A power transfer or energy transfer is the process of passing working energy from one system or device to another. Such transfers can be between energy types, as from electricity to mechanical motion, or within a type, from one mechanical motion to another.
For instance, a coal-fired power plant involves these power transfers:
Steam energy converted to mechanical energy in the turbine
Mechanical energy of the turbine converted to electrical energy, which is the ultimate output
In such a system, the last step is almost perfectly efficient, the first and second steps are fairly efficient, but the third step is relatively inefficient.
In a conventional automobile, these power transfers are involved:
Potential energy in the fuel converted to kinetic energy of expanding gas via combustion
Kinetic energy of expanding gas converted to linear piston movement
Linear piston movement converted to rotary crankshaft movement
Rotary crankshaft movement passed into transmission assembly
Rotary movement passed out of transmission assembly in second step
Rotary movement passed through differential
Rotary movement passed out of differential to drive wheels
Rotary movement of drive wheels converted to linear motion of the vehicle
Maximum power is transferred from the source to the load when the resistance of the load is equal to the internal resistance of the source.
The efficiency of powertransfer (ratio of output power to input power) from the source to the load increases as the load resistance is increased.
The efficiency of powertransfer is only 50 percent at the maximum powertransfer point (when the load resistance equals the internal resistance of the source).