Question 28 QMED03 - Oiler
The thermal energy produced by an internal combustion engine is transformed into ________.
The Correct Answer is D **Explanation for Option D (Mechanical Energy):** The primary function of an internal combustion engine is to act as a heat engine. It takes the chemical energy stored in the fuel, converts it into thermal energy (heat) through combustion, and then converts a portion of that thermal energy into useful work. This useful work is manifested as **mechanical energy**—the energy of motion and force used to turn the crankshaft, which ultimately powers the wheels of a vehicle or drives a machine. According to the First Law of Thermodynamics, energy is conserved, and in this specific device, the thermal energy is purposefully channeled to produce mechanical output. **Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:** * **A) internal energy:** While the thermal energy *is* a form of internal energy (the energy contained within the system due to the random motion of molecules) immediately after combustion, "internal energy" is not the *transformation* goal of the engine. The goal is the conversion *out* of the system to perform work. * **B) combustion energy:** Combustion energy is the initial chemical energy stored in the fuel (often called the enthalpy of combustion or heat of combustion). The engine *uses* combustion energy, but the thermal energy produced is not *transformed* back into combustion energy; it's a step in the process, not the final output transformation. * **C) external energy:** "External energy" is too vague and lacks specific physical meaning in this context. While the engine performs work on external systems (like a car chassis), the specific, quantifiable form of energy produced and transferred to the external system is mechanical energy.
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