CONNECT FOR THERMODYNAMICS: AN ENGINEERI
9th Edition
ISBN: 9781260048636
Author: CENGEL
Publisher: MCG
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
Chapter 6.11, Problem 122P
To determine
The energy savings of the proposed light bulb justify its cost.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
An inventor claims to have developed a resistance heater that supplies 1.2 kWh of energy to a room for each kWh of electricity it consumes. Is this a reasonable claim, or has the inventor developed a perpetual-motion machine? Explain.
An air-conditioning system is used to maintain a house at 75°F when the temperature outside is 95°F. The house is gaining the heat through the walls and windows at a rate of 1250 Btu/min, and the heat generation rate within the house from people, lights, and appliances amounts to 350 Btu/min. Determine the minimum power input required for this air-conditioning system
By supplying energy to a house at a rate of 25,000 kJ/hr, a heat pump maintains the
temperature of the dwelling at 20 C when the outside air is at -10 C. If electricity
costs 8 cents per kW-hr, determine the minimum theoretical operating cost to heat
the house for 24 hours.
$1.97
O $1.37
$1.75
O $1.51
O$1.64
Chapter 6 Solutions
CONNECT FOR THERMODYNAMICS: AN ENGINEERI
Ch. 6.11 - A mechanic claims to have developed a car engine...Ch. 6.11 - Describe an imaginary process that violates both...Ch. 6.11 - Describe an imaginary process that satisfies the...Ch. 6.11 - Describe an imaginary process that satisfies the...Ch. 6.11 - An experimentalist claims to have raised the...Ch. 6.11 - Consider the process of baking potatoes in a...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 7PCh. 6.11 - What are the characteristics of all heat engines?Ch. 6.11 - What is the KelvinPlanck expression of the second...Ch. 6.11 - Is it possible for a heat engine to operate...
Ch. 6.11 - Does a heat engine that has a thermal efficiency...Ch. 6.11 - In the absence of any friction and other...Ch. 6.11 - Are the efficiencies of all the work-producing...Ch. 6.11 - Baseboard heaters are basically electric...Ch. 6.11 - Consider a pan of water being heated (a) by...Ch. 6.11 - A heat engine has a total heat input of 1.3 kJ and...Ch. 6.11 - A steam power plant receives heat from a furnace...Ch. 6.11 - A heat engine has a heat input of 3 104 Btu/h and...Ch. 6.11 - A 600-MW steam power plant, which is cooled by a...Ch. 6.11 - A heat engine with a thermal efficiency of 45...Ch. 6.11 - A heat engine that propels a ship produces 500...Ch. 6.11 - A steam power plant with a power output of 150 MW...Ch. 6.11 - An automobile engine consumes fuel at a rate of 22...Ch. 6.11 - Solar energy stored in large bodies of water,...Ch. 6.11 - A coal-burning steam power plant produces a net...Ch. 6.11 - An Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) power...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 27PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 29PCh. 6.11 - What is the difference between a refrigerator and...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 31PCh. 6.11 - Define the coefficient of performance of a...Ch. 6.11 - Define the coefficient of performance of a heat...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 34PCh. 6.11 - A refrigerator has a COP of 1.5. That is, the...Ch. 6.11 - In a refrigerator, heat is transferred from a...Ch. 6.11 - A heat pump is a device that absorbs energy from...Ch. 6.11 - What is the Clausius expression of the second law...Ch. 6.11 - Show that the KelvinPlanck and the Clausius...Ch. 6.11 - The coefficient of performance of a residential...Ch. 6.11 - A food freezer is to produce a 5-kW cooling...Ch. 6.11 - An automotive air conditioner produces a 1-kW...Ch. 6.11 - A food refrigerator is to provide a 15,000-kJ/h...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 44PCh. 6.11 - Determine the COP of a heat pump that supplies...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 46PCh. 6.11 - A heat pump with a COP of 1.4 is to produce a...Ch. 6.11 - An air conditioner removes heat steadily from a...Ch. 6.11 - A household refrigerator that has a power input of...Ch. 6.11 - When a man returns to his well-sealed house on a...Ch. 6.11 - Water enters an ice machine at 55F and leaves as...Ch. 6.11 - A refrigerator is used to cool water from 23 to 5C...Ch. 6.11 - A household refrigerator runs one-fourth of the...Ch. 6.11 - Consider an office room that is being cooled...Ch. 6.11 - A house that was heated by electric resistance...Ch. 6.11 - Refrigerant-134a enters the condenser of a...Ch. 6.11 - Refrigerant-134a enters the evaporator coils...Ch. 6.11 - An inventor claims to have developed a resistance...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 60PCh. 6.11 - Why are engineers interested in reversible...Ch. 6.11 - A cold canned drink is left in a warmer room where...Ch. 6.11 - A block slides down an inclined plane with...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 64PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 65PCh. 6.11 - Show that processes that use work for mixing are...Ch. 6.11 - Why does a nonquasi-equilibrium compression...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 68PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 69PCh. 6.11 - What are the four processes that make up the...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 71PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 72PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 73PCh. 6.11 - Somebody claims to have developed a new reversible...Ch. 6.11 - Is there any way to increase the efficiency of a...Ch. 6.11 - Consider two actual power plants operating with...Ch. 6.11 - You are an engineer in an electric-generation...