cracking cycle efficiency - meaning and definition. What is cracking cycle efficiency
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What (who) is cracking cycle efficiency - definition

THEORETICAL THERMODYNAMIC CYCLE PROPOSED BY NICOLAS LÉONARD SADI CARNOT IN 1824 AND EXPANDED UPON BY OTHERS IN THE 1830S AND 1840S
Carnot Cycle; Carnot efficiency; Carnot-cycle; Carnot refrigeration; Carnot rule; Engine cycle
  • Figure 5}}: A visualization of a Carnot cycle
  • Figure 4}}: A Carnot cycle taking place between a hot reservoir at temperature ''T''<sub>H</sub> and a cold reservoir at temperature ''T''<sub>C</sub>.
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  • Figure 2}}: A Carnot cycle as an idealized thermodynamic cycle performed by a heat engine (Carnot heat engine), illustrated on a TS (temperature T–entropy S) diagram. The cycle takes place between a hot reservoir at temperature ''T''<sub>H</sub> and a cold reservoir at temperature ''T''<sub>C</sub>. The vertical axis is the system temperature, the horizontal axis is the system entropy.

A-to-B (isothermal expansion), B-to-C (isentropic expansion), C-to-D (isothermal compression), D-to-A (isentropic compression).
  • Figure 1}}: A Carnot cycle illustrated on a [[PV diagram]] to illustrate the work done.

1-to-2 (isothermal expansion), 2-to-3 (isentropic expansion), 3-to-4 (isothermal compression), 4-to-1 (isentropic compression).
  • ''Q''<sub>C</sub>}}, is the amount of energy exchanged between the system and the cold reservoir. The area in white, ''W'', is the amount of work energy exchanged by the system with its surroundings. The amount of heat exchanged with the hot reservoir is the sum of the two. If the system is behaving as an engine, the process moves clockwise around the loop, and moves counter-clockwise if it is behaving as a refrigerator. The efficiency to the cycle is the ratio of the white area (work) divided by the sum of the white and red areas (heat absorbed from the hot reservoir).<br>
Q <sub>C</sub> (energy lost to the cold reservoir) can be seen as a direct subtraction, or expressed as the sum of a negative quantity, which can lead to different conventions.
  • Figure 6}}: A real engine (left) compared to the Carnot cycle (right). The entropy of a real material changes with temperature. This change is indicated by the curve on a ''T''–''S'' diagram. For this figure, the curve indicates a vapor-liquid equilibrium (''See [[Rankine cycle]]''). Irreversible systems and losses of energy (for example, work due to friction and heat losses) prevent the ideal from taking place at every step.

Cracking (chemistry)         
  • Schematic flow diagram of a fluid catalytic cracker
THERMAL OR CATALYTIC DECOMPOSITION OF A COMPOUND SUCH AS A HYDROCARBON INTO CHEMICAL SPECIES OF SMALLER MOLECULAR WEIGHT
Hydrocracking; Hydrocracker; Thermal cracking; Catalytic hydrocracking; FCCU; Cracking of petroleum; Petroleum cracking; Hydrogen catalytic cracking; Unicracking; Steam Cracking; Chemical cracking; Pyrolytic Cracking; Crack (chemistry); Hydrocarbon cracking; Cracking of hydrocarbons
In petrochemistry, petroleum geology and organic chemistry, cracking is the process whereby complex organic molecules such as kerogens or long-chain hydrocarbons are broken down into simpler molecules such as light hydrocarbons, by the breaking of carbon-carbon bonds in the precursors. The rate of cracking and the end products are strongly dependent on the temperature and presence of catalysts.
Steam cracking         
  • Schematic flow diagram of a fluid catalytic cracker
THERMAL OR CATALYTIC DECOMPOSITION OF A COMPOUND SUCH AS A HYDROCARBON INTO CHEMICAL SPECIES OF SMALLER MOLECULAR WEIGHT
Hydrocracking; Hydrocracker; Thermal cracking; Catalytic hydrocracking; FCCU; Cracking of petroleum; Petroleum cracking; Hydrogen catalytic cracking; Unicracking; Steam Cracking; Chemical cracking; Pyrolytic Cracking; Crack (chemistry); Hydrocarbon cracking; Cracking of hydrocarbons
Steam cracking is a petrochemical process in which saturated hydrocarbons are broken down into smaller, often unsaturated, hydrocarbons. It is the principal industrial method for producing the lighter alkenes (or commonly olefins), including ethene (or ethylene) and propene (or propylene).
Spectral efficiency         
INFORMATION RATE THAT CAN BE TRANSMITTED OVER A GIVEN BANDWIDTH
Spectrum efficiency; System spectrum efficiency; System spectral efficiency; Link spectral efficiency; Bandwidth efficiency; BandWidth efficiency; Area spectral efficiency; Spectral efficiency comparison table; Bit/s/Hz; Bits/s/Hz; (bit/s)/Hz; (bit/s)/Hertz; Modulation efficiency; Channel spectral efficiency
Spectral efficiency, spectrum efficiency or bandwidth efficiency refers to the information rate that can be transmitted over a given bandwidth in a specific communication system. It is a measure of how efficiently a limited frequency spectrum is utilized by the physical layer protocol, and sometimes by the medium access control (the channel access protocol).

Wikipedia

Carnot cycle

A Carnot cycle is an ideal thermodynamic cycle proposed by French physicist Sadi Carnot in 1824 and expanded upon by others in the 1830s and 1840s. By Carnot's theorem, it provides an upper limit on the efficiency of any classical thermodynamic engine during the conversion of heat into work, or conversely, the efficiency of a refrigeration system in creating a temperature difference through the application of work to the system.

In a Carnot cycle, a system or engine transfers energy in the form of heat between two thermal reservoirs at temperatures T H {\displaystyle T_{H}} and T C {\displaystyle T_{C}} (referred to as the hot and cold reservoirs, respectively), and a part of this transferred energy is converted to the work done by the system. The cycle is reversible, and there is no generation of entropy. (In other words, entropy is conserved; entropy is only transferred between the thermal reservoirs and the system without gain or loss of it.) When work is applied to the system, heat moves from the cold to hot reservoir (heat pump or refrigeration). When heat moves from the hot to the cold reservoir, the system applies work to the environment. The work W {\displaystyle W} done by the system or engine to the environment per Carnot cycle depends on the temperatures of the thermal reservoirs and the entropy transferred from the hot reservoir to the system Δ S {\displaystyle \Delta S} per cycle such as W = ( T H T C ) Δ S = ( T H T C ) Q H T H {\displaystyle W=(T_{H}-T_{C})\Delta S=(T_{H}-T_{C}){\frac {Q_{H}}{T_{H}}}} , where Q H {\displaystyle Q_{H}} is heat transferred from the hot reservoir to the system per cycle.