Reversible (minimum) work for some processes
DOI 10.1615/hedhme.a.000133
1.9.4 Reversible (minimum) work for some processes
D. Limb
The overall shaft work or exergy required by any process consists of the minimum reversible work — plus the work to offset irreversible losses. The latter is exergy which is completely destroyed in achieving the objectives of the process or piece of equipment — within the constraints of real equipment of finite size.
Certain processes or process steps arise very frequently:
- Separation of a feed into two or more products of given purities.
- Liquefaction of a normally gaseous substance.
- Compression of a gas stream.
- Carrying out a reaction.
A. Reversible work of separation
A mixture of different chemical species has a greater degree of randomness or disorder — a higher entropy — than the pure components of which it is comprised under the same temperature and pressure. “Un-mixing” this stream into its pure components results in a reduction in entropy. The 2nd Law tells us this cannot occur spontaneously but requires a minimum input of work:
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