hello guys,
seems like i lost 3 marks max i was stupid enough to screw up the ratio for the aluminum pot and related question. ill get consequential marks full for the rest i asked my teacher on that one
. BTW the structures needed to show the full bonds so did you just shorten them in your answers?
Coblin what enter did you get in VCE? and can you really explain in simple terms Q20. i think i put D because i was thinking the amount of energy from each of the three different sources and how much they contribute to the electricity generation. All sources use their total amount of energy but it is the turbine that converts most (98%) of its energy into electricity, compared to about 30 % of the coal going to steam, rest lost as heat. as for the steam heat losses occur but some percentage of steam's energy passes through to the turbine. that was my thinking I'll write it out better if you do not understand
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Salt'n'Sugar
EDIT:: what does one have to do to become like a maths/chemistry/physics mod here or one of them? i would really be willing to help out.
I didn't pay full attention to the questions, especially since I had to draw out the structures in ASCII art form.
I got 45 in Chemistry and got 99 for my ENTER.
I know what you mean for Q20, but I strongly believe the question did not ask for what you thought it meant.
It asks for how much of each form of energy do we need to produce a "fixed output of electrical energy"? So lets just make that "fixed output" equal to a 100 units of electricity: so it's saying tell me how much chemical energy I need to give me 100 units of electricity. Tell me how much steam energy I need to give me 100 units of electricity, and how much mechanical energy I need to give me 100 units of electricity.
Making up numbers here, lets say we'd need 300 units of chemical energy in coal to make 100 units of electricity. Lets say that 300 units of chemical energy becomes 200 units of steam energy, and 100 units of heat. Those 200 units of steam energy would create 100 units of electricity as well (because 300 units of chemical energy produces 200 units of steam, and consequentially, 100 units of electricity).
Now, these 200 units of steam would split up into 150 units of mechanical energy, and 50 units of heat, so that the 150 units of mechanical energy would then give 100 units of electricity, and 50 units of heat. So we have chemical > steam > mechanical.
It's basically just testing your knowledge of the cumulative efficiency of the steps. The steps that occur earlier are going to require more input than the later steps, because there are more energy transformations, and hence more energy losses involved.