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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 chemical, electric power, mechanical work, light (radiation), or heat. The resulting value, η (eta), ranges between 0 and 1.[1][2][3]

Useful output energy is always lower than input energy.
Efficiency of power plants, world total, 2008

Overview

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Energy conversion efficiency 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 cannot exceed 100%, which would result in a perpetual motion machine, which is impossible.

However, other effectiveness measures that can exceed 1.0 are used for refrigerators, heat pumps and other devices that move heat rather than convert it. It is not called efficiency, but the coefficient of performance, or COP. It is a ratio of useful heating or cooling provided relative to the work (energy) required. Higher COPs equate to higher efficiency, lower energy (power) consumption and thus lower operating costs. The COP usually exceeds 1, especially in heat pumps, because instead of just converting work to heat (which, if 100% efficient, would be a COP of 1), it pumps additional heat from a heat source to where the heat is required. Most air conditioners have a COP of 2.3 to 3.5.[4]

When talking about the efficiency of heat engines and power stations the convention should be stated, i.e., HHV (a.k.a. Gross Heating Value, etc.) or LCV (a.k.a. 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

Chemical conversion efficiency

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The change of Gibbs energy of a defined chemical transformation at a particular temperature is the minimum theoretical quantity of energy required to make that change occur (if the change in Gibbs energy between reactants and products is positive) or the maximum theoretical energy that might be obtained from that change (if the change in Gibbs energy between reactants and products is negative). The energy efficiency of a process involving chemical change may be expressed relative to these theoretical minima or maxima.The difference between the change of enthalpy and the change of Gibbs energy of a chemical transformation at a particular temperature indicates the heat input required or the heat removal (cooling) required to maintain that temperature.[5]

A fuel cell may be considered to be the reverse of electrolysis. For example, an ideal fuel cell operating at a temperature of 25 °C having gaseous hydrogen and gaseous oxygen as inputs and liquid water as the output could produce a theoretical maximum amount of electrical energy of 237.129 kJ (0.06587 kWh) per gram mol (18.0154 gram) of water produced and would require 48.701 kJ (0.01353 kWh) per gram mol of water produced of heat energy to be removed from the cell to maintain that temperature.[6]

An ideal electrolysis unit operating at a temperature of 25 °C having liquid water as the input and gaseous hydrogen and gaseous oxygen as products would require a theoretical minimum input of electrical energy of 237.129 kJ (0.06587 kWh) per gram mol (18.0154 gram) of water consumed and would require 48.701 kJ (0.01353 kWh) per gram mol of water consumed of heat energy to be added to the unit to maintain that temperature.[6] It would operate at a cell voltage of 1.24 V.

For a water electrolysis unit operating at a constant temperature of 25 °C without the input of any additional heat energy, electrical energy would have to be supplied at a rate equivalent of the enthalpy (heat) of reaction or 285.830 kJ (0.07940 kWh) per gram mol of water consumed.[6] It would operate at a cell voltage of 1.48 V. The electrical energy input of this cell is 1.20 times greater than the theoretical minimum so the energy efficiency is 0.83 compared to the ideal cell. 

A water electrolysis unit operating with a higher voltage that 1.48 V and at a temperature of 25 °C would have to have heat energy removed in order to maintain a constant temperature and the energy efficiency would be less than 0.83.

The large entropy difference between liquid water and gaseous hydrogen plus gaseous oxygen accounts for the significant difference between the Gibbs energy of reaction and the enthalpy (heat) of reaction.

Fuel heating values and efficiency

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In Europe the usable energy content of a fuel is typically calculated using the lower heating value (LHV) of that fuel, the definition of which 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 a 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.

Wall-plug efficiency, luminous efficiency, and efficacy

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The absolute irradiance of four different gases when used in a flashtube. Xenon is by far the most efficient of the gases, although krypton is more effective at a specific wavelength of light.
 
The sensitivity of the human eye to various wavelengths. Assuming each wavelength equals 1 watt of radiant energy, only the center wavelength is perceived as 683 candelas (1 watt of luminous energy), equaling 683 lumens. The vertical colored-lines represent the 589 (yellow) sodium line, and popular 532 nm (green), 671 nm (red), 473 nm (blue), and 405 nm (violet) laser pointers.
 
A Sankey diagram showing the multiple stages of energy loss between the wall plug and the light output of a fluorescent lamp. The greatest losses occur due to the Stokes shift.

In optical systems such as lighting and lasers, the energy conversion efficiency is often referred to as wall-plug efficiency. The wall-plug efficiency is the measure of output radiative-energy, in watts (joules per second), per total input electrical energy in watts. The output energy is usually measured in terms of absolute irradiance and the wall-plug efficiency is given as a percentage of the total input energy, with the inverse percentage representing the losses.

The wall-plug efficiency differs from the luminous efficiency in that wall-plug efficiency describes the direct output/input conversion of energy (the amount of work that can be performed) whereas luminous efficiency takes into account the human eye's varying sensitivity to different wavelengths (how well it can illuminate a space). Instead of using watts, the power of a light source to produce wavelengths proportional to human perception is measured in lumens. The human eye is most sensitive to wavelengths of 555 nanometers (greenish-yellow) but the sensitivity decreases dramatically to either side of this wavelength, following a Gaussian power-curve and dropping to zero sensitivity at the red and violet ends of the spectrum. Due to this the eye does not usually see all of the wavelengths emitted by a particular light-source, nor does it see all of the wavelengths within the visual spectrum equally. Yellow and green, for example, make up more than 50% of what the eye perceives as being white, even though in terms of radiant energy white-light is made from equal portions of all colors (i.e.: a 5 mW green laser appears brighter than a 5 mW red laser, yet the red laser stands-out better against a white background). Therefore, the radiant intensity of a light source may be much greater than its luminous intensity, meaning that the source emits more energy than the eye can use. Likewise, the lamp's wall-plug efficiency is usually greater than its luminous efficiency. The effectiveness of a light source to convert electrical energy into wavelengths of visible light, in proportion to the sensitivity of the human eye, is referred to as luminous efficacy, which is measured in units of lumens per watt (lm/w) of electrical input-energy.

Unlike efficacy (effectiveness), which is a unit of measurement, efficiency is a unitless number expressed as a percentage, requiring only that the input and output units be of the same type. The luminous efficiency of a light source is thus the percentage of luminous efficacy per theoretical maximum efficacy at a specific wavelength. The amount of energy carried by a photon of light is determined by its wavelength. In lumens, this energy is offset by the eye's sensitivity to the selected wavelengths. For example, a green laser pointer can have greater than 30 times the apparent brightness of a red pointer of the same power output. At 555 nm in wavelength, 1 watt of radiant energy is equivalent to 683 lumens, thus a monochromatic light source at this wavelength, with a luminous efficacy of 683 lm/w, would have a luminous efficiency of 100%. The theoretical-maximum efficacy lowers for wavelengths at either side of 555 nm. For example, low-pressure sodium lamps produce monochromatic light at 589 nm with a luminous efficacy of 200 lm/w, which is the highest of any lamp. The theoretical-maximum efficacy at that wavelength is 525 lm/w, so the lamp has a luminous efficiency of 38.1%. Because the lamp is monochromatic, the luminous efficiency nearly matches the wall-plug efficiency of < 40%.[7][8]