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 78PCh. 6.11 - A thermodynamicist claims to have developed a heat...Ch. 6.11 - A heat engine is operating on a Carnot cycle and...Ch. 6.11 - A completely reversible heat engine operates with...Ch. 6.11 - An inventor claims to have developed a heat engine...Ch. 6.11 - A Carnot heat engine operates between a source at...Ch. 6.11 - A heat engine is operating on a Carnot cycle and...Ch. 6.11 - A heat engine operates between a source at 477C...Ch. 6.11 - An experimentalist claims that, based on his...Ch. 6.11 - In tropical climates, the water near the surface...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 89PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 90PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 91PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 92PCh. 6.11 - How can we increase the COP of a Carnot...Ch. 6.11 - In an effort to conserve energy in a heat-engine...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 95PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 96PCh. 6.11 - A thermodynamicist claims to have developed a heat...Ch. 6.11 - Determine the minimum work per unit of heat...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 99PCh. 6.11 - An air-conditioning system operating on the...Ch. 6.11 - A heat pump operates on a Carnot heat pump cycle...Ch. 6.11 - An air-conditioning system is used to maintain a...Ch. 6.11 - A Carnot refrigerator absorbs heat from a space at...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 104PCh. 6.11 - A Carnot refrigerator operates in a room in which...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 106PCh. 6.11 - A commercial refrigerator with refrigerant-134a as...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 108PCh. 6.11 - A heat pump is to be used for heating a house in...Ch. 6.11 - A completely reversible heat pump has a COP of 1.6...Ch. 6.11 - A Carnot heat pump is to be used to heat a house...Ch. 6.11 - A Carnot heat engine receives heat from a...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 113PCh. 6.11 - Derive an expression for the COP of a completely...Ch. 6.11 - Calculate and plot the COP of a completely...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 116PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 117PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 118PCh. 6.11 - Someone proposes that the entire...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 120PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 121PCh. 6.11 - Prob. 122PCh. 6.11 - It is commonly recommended that hot foods be...Ch. 6.11 - It is often stated that the refrigerator door...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 125RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 126RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 127RPCh. 6.11 - A Carnot heat pump is used to heat and maintain a...Ch. 6.11 - A refrigeration system uses a water-cooled...Ch. 6.11 - A refrigeration system is to cool bread loaves...Ch. 6.11 - A heat pump with a COP of 2.8 is used to heat an...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 132RPCh. 6.11 - Consider a Carnot heat-engine cycle executed in a...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 134RPCh. 6.11 - Consider a Carnot refrigeration cycle executed in...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 137RPCh. 6.11 - Consider two Carnot heat engines operating in...Ch. 6.11 - A heat engine operates between two reservoirs at...Ch. 6.11 - An old gas turbine has an efficiency of 21 percent...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 141RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 142RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 143RPCh. 6.11 - The drinking water needs of a production facility...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 145RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 147RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 148RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 149RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 150RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 151RPCh. 6.11 - A heat pump with refrigerant-134a as the working...Ch. 6.11 - Prob. 153RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 155RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 156RPCh. 6.11 - Prob. 157RPCh. 6.11 - Prove that a refrigerators COP cannot exceed that...Ch. 6.11 - Consider a Carnot refrigerator and a Carnot heat...Ch. 6.11 - A 2.4-m-high 200-m2 house is maintained at 22C by...Ch. 6.11 - A window air conditioner that consumes 1 kW of...Ch. 6.11 - The drinking water needs of an office are met by...Ch. 6.11 - The label on a washing machine indicates that the...Ch. 6.11 - A heat pump is absorbing heat from the cold...Ch. 6.11 - A heat engine cycle is executed with steam in the...Ch. 6.11 - A heat pump cycle is executed with R134a under the...Ch. 6.11 - A refrigeration cycle is executed with R-134a...Ch. 6.11 - A heat pump with a COP of 3.2 is used to heat a...Ch. 6.11 - A heat engine cycle is executed with steam in the...Ch. 6.11 - A heat engine receives heat from a source at 1000C...Ch. 6.11 - An air-conditioning system operating on the...Ch. 6.11 - A refrigerator is removing heat from a cold medium...Ch. 6.11 - Two Carnot heat engines are operating in series...Ch. 6.11 - A typical new household refrigerator consumes...
