To start our chapter on
Work and Energy we will perform the most fun lab of the year:
"Measuring your personal horsepower"
First some definitions:
Torque is the ability to perform work and is measured as newton-meters which are also called Joules. In English measurement: foot-pounds. Any measurement of weight and distance will do but these are the accepted units. FYI, car guys sometimes argue over foot-pounds vs. pounds-feet. No difference!
Work is moving some weight some distance. No work is performed until an object has moved some distance!
Potential Energy is energy stored. PE is a relative quantity. If I hold a five kilogram weight two meters off the floor the PE is ten newton-meters or Joules relative to the floor. PE = mass x gravity x height. Unit of measure should be Newton-meters or Joules ( a Joule is Kg x M^2/sec^2)
Kinetic Energy is motion. KE = 1/2 x mass x velocity^2 (velocity squared)
Total Energy = PE plus KE
The first law of Thermodynamics says energy cannot be created or destroyed, it can only change forms. How is this useful? In the design of roller coasters!
Power is work per unit of time. Power is measured in Watts or Joules per second.
"Measuring your personal horsepower"
We will measure a person's horsepower by running up a set of stairs.
1-measure the person's mass in KG. I weigh 150 pounds or 68.2 kg
2-measure one step in CM One step is 8 inches or 20 cm
3-count the number of steps bottom to top. Our basement stairs have 13 steps
4-calculate the total height of the stairway. 13 x 20 = 260 cm or 2.6 m
5-total work accomplished by walking up the stairs: 68.2kg x 2.6m = 1737 Joules
6-time it takes to run as fast as you can up the stairs. take three trials and average.
It took me 5.2 seconds. 1737J/5.2sec=334 Watts
There are 760 watts in one horsepower so I have the equivalent of .45 hp
Note that if you walk up the stairs or run up the stairs the quantity of work is the same. You lifted your mass from the bottom to the top of the stairs. It takes more horsepower to run faster up the stairs.
There are many types of energy:
Mechanical energy - movement (or potential movement) of objects
Chemical energy - ionic bonds within a molecule (potential energy). when you break these bonds you get kinetic. For example: gasoline reacts to a spark in your car's engine. heat and carbon (and other byproducts) are released.
Electrical energy - motion (or potential motion) of charged particles
Heat energy - energy is transferred from one object to another
All of these can be PE or KE except heat which is just KE
Biology lesson: how does food become energy in your body?
1-you eat food. potential chemical energy of the food gets stored in cells in your body (basically fat)
2-brain tells muscle cells to convert some of that energy to electrical energy
3-which moves your muscles
Light bulbs are rated in watts
a 100 watt light bulb burns 100 Joules of energy per second
What is a calorie? A calorie is 4.18 Joules of energy
A food calorie is really 1000 calories.
If you consume 3000 calories per day you have about 145 watts of power
3000 cal x 4.18J/cal divided by (60x60x24) seconds per day
It is interesting to follow the conversion of energy in the operation of a typical electrical power generation facility. What type of energy (mechanical,chemical, electrical, heat) is being used and at what stages in the operation is the energy potential or kinetic? It is helpful general knowledge for the students to understand how electricity is created on a large scale.
A typical power plant uses a fuel source (coal, oil, natural gas) to heat water and make steam. The steam is forced through a turbine (think of a fan with many small blades). The turbine turns a generator which creates electricity. The fuel is potential chemical energy. When the fuel is burned, chemical energy is converted to kinetic mechanical energy in the turning of the turbine. The turbine turns the generator which creates kinetic electrical energy. The only potential energy in this system is the fuel before it is burned.
A nuclear power plant is similar but it is the nuclear reaction which creates the heat.
The cooling towers you see at a power plant expel heat from the system's components just as the radiator in a car keeps the engine from overheating. There is often a lake near the power plant as it takes a considerable amount of water to flow through the cooling system, absorb excess heat, run through the cooling towers, and not raise the temperature of the lake significantly enough to harm the plants and fish.