energief
Energief is a hypothetical energy-efficiency metric used in energy-systems analysis and education to compare how effectively different technologies deliver useful energy to end users. In its simplest form, energief is a dimensionless ratio defined as energief = useful energy delivered (Qout) divided by total primary energy input (Ein). In single-service systems, energief typically satisfies Qout ≤ Ein, so the value is at or below 1.0, with 1.0 representing a theoretical maximum where no losses occur. In multi-output or multi-service contexts, energief can exceed 1.0 if multiple useful outputs are counted against the same input, depending on the normalization used.
Origins and use in literature are informal rather than standardized. Energief has been discussed in theoretical
Measurement and interpretation pose challenges. Defining useful energy, service requirements, and system boundaries varies by application
Related concepts include energy efficiency, exergy, COP (coefficient of performance), and EER (energy-efficiency ratio). Energief is