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, mechanical-engineering and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- The coefficient of performance of a residential heat pump is 1.6. Calculate the heating effect in kJ/s this heat pump will produce when it consumes 2 kW of electrical power.arrow_forwardThe label on a washing machine indicates that the washer will use $85 worth of hot water if the water is heated by a 90 percent efficient electric heater at an electricity rate of $0.125/kWh. If the water is heated from 18 to 45°C, the amount of hot water an average family uses per year is (a) 19.5 tons (b) 21.7 tons (c) 24.1 tons (d) 27.2 tons (e) 30.4 tonsarrow_forwardReplacing incandescent lights with energy-efficient fluorescent lights can reduce the lighting energy consumption to one-fourth of what it was before. The energy consumed by the lamps is eventually converted to heat, and thus switching to energy-efficient lighting also reduces the cooling load in summer but increases the heating load in winter. Consider a building that is heated by a natural gas furnace with an efficiency of 80 percent and cooled by an air conditioner with a COP of 3.5. If electricity costs $0.12/kWh and natural gas costs $1.40/therm (1 therm = 105,500 kJ), determine if efficient lighting will increase or decrease the total energy cost of the building in summer.arrow_forward
- A heat pump with a COP of 3.2 is used to heat a perfectly sealed house (no air leaks). The entire mass within the house (air, furniture, etc.) is equivalent to 1200 kg of air. When running, the heat pump consumes electric power at a rate of 5 kW. The temperature of the house was 7°C when the heat pump was turned on. If heat transfer through the envelope of the house (walls, roof, etc.) is negligible, the length of time the heat pump must run to raise the temperature of the entire contents of the house to 22°C is (a) 13.5 min (b) 43.1 min (c) 138 min (d) 18.8 min (e) 808 minarrow_forwardA refrigerator has a broken light bulb inside that is constantly turned on even when the refrigerator door is closed. If the light bulb uses 20 W of power and the refrigerator has a COP of 1.4, what would be the total cost of power consumption of the entire refrigerator? Assume electricity costs P12 per kWh and the refrigerator is opened an average of 15 times per day for 30 seconds.arrow_forwardA house loses heat through its exterior at a rate of 5 kW when the inside temperature is 22◦C and the outside temperature is −5◦C. Determine the electrical power required to maintain the interior temperature at 22◦C for the following two cases: (a) The electrical power is used in resistance heaters that convert all the power to heat. (b) The electrical power is used to drive the motor of a heat pump that has a coefficient of performance equal to 30% of the Carnot cycle value.arrow_forward
- An air-conditioning system is used to maintain a house at 70°F when the temperature outside is 100°F. The house is gaining heat through the walls and the windows at a rate of 800 Btu/min, and the heat generation rate within the house from people, lights, and appliances amounts to 100 Btu/min. Determine the minimum power input required for this airconditioning system.arrow_forwardDetermine the COP (coefficient of performance) of a heat pump if the rate of heat rejected is 360 kJ/min and power supplied is 2 kW.arrow_forwardIf a house needs a minimum heat transfer rate of 75 kJ/h (i.e., 75 kJ of heat needs to be transferred into the house during one hour) to maintain a pleasant indoor temperature. If one wants to use a heat pump with a COP of 5.55 to fulfill this heat transfer rate, what is the corresponding electricity (in kWh) consumption to run such a heat pump for one hour?arrow_forward
- Calculate the overall thermal efficiency of a Diesel Electric Plant used by a logging firm, which consumed 250 gallons of industrial fuel with 30°API at 80°F and produced 3244 kW-hrs of electric energy over a 5-hour period. The fuel was purchased at $30 per liter at 60°F.arrow_forwardA refrigerator used to cool a computer requires 3 kW of electrical power and has a COP of 1.4. Calculate the cooling effect of this refrigerator, in kW.arrow_forwardConsider a classroom for 55 students and one instructor, each generating heat at a rate of 100 W. Lighting is provided by 18 fluorescent lightbulbs, 40 W each, and the ballasts consume an additional 10 percent. Determine the rate of internal heat generation in this classroom when it is fully occupied.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Elements Of ElectromagneticsMechanical EngineeringISBN:9780190698614Author:Sadiku, Matthew N. O.Publisher:Oxford University PressMechanics of Materials (10th Edition)Mechanical EngineeringISBN:9780134319650Author:Russell C. HibbelerPublisher:PEARSONThermodynamics: An Engineering ApproachMechanical EngineeringISBN:9781259822674Author:Yunus A. Cengel Dr., Michael A. BolesPublisher:McGraw-Hill Education
- Control Systems EngineeringMechanical EngineeringISBN:9781118170519Author:Norman S. NisePublisher:WILEYMechanics of Materials (MindTap Course List)Mechanical EngineeringISBN:9781337093347Author:Barry J. Goodno, James M. GerePublisher:Cengage LearningEngineering Mechanics: StaticsMechanical EngineeringISBN:9781118807330Author:James L. Meriam, L. G. Kraige, J. N. BoltonPublisher:WILEY
Elements Of Electromagnetics
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9780190698614
Author:Sadiku, Matthew N. O.
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Mechanics of Materials (10th Edition)
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9780134319650
Author:Russell C. Hibbeler
Publisher:PEARSON
Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781259822674
Author:Yunus A. Cengel Dr., Michael A. Boles
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education
Control Systems Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781118170519
Author:Norman S. Nise
Publisher:WILEY
Mechanics of Materials (MindTap Course List)
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781337093347
Author:Barry J. Goodno, James M. Gere
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Engineering Mechanics: Statics
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781118807330
Author:James L. Meriam, L. G. Kraige, J. N. Bolton
Publisher:WILEY
The Refrigeration Cycle Explained - The Four Major Components; Author: HVAC Know It All;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfciSvOZDUY;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY