closecloseaboutactivitiessocietyinventorstechnologyphysicsHomesitemaphelpsearchsettingsprint version



Nicolas Léonard Sadi Carnot (1796-1832)

Source: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/
Acropolis/6914/termode.htm

A French scientist, physicist and military engineer. He was mostly known as the founder of the science of Thermodynamics.

Carnot was born on June 1,1796, in Paris, France. His father was Lazare Nicolas Marguerite Carnot.

At the age of eighteen, Sadi Carnot studied and graduated from École Polytechnique. Then, in the same year, he commissioned in Napoleon's army. After Waterloo, his father was exiled, and Carnot's army career and studies were interrupted for many years. Following his retirement as an army officer, he began studying and working on the processes involved in the operation of steam engines. In 1824, he described his interpretation of the perfect engine, with the Carnot engine. In this device, all available source of energy is utilized. He discovered that heat could not be transmitted form a colder to a warmer object and that the efficiency of an engine relies on the amount of heat it is capable of employing. This discovery was known as the Carnot cycle and is the basis of the second law of thermodynamics. It was an outstanding contribution to the theory of heat engines. He was able to anticipate this law with the first theoretical explanation of the efficiency of reversible steam engines.

In that same year (1824), he published his researches in his book Reflections on the Motive Power of the Fire. In that time, his discoveries and work were largely ignored. However, by 1834, they were recognized and accepted by society. In addition, his views were even incorporated in the thermodynamic theory, which was developed, in 1850, by Rudolf Clausius in Germany and Lord Kelvin in Britain. This work demonstrated that his contributions to understanding and interpreting the nature and mechanical equivalent of heat antedated those of Lord Kelvin, Julius Robert von Mayer, and James Prescott Joule.

Nicolas L. Sadi Carnot died on August 24, 1832, in Paris.




Search...
Links about "Carnot"

Ideal Heat Engine Gas Cycles
http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~vawter/PhysicsNet/Topics/ThermLaw2/Entropy/GasCycleEngines.html
Language: English | Rating: 4.884 | Hits: 5793 | Status: broken? | founder: sye
Description and graphs of ideal heat engine gas cycles.

thermodynamik-waermelehre
http://didaktik.physik.uni-wuerzburg.de/~pkrahmer/home/thermo.html
Language: German | Rating: 5.093 | Hits: 3021 | Status: broken? | founder: sye
Riesige Link-Liste zum Thema Thermodynamik

Carnot Cycle (Heat Engine)
http://didaktik.physik.uni-wuerzburg.de/~pkrahmer/ntnujava/carnot/carnot.html
Language: English | Rating: 5.063 | Hits: 929 | Status: broken? | founder: other
Java applet of Carnot engine

  1. to 3. Link of 3 possible Links. 

Add Link


User-Files about "Carnot"

No User-Files about "Carnot"

Upload File




Top


© 2000 by ThinkQuest team C006011


Thermodynamik

First Experiments
Steam engines
Stirling engine
Internal Combustion engine
Steam turbines
Gas turbines

Biography Heron of Alexandria
Biography Otto von Guericke
Biography Thomas Newcomen
Biography James Watt
Biography Sadi Carnot
Biography Rudolf Diesel
Biography Felix Wankel

Society and engines
Environment

Explore
Settings
Print version
Add Contents to this website
Add Link to this website
Forum
Search the site

Help
About us
References
Sitemap
Animations
Feedback
E-mail

Basics
The 4 Laws of Thermodynamics
Carnot Cycle

Heron u.a.
Guericke

Papin
Savery
Newcomen
Watt
Steam trains
Steam cars
Steam boats

Huygens
Gas engines
Otto engine
Multiple-cylinder engines
2-stroke engine
Diesel engine
Wankel engine

watt
otto

Cubic capacity
Guericke
order p-V diagrams
Sound