Carnot's theorem, also called Carnot's rule or Carnot's law, is a principle of thermodynamics developed by Nicolas Léonard Sadi Carnot in 1824 that specifies limits on the maximum efficiency that any heat engine can obtain.
Carnot's theorem states that all heat engines operating between the same two thermal or heat reservoirs cannot have efficiencies greater than a reversible heat engine operating between the same reservoirs. A corollary of this theorem is that every reversible heat engine operating between a pair of heat reservoirs is equally efficient, regardless of the working substance employed or the operation details. Since a Carnot heat engine is also a reversible engine, the efficiency of all the reversible heat engines is determined as the efficiency of the Carnot heat engine that depends solely on the temperatures of its hot and cold reservoirs.
The maximum efficiency (i.e., the Carnot heat engine efficiency) of a heat engine operating between hot and cold reservoirs, denoted as and respectively, is the ratio of the temperature difference between the reservoirs to the hot reservoir temperature, expressed in the equation
is greater than zero if and only if there is a temperature difference between the two thermal reservoirs. Since is the upper limit of all reversible and irreversible heat engine efficiencies, it is concluded that work from a heat engine can be produced if and only if there is a temperature difference between two thermal reservoirs connecting to the engine.
Carnot's theorem is a consequence of the second law of thermodynamics. Historically, it was based on contemporary caloric theory, and preceded the establishment of the second law.
where represents heat, denotes input to an object, for output from an object, and for the hot thermal reservoir. If heat flows from the hot reservoir then it has the sign of + while if flows from the hot reservoir then it has the sign of -. This expression can be easily derived by using the definition of the efficiency of a heat engine, , where work and heat in this expression are net quantities per engine cycle, and the conservation of energy for each engine as shown below. The sign convention of work , with which the sign of + for work done by an engine to its surroundings, is employed.
The above expression means that heat into the hot reservoir from the engine pair (can be considered as a single engine) is greater than heat into the engine pair from the hot reservoir (i.e., the hot reservoir continuously gets energy). A reversible heat engine with a low efficiency delivers more heat (energy) to the hot reservoir for a given amount of work (energy) to this engine when it is being driven as a heat pump. All these mean that heat can transfer from cold to hot places without external work, and such a heat transfer is impossible by the second law of thermodynamics.
Let's find the values of work and heat depicted in the right figure in which a reversible heat engine with a less efficiency is driven as a heat pump by a heat engine with a more efficiency .
The definition of the efficiency is for each engine and the following expressions can be made:
The denominator of the second expression, , is made to make the expression to be consistent, and it helps to fill the values of work and heat for the engine .
For each engine, the absolute value of the energy entering the engine, , must be equal to the absolute value of the energy leaving from the engine, . Otherwise, energy is continuously accumulated in an engine or the conservation of energy is violated by taking more energy from an engine than input energy to the engine:
In the second expression, is used to find the term describing the amount of heat taken from the cold reservoir, completing the absolute value expressions of work and heat in the right figure.
Having established that the right figure values are correct, Carnot's theorem may be proven for irreversible and the reversible heat engines as shown below.
The reversible heat engine efficiency can be determined by analyzing a Carnot heat engine as one of reversible heat engine.
This conclusion is an important result because it helps establish the Clausius theorem, which implies that the change in entropy is unique for all reversible processes:
as the entropy change, that is made during a transition from a thermodynamic equilibrium state to a state in a V-T (Volume-Temperature) space, is the same over all reversible process paths between these two states. If this integral were not path independent, then entropy would not be a state function.http://faculty.wwu.edu/vawter/PhysicsNet/Topics/ThermLaw2/ThermalProcesses.html , and http://www.itp.phys.ethz.ch/education/hs10/stat/slides/Laws_TD.pdf . Both retrieved 13 December 2013.
where is the work done by the engine, is the heat to the cold reservoir from the engine, and is the heat to the engine from the hot reservoir, per cycle. Thus, the efficiency depends only on . The sign of qC > 0 for the waste heat lost by the system violates the sign convention of heat.
Because all reversible heat engines operating between temperatures and must have the same efficiency, the efficiency of a reversible heat engine is a function of only the two reservoir temperatures:
In addition, a reversible heat engine operating between temperatures and must have the same efficiency as one consisting of two cycles, one between and another (intermediate) temperature , and the second between and (). This can only be the case if
Specializing to the case that is a fixed reference temperature: the temperature of the triple point of water as 273.16. (Of course any reference temperature and any positive numerical value could be used — the choice here corresponds to the Kelvin scale.) Then for any and ,
Therefore, if thermodynamic temperature is defined by
then the function viewed as a function of thermodynamic temperature, is
Substituting this equation back into the above equation gives a relationship for the efficiency in terms of thermodynamic temperatures:
A Carnot battery is a type of energy storage system that stores electricity in thermal energy storage and converts the stored heat back to electricity through thermodynamic cycles.
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