2.43 Advanced Thermodynamics
2.43 Advanced Thermodynamics (Spring 2024, MIT OCW). Instructor: Prof. Gian Paolo Beretta. This course is a self-contained concise review of general thermodynamics concepts, multicomponent equilibrium properties, chemical equilibrium, electrochemical potentials, and chemical kinetics, as needed to introduce the methods of nonequilibrium thermodynamics and to provide a unified understanding of phase equilibria, transport, and nonequilibrium phenomena useful for future energy and climate engineering technologies. Applications include second-law efficiencies and methods to allocate primary energy consumptions and CO₂ emissions in cogeneration and hybrid power systems, minimum work of separation, maximum work of mixing, osmotic pressure and membrane equilibria, metastable states, spinodal decomposition, and Onsager's near-equilibrium reciprocity in thermodiffusive, thermoelectric, and electrokinetic cross effects. (from ocw.mit.edu)
Lecture 10 - Review of Various Forms of Energy (Part II); Allocation of Consumptions in Cogeneration |
Various examples of exergies (second part). The problem of allocation of primary energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions in cogeneration. The problem of determining the renewable fraction of power produced in hybrid fossil-renewable facilities.
Go to the Course Home or watch other lectures: