hi there, i am new to this forum,and i have a question.assuming the efficiency of a turbine to be 0.85,
and a fluid flows into a turbine with intial enthalpy as h1, and leaves with and enthalpy of h2.also the mass flow rate is m.taking intial and final velocity as negligible,and the height to be same,what is the power developed.i know how to find the work rate which will be the power,but the problem in class is will i multiply to the efficiency or divide.i did divide,i hope its right.pls i expect an answer soon.
Remembering whether to multiply or divide is a rote way of learning and is
not what engineers do and will get you nowhere. You need to
understand why something is, and then deduce it when you need it, without the risk of forgetting.
So, to hopefully further your understanding, here's an explanation:
Firstly, it doesn't make sense to say "taking initial and final velocity as negligible" - that means that the fluid isn't flowing (or it's a pipe with an impractically big diameter)! You can, however, say "taking the
difference between final and initial velocity to be negligible"...
85% efficiency means that of the all the possible work done on the turbine, only 85% of it is used "usefully" by the turbine. That tells you that the power developed is 85% of the work that the system is doing on the turbine, not so?
Using an energy balance, you can calculate how much work the system is doing, therefore the turbine is producing... (I'll let you finish that sentence)
If you still have trouble understanding, let me know.