Exergy in meteorology: Definition and properties of moist-air available enthalpy
Pascal Marquet

TL;DR
This paper introduces a moist-air available enthalpy function extending the dry exergy concept, providing a new local exergy measure for moist atmospheres with significant implications for meteorological energy analysis.
Contribution
It generalizes the dry available enthalpy to moist atmospheres, defining a new moist available enthalpy with a simple analytical form and a latent component.
Findings
Moist available enthalpy differs significantly from dry case.
The latent component is a novel addition to energy functions.
Modifications are important for accurate atmospheric energy analysis.
Abstract
The exergy of the dry atmosphere can be considered as another aspect of the meteorological theories of available energies. The local and global properties of the dry available enthalpy function, also called flow exergy, were investigated in a previous paper (Marquet, Q. J. R. Meteorol. Soc., Vol 117, p.449-475, 1991). The concept of exergy is well defined in thermodynamics, and several generalizations to chemically reacting systems have already been made. Similarly, the concept of moist available enthalpy is presented in this paper in order to generalize the dry available enthalpy to the case of a moist atmosphere. It is a local exergy-like function which possesses a simple analytical expression where only two unknown constants are to be determined, a reference temperature and a reference pressure. The moist available enthalpy, , is defined in terms of a moist potential change in…
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