013 Posted January 7, 2013 To check if a medium is interesting in a thermal engine, you can compare its P*dV with the heat used in the operation. ----- In a diatomic gas, 20.79+8.31J/mol of heat (=cost) give 1K which changes PV by 8.31J/mol (=benefit, potential and overestimated). Usually the strongest candidate. Take ice: 334kJ/kg to freeze or melt it, and 8.3%*183MPa=15kJ/kg (or less than that: inferred from the liquid's bulk modulus, 2.2GPa). This ratio is far less promising than a gas, or even than a boiling liquid. For a shape memory alloy (see Wiki), this ratio would be bad also, though some people consider using them - to make electricity from the residual heat in car exhaust pipe, last time I saw it. And from a normal solid it's far worse. ----- This ratio has no theoretical significance. It puts no physical limit on the attainable efficiency. But if you consider how inefficient the technological processes are at a thermal engine, this ratio does then have a direct consequence on the achievable efficiency. No big thermal engine, where efficiency is the prime consideration, will use ice instead of vapour or a gas. But maybe a very special application, where other considerations are more important - just like for electricity from exhaust heat, a dry cycle is more important than efficiency. Could you exploit a huge amount of ice because it's available naturally and you need to add very little man-made apparatus? Similarly, we couldn't produce electricity from rain directly, but if existing mountains make the height drop and existing valleys the reservoirs, we just add a thin dam, turbines and generators, and get cheap electricity.
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