Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Physics 212 Lecture: "Carnot's Principle and Efficiency of Heat Engines."
Jan 30, 1998
- A reversible engine is one which does work only via
reversible processes: those which leave the engine
and its surroundings in the same state as it starts.
- Carnot's Principle is
Any irreversible engine operating between two heat
reservoirs will have a lower efficiency that a reversible
engine acting between the same reservoirs.
- Reversible (or Carnot) engines have a simple relationship between
efficiency and the temperatures of their reservoirs.
- One can run a heat engine "backwards" by feeding it energy
as an input, and create a temperature difference as the result.
We call such "backwards" heat engines "refrigerators."
This lecture discusses material in Chapter 15 of Cutnell and Johnson.
Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.