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Burrah Boy
31-07-2009, 12:40 PM
Hi all, I am furthering my studies in the industry and seem to be battling to get a good and clear understanding of entropy. I have looked at a few videos on you tube, and a few websites, but it still hasnt sunk in deep enough, (maybe its me!) The one analogy which I sort of grasped was an example of an engine running (carnot cycle) and the person explaining said that the heat lost during the cycle was the entropy, say 15%.
Still not much substance though, can anybody explain it in a bit more "lay-mans" terms. Hopefully this will allow me to tackle the understanding a great deal better.
Thanks!

weatherman
31-07-2009, 12:46 PM
enthalpy and entropy are different things which one do you want

frank
31-07-2009, 08:26 PM
Enthalpy is 'available energy' - in laymans terms
Entropy is unusable 'available energy'

So, in your example, 15% of the available Enthalpy was unusable (Entropy)

Burrah Boy
01-08-2009, 08:48 AM
Thanks Frank, makes more sense now already.

moideen
01-08-2009, 07:43 PM
Enthalpy is 'available energy' - in laymans terms
Entropy is unusable 'available energy'

So, in your example, 15% of the available Enthalpy was unusable (Entropy)

Hi
I want to know, what is the use of the understanding entropy? Is this using for trouble shooting or designing?

MOIDEEN-DUBAI

:mad: