Energy conversion efficiency
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Energy conversion efficiency (η) is the ratio between the useful output of an energy conversion machine and the input, in energy terms. The input, as well as the useful output may be electric power, mechanical work, light (radiation), or heat.[1]
Overview
Energy conversion efficiency is not defined uniquely, but instead depends on the usefulness of the output. All or part of the heat produced from burning a fuel may become rejected waste heat if, for example, work is the desired output from a thermodynamic cycle. Energy converter is an example of an energy transformation. For example a light bulb falls into the categories energy converter. Even though the definition includes the notion of usefulness, efficiency is considered a technical or physical term. Goal or mission oriented terms include effectiveness and efficacy.
Generally, energy conversion efficiency is a dimensionless number between 0 and 1.0, or 0% to 100%. Efficiencies may not exceed 100%, e.g., for a perpetual motion machine. However, other effectiveness measures that can exceed 1.0 are used for heat pumps and other devices that move heat rather than convert it.
When talking about the efficiency of heat engines and power stations the convention should be stated, i.e., HHV (aka Gross Heating Value etc.) or LCV (aka Net Heating value), and whether gross output (at the generator terminals) or net output (at the power station fence) are being considered. The two are separate but both must be stated. Failure to do so causes endless confusion.
Related, more specific terms include
- Electrical efficiency, useful power output per electrical power consumed;
- Mechanical efficiency, where one form of mechanical energy (e.g. potential energy of water) is converted to mechanical energy (work);
- Thermal efficiency or Fuel efficiency, useful heat and/or work output per input energy such as the fuel consumed;
- 'Total efficiency', e.g., for cogeneration, useful electric power and heat output per fuel energy consumed. Same as the thermal efficiency.
- Luminous efficiency, that portion of the emitted electromagnetic radiation is usable for human vision.
Fuel heating values and efficiency
In Europe the usable energy content of fuel is typically calculated using the lower heating value (LHV) of that fuel, which definition assumes that the water vapor produced during fuel combustion (oxidation), remains gaseous, and is not condensed to liquid water so the latent heat of vaporization of that water is not usable. Using the LHV, a condensing boiler can achieve a "heating efficiency" in excess of 100% (this does not violate the first law of thermodynamics as long as the LHV convention is understood, but does cause confusion). This is because the apparatus recovers part of the heat of vaporization, which is not included in the definition of the lower heating value of fuel[citation needed]. In the U.S. and elsewhere, the higher heating value (HHV) is used, which includes the latent heat for condensing the water vapor, and thus the thermodynamic maximum of 100% efficiency cannot be exceeded with HHV's use.
Example of energy conversion efficiency
This article is missing information about clear definition of the energy conversion efficiency for light sources. The lighting efficiency is given by the luminous efficacy which does not allow to give a simple percentage without specifying what "100%" would be. If there is an ISO standard or another reliable source defining the energy conversion efficiency in lighting, please cite it. . (May 2012) |
Conversion process | Conversion type | Energy efficiency |
---|---|---|
Electricity generation | ||
Gas turbine | Chemical to electrical | up to 40% |
Gas turbine plus steam turbine (combined cycle) | Chemical/thermal to electrical | up to 60% |
Water turbine | Gravitational to electrical | up to 90% (practically achieved) |
Wind turbine | Kinetic to electrical | up to 59% (theoretical limit) |
Solar cell | Radiative to electrical | 6–40% (technology-dependent, 15-20% most often, 85–90% theoretical limit) |
Fuel cell | Chemical to electrical | up to 85% |
World Electricity generation 2008 | Gross output 39% | Net output 33%[2] |
Engine/Motor | ||
Combustion engine | Chemical to kinetic | 10–50%[3] |
Electric motor | Electrical to kinetic | 70–99.99% (> 200 W); 50–90% (10–200 W); 30–60% (< 10 W) |
Natural process | ||
Photosynthesis | Radiative to chemical | up to 6%[4] |
Muscle | Chemical to kinetic | 14–27% |
Appliance | ||
Household refrigerator | Electrical to thermal | low-end systems ~ 20%; high-end systems ~ 40–50% |
Incandescent light bulb | Electrical to radiative | 0.7–5.1%,[5] 5–10%[citation needed] |
Light-emitting diode (LED) | Electrical to radiative | 4.2–53% [6] |
Fluorescent lamp | Electrical to radiative | 8.0–15.6%,[5] 28%[7] |
Low-pressure sodium lamp | Electrical to radiative | 15.0–29.0%,[5] 40.5%[7] |
Metal-halide lamp | Electrical to radiative | 9.5–17.0%,[5] 24%[7] |
Switched-mode power supply | Electrical to electrical | currently up to 96% practically |
Electric shower | Electrical to thermal | 90–95% (multiply with the energy efficiency of electricity generation for comparison with other water-heating systems) |
Electric heater | Electrical to thermal | ~100% (essentially all energy is converted into heat, multiply with the energy efficiency of electricity generation for comparison with other heating systems) |
Others | ||
Firearm | Chemical to kinetic | ~30% (.300 Hawk ammunition) |
Electrolysis of water | Electrical to chemical | 50–70% (80–94% theoretical maximum) |
See also
- Cost of electricity by source
- Electrical efficiency
- Energy efficiency (disambiguation)
- EROEI
- Exergy efficiency
- Figure of merit
- Fuel efficiency
- Heat of combustion
- Higher heating value
- International Electrotechnical Commission
- Lower heating value
- Mechanical efficiency
- Perpetual motion
- Sensitivity (electronics)
- Solar cell efficiency
- Thermal efficiency
References
- Cited
- ^ Bold text
- ^ IEC/OECD 2008 Energy Balance for World, accessdate 2011-06-08
- ^ "Motivations for Promoting Clean Diesels" (PDF). US Department Of Energy. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 7, 2008.
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suggested) (help) - ^ Miyamoto K. "Chapter 1 - Biological energy production". Renewable biological systems for alternative sustainable energy production (FAO Agricultural Services Bulletin - 128). Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Retrieved 2009-01-04.
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(help) - ^ a b c d Luminous efficacy#Lighting efficiency
- ^ "All in 1 LED Lighting Solutions Guide". PhilipsLumileds.com. Philips. 2012-10-04. p. 15. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-03-31. Retrieved 2015-11-18.
- ^ a b c Light Pollution Handbook. Springer. 2004.
- General