Calculations for luminous efficiency become more complex for lamps that produce white light or a mixture of spectral lines. Fluorescent lamps have higher wall-plug efficiencies than low-pressure sodium lamps, but only have half the luminous efficacy of ~ 100 lm/w, thus the luminous efficiency of fluorescents is lower than sodium lamps. A xenon flashtube has a typical wall-plug efficiency of 50–70%, exceeding that of most other forms of lighting. Because the flashtube emits large amounts of infrared and ultraviolet radiation, only a portion of the output energy is used by the eye. The luminous efficacy is therefore typically around 50 lm/w. However, not all applications for lighting involve the human eye nor are restricted to visible wavelengths. For laser pumping, the efficacy is not related to the human eye so it is not called "luminous" efficacy, but rather simply "efficacy" as it relates to the absorption lines of the laser medium. Krypton flashtubes are often chosen for pumping Nd:YAG lasers, even though their wall-plug efficiency is typically only ~ 40%. Krypton's spectral lines better match the absorption lines of the neodymium-doped crystal, thus the efficacy of krypton for this purpose is much higher than xenon; able to produce up to twice the laser output for the same electrical input.[9][10] All of these terms refer to the amount of energy and lumens as they exit the light source, disregarding any losses that might occur within the lighting fixture or subsequent output optics. Luminaire efficiency refers to the total lumen-output from the fixture per the lamp output.[11]

With the exception of a few light sources, such as incandescent light bulbs, most light sources have multiple stages of energy conversion between the "wall plug" (electrical input point, which may include batteries, direct wiring, or other sources) and the final light-output, with each stage producing a loss. Low-pressure sodium lamps initially convert the electrical energy using an electrical ballast, to maintain the proper current and voltage, but some energy is lost in the ballast. Similarly, fluorescent lamps also convert the electricity using a ballast (electronic efficiency). The electricity is then converted into light energy by the electrical arc (electrode efficiency and discharge efficiency). The light is then transferred to a fluorescent coating that only absorbs suitable wavelengths, with some losses of those wavelengths due to reflection off and transmission through the coating (transfer efficiency). The number of photons absorbed by the coating will not match the number then reemitted as fluorescence (quantum efficiency). Finally, due to the phenomenon of the Stokes shift, the re-emitted photons will have a longer wavelength (thus lower energy) than the absorbed photons (fluorescence efficiency). In very similar fashion, lasers also experience many stages of conversion between the wall plug and the output aperture. The terms "wall-plug efficiency" or "energy conversion efficiency" are therefore used to denote the overall efficiency of the energy-conversion device, deducting the losses from each stage, although this may exclude external components needed to operate some devices, such as coolant pumps.[12][13]

