Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by quantumstate 5119 days ago
The specific heat is the energy needed to raise the temperature per mass. So for water it takes 4.184 joules per gram to raise the temperature by 1 kelvin. So if you heated water to 75 degrees you would have put in about 205 joules per gram. You then have to deal with conductive losses and the efficiency of a heat engine.

This is not directly comparable to the energy density of gasoline or a lithium ion battery which use chemical reactions to store the energy. So you can turn almost 100% of the energy in a lithium ion battery into useful work but if you put the equivalent number of joules into heating an object you wouldn't get close unless you have a handy 0 kelvin object.

1 comments

0. you must play the game

1. you can never win

2. you can only break even on a very cold day

3. it never gets that cold