This article reports an open discussion that took place during the Keenan Symposium "Meeting the Entropy Challenge" (held in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on October 5, 2007) following the short, presentations - each reported as a separate article in the present volume - by Thomas Widmer, Ernest Geskin, James Keck, Noam Lior, Debjyoti Banerjee, 1 Richard Peterson, Erik Ydstie, Ron Zevenhoven, Zhuomin Zhang, and Ahmed Ghoniem. All panelists and the audience were asked to address the following questions Current state-of-the-art efficiency of combined-cycle energy conversion technology is about. 60%. Based on the trend of historical data, some forecast, that, second-law efficiency of energy conversion will reach 80% by the end of the century. What technologies are at sight that might hold this promise? Nanotechnologies and microtechnologies point towards the development of microscopic heat, engines? How do second law limitations map down to these scales? Combustion is the principal way of converting the chemical energy of fossil fuels to thermal energy, but it is highly irreversible. Are there promising ways to reduce combustion irreversibility? Are fuel cells the only alternative to combustion? © 2008 American Institute of Physics.

Discussion on "The second law and energy"

BERETTA, Gian Paolo;
2008-01-01

Abstract

This article reports an open discussion that took place during the Keenan Symposium "Meeting the Entropy Challenge" (held in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on October 5, 2007) following the short, presentations - each reported as a separate article in the present volume - by Thomas Widmer, Ernest Geskin, James Keck, Noam Lior, Debjyoti Banerjee, 1 Richard Peterson, Erik Ydstie, Ron Zevenhoven, Zhuomin Zhang, and Ahmed Ghoniem. All panelists and the audience were asked to address the following questions Current state-of-the-art efficiency of combined-cycle energy conversion technology is about. 60%. Based on the trend of historical data, some forecast, that, second-law efficiency of energy conversion will reach 80% by the end of the century. What technologies are at sight that might hold this promise? Nanotechnologies and microtechnologies point towards the development of microscopic heat, engines? How do second law limitations map down to these scales? Combustion is the principal way of converting the chemical energy of fossil fuels to thermal energy, but it is highly irreversible. Are there promising ways to reduce combustion irreversibility? Are fuel cells the only alternative to combustion? © 2008 American Institute of Physics.
2008
Meeting the Entropy Challenge
Altre Istituz. pubb. estere
PE8_8 Mechanical and manufacturing engineering (shaping, mounting, joining, separation)
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Inglese
su invito
Keenan Symposium
2008
Boston
Internazionale
ELETTRONICO
1033
374
380
6
9780735405578
AIP Conference Proceedings Series
http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-52249096765&partnerID=40&md5=bc7e7d83026dd4c99389f55f8ef025d3
none
Lloyd, S.; Banerjee, D.; Bejan, A.; Beretta, Gian Paolo; Geskin, E.; Ghoniem, A.; Gutowski, T. G.; Gyftopoulos, E. P.; Keck, J. C.; Lior, N.; Miller, ...espandi
273
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
15
4 Contributo in Atti di Convegno (Proceeding)::4.1 Contributo in Atti di convegno
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11379/161351
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