Example of energy conversion efficiency

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Conversion process Conversion type Energy efficiency
Electricity generation
Gas turbine Chemical to electrical up to 40%
Gas turbine plus steam turbine (combined cycle) Chemical to thermal+electrical (cogeneration) up to 63.08%[14] In December 2017, GE claimed >64% in its latest 826 MW 9HA.02 plant, up from 63.7%. They said this was due to advances in additive manufacturing and combustion. Their press release said that they planned to achieve 65% by the early 2020s.[15][self-published source]
Water turbine Gravitational to electrical up to 95%[16][self-published source] (practically achieved)
Wind turbine Kinetic to electrical up to 50% (HAWT in isolation,[17] up to 25–40% HAWTs in close proximity, up to 35–40% VAWT in isolation, up to 41–47% VAWT series-farm.[18] 3128 HAWTs older than 10 years in Denmark showed that half had no decrease, while the other half saw a production decrease of 1.2% per year.[19] Theoretical limit = 16/27= 59%)
Solar cell Radiative to electrical 6–40% (technology-dependent, 15–20% most often, median degradation for x-Si technologies in the 0.5–0.6%/year[20] range with the mean in the 0.8–0.9%/year range. Hetero-interface technology (HIT) and microcrystalline silicon (μc-Si) technologies, although not as plentiful, exhibit degradation around 1%/year and resemble thin-film products more closely than x-Si.[21] infinite-stack limit: 86.8% concentrated[22] 68.7% unconcentrated[23])
Fuel cell Chemical to thermal+electrical (cogeneration) The energy efficiency of a fuel cell is generally between 40 and 60%; however, if waste heat is captured in a cogeneration scheme, efficiencies of up to 85% can be obtained.[24]
World average fossil fuel electricity generation power plant as of 2008 [25] Chemical to electrical Gross output 39%, Net output 33%
Electricity storage
Lithium-ion battery Chemical to electrical/reversible 80–90%[26]
Nickel–metal hydride battery Chemical to electrical/reversible 66%[27]
Lead-acid battery Chemical to electrical/reversible 50–95%[28]
Pumped-storage hydroelectricity gravitational to electrical/reversible 70–85%[29]
Engine/motor
Combustion engine Chemical to kinetic 10–50%[30]
Electric motor Electrical to kinetic 70–99.99% (> 200 W); 50–90% (10–200 W); 30–60% (< 10 W)
Turbofan Chemical to kinetic 20–40%[31]
Natural process
Photosynthesis Radiative to chemical 0.1% (average)[32] to 2% (best);[33] up to 6% in principle[34] (see main: Photosynthetic efficiency)
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 ~ 80% wall-plug efficiency[35] 0.7–5.1% luminous efficiency[36]
Light-emitting diode (LED) Electrical to radiative 4.2–53%[37][failed verification][dubiousdiscuss]
Fluorescent lamp Electrical to radiative 8.0–15.6%,[36] 28%[38]
Low-pressure sodium lamp Electrical to radiative 15.0–29.0%,[36] 40.5%[38]
Metal-halide lamp Electrical to radiative 9.5–17.0%,[36] 24%[38]
Switched-mode power supply Electrical to electrical currently up to 96% practically
Electric shower Electrical to thermal 90–95% (multiply by the energy efficiency of electricity generation to compare with other water-heating systems)
Electric heater Electrical to thermal ~100% (essentially all energy is converted into heat, multiply by the energy efficiency of electricity generation to compare 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

