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Examine os métodos selecionados lado a lado; as linhas que diferem ficam destacadas.

Análise Exergoeconômica×Análise Exergoambiental×Ciclo de Rankine×
ÁreaTermodinâmicaTermodinâmicaTermodinâmica
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem199320091859
Autor originalGoran TsatsaronisGoran Tsatsaronis and Lucía MeyerWilliam John Macquorn Rankine
TipoThermoeconomic assessmentLife cycle and environmental analysisThermodynamic cycle
Fonte seminalTsatsaronis, G. (1993). Thermoeconomic analysis and optimization of energy conversion processes. Progress in Energy and Combustion Science, 19(4), 323-356. DOI ↗Meyer, L., Tsatsaronis, G., Buchgeister, J., & Schebek, L. (2009). Exergoenvironmental analysis for evaluation of the environmental impact of energy conversion processes. Energy, 34(1), 75-89. link ↗Smith, J. M., Van Ness, H. C., & Abbott, M. M. (2005). Introduction to Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics (7th ed.). McGraw-Hill. ISBN: 978-0071247009
Outros nomesexergy costing, thermoeconomic analysisenvironmental exergy costing, exergy-based LCAClausius-Rankine cycle, steam cycle, vapor power cycle
Relacionados333
ResumoExergoeconomic analysis combines thermodynamics and economics by assigning monetary costs to exergy streams. It reveals how thermodynamic irreversibilities translate into economic losses within industrial systems. This approach enables engineers to identify the most economically significant inefficiencies and make informed decisions about component improvements and system optimization.Exergoenvironmental analysis extends exergy-based methods to quantify and allocate environmental impacts of thermal systems. It assigns environmental costs to exergy streams based on upstream lifecycle impacts, revealing which components contribute most significantly to environmental burdens. This enables engineers to design sustainable energy systems by optimizing the trade-off between thermodynamic and environmental performance.The Rankine Cycle is the fundamental thermodynamic cycle for steam power plants. It describes how thermal energy from burning fuel or concentrated solar radiation is converted to mechanical work and ultimately electricity. The cycle consists of four processes: isobaric heat addition in the boiler, isentropic expansion through the turbine, isobaric heat rejection in the condenser, and isentropic compression by the pump.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Exergoeconomic Analysis · Exergoenvironmental Analysis · Rankine Cycle. Recuperado em 2026-06-20 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare