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Pavel Yablochkov
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Pavel Nikolayevich Yablochkov (also as Jablochkoff; ; – ) was a Russian electrical engineer, businessman and the inventor of the Yablochkov candle, a type of electric carbon .


Biography
Yablochkov graduated in 1866 as a military engineer from Nikolayev Engineering Institute, now Military Engineering-Technical University (Russian ), and in 1869 from Technical Galvanic School in . After serving in the army, Yablochkov settled in in 1873, where he was appointed Head of Office at the Moscow- railroad. He opened up a workshop for his experiments in electrical engineering, which laid down the foundations for his future inventions in the field of electric , electric machines, and accumulators.

Yablochkov’s major invention was the first model of an that eliminated the mechanical complexity of competing lights that required a regulator to manage the voltaic arc. He went to the same year where he built an industrial sample of the "electric candle" ( № 112024, 1876). It was in Paris that he developed his arc light idea into a complete system of electric lighting powered by Zénobe Gramme direct current dynamos fitted with an inverter to supply single-phase alternating current. The first public use of the Yablochkov system was in October 1877 at Halle Marengo of the Magasins du Louvre which was lit by six Yablochkov candles. By 1880, the system had grown in size to 120 lamps with 84 lit at a time powered by a 100-horsepower steam engine and had been operating every night for two and one half years. The Paris Exposition of 1878 presented Yablochkov with the unique opportunity to make a spectacular demonstration for a world audience, and through the promotional efforts of Gramme was successful in having 64 of his installed along the half mile (0.8 km) length of Avenue de l'Opéra, Place du Théâtre Français (today Place André-Malraux) and around the Place de l'Opéra. It was first lit in February 1878. Yablochkov candles required high voltage, and it was not long before experimenters reported that the arc lights could be powered on a 7-mile (11 km) circuit. Yablochkov candles were superior to Lontin-Serrin regulator arc lights that each required a separate Gramme generator. Beginning in 1880, the Paris Hippodrome's 20 Serrin lights powered by 20 generators were replaced by 68 additional Yablochkov candles, based on two years of positive experience with 60 candles powered by just three generators. The impact of the 1878 Paris demonstration was a depression in the value of gas company shares which did not recover until 1880. French, , and businessmen quickly set up companies licensing Yablochkov's patents.

As part of his arc lighting patents, Yablochkov described a method of employing 's discovery of induction to create a continuous current of higher voltage, where primary windings were connected to a source of alternating current and secondary windings could be connected to several electric "candles". Although it was not recognized at the time, Yablochkov's idea of using to provide different voltages from the same AC line was the model that modern transmission and distribution systems would settle on. As the patent said such a system "allowed to provide separate supply to several lighting fixtures with different luminous intensities from a single source of electric power". In 1879, Yablochkov established “Electric Lighting Company, P.N. Yablochkov the Inventor and Co” and an electrical plant in Petersburg that would later produce illuminators for military and factories. There was considerable international competition to his arc lights. His lasted only one and a half hours

(1884). 9780548996706, D. Appleton and company. .
whereas those of Charles F. Brush lasted twice as long. From the mid-1880s, Yablochkov mostly occupied himself with problems of generating electric . He constructed the so-called “magnet dynamo electric machine”, which had most of the features of the modern . Yablochkov did extensive research on transformation of fuel energy into electric energy, suggested a galvanic cell with , and created a regenerative cell (the so-called autoaccumulator).

Yablochkov participated in Electrical engineering exhibitions in (1880 and 1882), Paris (1881 and 1889), and First International Congress of (1881). For participation in the exhibition and congress, he was awarded the French Order of the Legion of Honor.


Personal life
Yablochkov was an active . He was initiated in 1876 into the Supreme Council of France of the . After being "Worshipful Master" of three lodges in , he created a new lodge under the Supreme Council known as "Cosmos" in 25 June 1887. Through this he hoped to attract young and wealthy Russian emigrants in Paris. One member of his lodge was Maksim Kovalevsky, who would later help bring Freemasonry back to Russia and prepare the groundwork for the foundation of the Grand Orient of Russia's Peoples.


Legacy
In 1947, the introduced the Yablochkov Award for the best work in the field of electrical engineering.

The crater Yablochkov on the is named after him. File:Saratov. Memorial plate Yablochkova.JPG|A memorial plaque on the facade of house No. 35 at the corner of M. Gorky and Yablochkov streets (Saratov) File:Pamjatnik Jablochkov.jpeg|Monument on the grave of P. N. Yablochkov (Sapozhok village, Rtischevsky district)


See also


Further reading
  • A biographical research of the life of Pavel Nikolayevich Yablockkov by Prof. Lev Davidovich Belkind

==Gallery==

where Yablochkov lived at the end of his life.]]

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