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Our Bodies Convert Concetrated Energy to Useless Low-Grade Energy

Animals, plants, and humans, use energy changes to move, grow, catch food, and make more of themselves. Cellular respiration is the process by which most living things convert concentrated food energy into work and thermal energy (often called heat), just as car and truck engines convert fuel energy into work and thermal energy (still often called heat). Our bodies do this by controlling complex chemical reactions in which concentrated energy is carefully moved from higher molecular bond energy levels to lower molecular bond energies. On the way, some of the energy (not all) is captured by ATP molecules and used by our cells to do the useful things described above.

When you exercise, some of the food energy gets converted into muscle work, but most of it gets converted to what we engineers call low-grade thermal energy. That's why you get all hot and sweaty. In fact, more than 60% of the food energy is converted to body-warming sweat-making thermal energy during metabolism of food energy. That leaves only 40% to do useful work in the cells. If you also figure in the energy required to digest the food and to pump it around in blood to all the cells, the final number can be significantly less than 40%. That's about the same as many of our human-made engines.

And, as with human-made machines and devices, all of the mechanical work done by the cells also ends up as low-grade heat (thermal energy), lost to us forever. The total amount of energy hasn't changed (1st law), but we can't use it anymore (2nd Law).

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