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References

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  1. ^ Energy Glossary, California Energy Commission (Accessed: April 3, 2021)
  2. ^ What is efficiency?, NASA, Cryogenics and Fluids Branch (Accessed: April 3, 2021)
  3. ^ Efficiency, J.M.K.C. Donev et al. (2020). Energy Education - Efficiency (Accessed: April 3, 2021)
  4. ^ "COP (Coefficient of performance)". us.grundfos.com. Archived from the original on 2014-06-28. Retrieved 2019-04-08.
  5. ^ Denbigh, K. "The Principles of Chemical Equilibrium with Applications in Chemistry and Chemical Engineering", Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1966)
  6. ^ a b c D. D. Wagman, W. H. Evans, Vivian B. Parker, Richard H. Schumm, Iva Harlow, Sylvia M. Bailey, Kenneth L. Churney, and Ralph L. Nutall. "The NBS Tables of Chemical Thermodynamic Properties" Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data Volume 10, 1982 Supplement No. 2
  7. ^ Applied Atomic Collision Physics, Volume 5 by H. S. W. Massey, E. W. McDaniel, B. Bederson – Academic Press 1982 Page 383
  8. ^ "Efficacy Limits for Solid-State White Light Sources".
  9. ^ Advanced Optical Instruments and Techniques by Daniel Malacara Hernández [es] – CRC Press 2018 Page 589
  10. ^ Solid-state laser engineering by Walter Koechner – Springer-Verlag 1965 Page 335
  11. ^ Understanding LED Illumination by M. Nisa Khan – CRC Press 2014 Page 21--23
  12. ^ "Wall-plug Efficiency".
  13. ^ Handbook of Luminescent Semiconductor Materials by Leah Bergman, Jeanne L. McHale – CRC Press 2012 Page 270
  14. ^ "GE-Powered Plant Awarded World Record Efficiency by Guinness". Power Engineering. 2018-03-27. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  15. ^ "HA technology now available at industry-first 64 percent efficiency" (Press release). GE Power. December 4, 2017.
  16. ^ "Heavy Metal: Building A Huge Hydropower Plant Involves Steady Hands And A Boatload Of Finesse | GE News". www.ge.com. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  17. ^ "Enercon E-family, 330 kW to 7.5 MW, Wind Turbine Specification" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 May 2011.
  18. ^ Hansen, Joachim Toftegaard; Mahak, Mahak; Tzanakis, Iakovos (2021-02-05). "Numerical modelling and optimization of vertical axis wind turbine pairs: A scale up approach". Renewable Energy. 171. London: Elsevier Ltd. (published June 2021): 1371–1381. Bibcode:2021REne..171.1371H. doi:10.1016/j.renene.2021.03.001.
  19. ^ Sanne Wittrup (1 November 2013). "11 års vinddata afslørede overraskende produktionsnedgang" [11 years of wind data shows surprising production decrease]. Ingeniøren (in Danish). Archived from the original on 25 October 2018.
  20. ^ Jordan, Dirk C.; Kurtz, Sarah R. (13 October 2011). "Photovoltaic Degradation Rates – An Analytical Review" (PDF). Progress in Photovoltaics: Research and Applications. 21 (1). National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), 15013 Denver West Parkway Golden CO 80401 USA: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. (published 2012-06-01): 12–29. doi:10.1002/pip.1182. OSTI 1045052. S2CID 93164232. Retrieved 2021-10-15.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  21. ^ Jordan, Dirk C.; Kurtz, Sarah R.; VanSant, Kaitlyn; Newmiller, Jeff (7 February 2016). "Compendium of photovoltaic degradation rates: Photovoltaic degradation rates". Progress in Photovoltaics: Research and Applications. 24 (7). National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), Golden, CO (United States): John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. (published 2016-02-07): 978–989. doi:10.1002/pip.2744. ISSN 1062-7995. OCLC 640902675. OSTI 1259256. S2CID 100609503. Retrieved 2021-10-15.
  22. ^ De Vos, A. (1980). "Detailed balance limit of the efficiency of tandem solar cells". Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics. 13 (5): 839–846. Bibcode:1980JPhD...13..839D. doi:10.1088/0022-3727/13/5/018. S2CID 250782402.
  23. ^ A. De Vos & H. Pauwels (1981). "On the Thermodynamic Limit of Photovoltaic Energy Conversion". Appl. Phys. 25 (2): 119–125. Bibcode:1981ApPhy..25..119D. doi:10.1007/BF00901283. S2CID 119693148.
  24. ^ "Types of Fuel Cells" Archived 9 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Department of Energy EERE website, accessed 4 August 2011
  25. ^ IEC/OECD 2008 Energy Balance for World Archived 2013-07-24 at the Wayback Machine, accessdate 2011-06-08
  26. ^ Valøen, Lars Ole and Shoesmith, Mark I. (2007). The effect of PHEV and HEV duty cycles on battery and battery pack performance (PDF). 2007 Plug-in Highway Electric Vehicle Conference: Proceedings. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  27. ^ "NiMH Battery Charging Basics". PowerStream.com.
  28. ^ PowerSonic, Technical Manual (PDF), p. 19, retrieved January 2014
  29. ^ Pumped Hydro Storage, Energy Storage Association, feb 2012.
  30. ^ "Motivations for Promoting Clean Diesels" (PDF). US Department Of Energy. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 7, 2008.
  31. ^ "11.5 Trends in thermal and propulsive efficiency". web.mit.edu. Retrieved 2016-10-26.
  32. ^ Govindjee, What is photosynthesis?
  33. ^ The Green Solar Collector; converting sunlight into algal biomass Wageningen University project (2005—2008)
  34. ^ 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.
  35. ^ Handbook of Digital Image Synthesis by Vincent Pegoraro - CRC Press 2017 Page 690
  36. ^ a b c d Luminous efficacy#Lighting efficiency
  37. ^ "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.
  38. ^ a b c Light Pollution Handbook. Springer. 2004. ISBN 9781402026652.
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