Cambridge A-Level Physics 9702 – Energy Conservation: Using Efficiency
Energy Conservation and Efficiency
The law of conservation of energy states that energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred or transformed. In real‑world systems some of the input energy is inevitably lost as heat, sound, or other non‑useful forms. The concept of efficiency quantifies how effectively a system converts input energy into a desired output.
Key Concepts
Conserved quantity: total energy of an isolated system remains constant.
Useful energy: the portion of the input energy that appears as the intended form of output (e.g., mechanical work, electrical power).
Energy loss: energy transformed into forms that do not contribute to the intended output, usually dissipated as heat.
Efficiency (\$\eta\$): the ratio of useful output energy to input energy, expressed as a percentage.
Identify the form of energy supplied to the system (\$E_{\text{in}}\$).
Determine the required useful output energy (\$E_{\text{out}}\$) or the desired output quantity (e.g., work, kinetic energy).
Read or calculate the efficiency \$\eta\$ of the device or process.
Apply the efficiency relation:
\$E{\text{out}} = \eta \, E{\text{in}}\$
or, if \$E_{\text{out}}\$ is known,
\$E{\text{in}} = \frac{E{\text{out}}}{\eta}\$
Account for any additional energy transformations (e.g., gravitational potential, kinetic energy) using the appropriate kinematic or dynamic equations.
Check that the final answer respects the conservation of energy and that the calculated losses are physically reasonable.
Worked Example
Problem: A 1500 W electric kettle is used to heat 0.5 kg of water from 20 °C to its boiling point (100 °C). The kettle’s efficiency is 80 %. Calculate:
The energy supplied by the kettle.
The time required to bring the water to boil.
Solution:
Calculate the useful energy needed to raise the water temperature:
\$E_{\text{useful}} = m c \Delta T\$
where \$m = 0.5\ \text{kg}\$, \$c = 4186\ \text{J kg}^{-1}\text{K}^{-1}\$, \$\Delta T = 100-20 = 80\ \text{K}\$.
So the water will boil in about \$2.3\ \text{min}\$.
Suggested diagram: Energy flow diagram showing electrical input, useful heat transferred to water, and heat lost to the surroundings.
Common Pitfalls
Forgetting to convert efficiency from a percentage to a decimal before using it in calculations.
Assuming 100 % efficiency for devices that are known to have losses (e.g., engines, transformers).
Neglecting the energy required for phase changes when heating or cooling substances.
Mixing up input and output powers when dealing with continuous processes; remember \$P = \frac{E}{t}\$.
Summary
Efficiency provides a practical bridge between the idealised conservation of energy and real‑world applications where losses occur. By incorporating the efficiency factor into energy calculations, students can accurately predict the performance of devices, estimate required input energy, and evaluate the feasibility of engineering solutions.