Burt Rutan's White Knight and SpaceShip One, Photo Courtesy of Scaled Composites
Thermodynamics and Propulsion


15. Generating Heat: Thermochemistry

[SB&VW-14.1-14.6]

Until now, we have specified the heat given to the devices analyzed, and not concerned ourselves with how this heat might be produced. In this section, we examine the issue of how we obtain the heat needed for work production. For the most part, this is from converting chemical energy into heat, so the discussion will be on reacting mixtures of gas which are involved in chemical combustion processes.

The topic addressed is ``thermochemistry,'' which is the combining of thermodynamics with chemistry to predict such items as how much heat is released from a chemical reaction. This is the ``Q'' or ``q'' that we have used in the cycle analysis. The principal components of the approach are use of a chemical balance plus the steady flow energy equation (SFEE) which equates the sum of shaft work (from) and heat transfer (to) a control volume to the difference in control volume inlet and exit enthalpy fluxes.



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