Sadi Carnot

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Sadi Carnot was a learned French scientist who founded modern thermodynamics

Jun 1, 1796

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: June 1, 1796
  • Died on: August 24, 1832
  • Nationality: French
  • Famous: Physicists, Scientists, Scientists, Physicists
  • Siblings: Hippolyte Carnot
  • Universities:
    • École Polytechnique
    • École Royale du Génie
    • Sorbonne
    • Collège de France
  • Birth Place: Luxembourg Palace

Sadi Carnot born at

Luxembourg Palace

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Birth Place

Childhood & Early LifeNamed after the Persian poet Sadi of Shiraz, Nicolas Léonard Sadi Carnot was popularly known by his third given name. His father, Lazare Nicholas Marguerite Carnot was an eminent military leader and geometer. Young Carnot’s early life was an unfortunate one, filled with turbulence and turmoil. The family suffered monetarily, what with his father first being exiled, then returned to be appointed as Napoleon’s minister of war and later being forced to resign. It was only in 1812 that Sadi Carnot’s life improved a bit, with his enrolment at the École polytechnique. The institute, famous for its exceptionally excellent education, had names of the great scientists, such as Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac, Siméon Denis Poisson and André-Marie Ampère, in its faculty list. As such, Carnot’s years at the institute directed the course of his life later. Carnot became an officer in the French army and served the same until 1814. The same year, he graduated from École polytechnique, after which he went to École du Génie atMetz undertaking a two-year course in military engineering. In 1815, Napoleon returned from exile only to be defeated later the same year. Senior Carnot, who was appointed minister of the interior, was soon deported which led to his shifting base to Germany, never to return to France. His younger son, Hippolyte Carnot, gave him company in Germany. During this time, Sadi Carnot, too, wasn’t very happy with his life on the professional front. Though he had the job of inspecting fortifications, drawing up plans and writing reports, his recommendations were mistreated and ignored. Due to his lack of promotion and inability to find himself a job that helped him make use of his training, in 1819, Carnot gave an examination to join the then formed General Staff Corps in Paris. Fortunately he passed the paper and took up the job. During this time, Carnot began to attend courses at various institutions in Paris, including the Sorbonne and the Collège de France. It was then that his interest in industrial problems grew and he began to study the theory of gases. Carnot’s visit to his father in the latter’s exiled home in Magdeburg in 1821 can be counted as one of the most important events in his life. Three years earlier, the first steam engine had arrived at Magdeburg and had captured the interest of Lazare Carnot so deeply that he shared the information with his son. The father-son duo spent major part of their day discussing the working and functioning of steam engines. Inspired and excited, Carnot returned to Paris with an aim of developing a theory for steam engine.Later LifeHis venture towards developing a theory for steam engine led to the discovery of the mathematical theory of heat and helped start the modern theory of thermodynamics. Until then, no research discovered the fundamental scientific principles behind the operation. Most scientists believed in caloric theory, which maintained heat was an invisible liquid that flowed when it was out of balance. Carnot wanted to use his research to improve the efficiency of steam engines. His first major work was a paper that he penned in 1822-23. It contained a mathematical expression for the work produced by one kilogram of steam. However, this paper was never published and was discovered in the manuscript form only in 1966. In 1823, after the death of Lazare Carnot, Hippolyte Carnot returned to Paris and helped Sadi Carnot, who was then working on the book on steam engines aiming to answer two questions. Firstly, whether there was an upper limit to the power of heat, and secondly whether there was a better means than steam to produce this power. It was in 1824 that Carnot published his work, Réflexions sur la puissance motrice du feu et sur les machines propres à développer cette puissance (Reflections on the Motive Power of Fire). The book contained details of his research and presented a well-reasoned theoretical treatment for the perfect heat engine, presently known as the Carnot cycle. His Work - Reflections on the Motive Power of FireWhile the book dealt with a wide range of topics about heat engine, the most important section was the one that was dedicated to an abstract presentation of an idealized engine, which could be used to understand and clarify the fundamental principles that are generally applied to all heat engines, independent of their design. Arguably, the most significant contribution that Carnot made to thermodynamics was his abstraction of the essential features of the steam engine. The same resulted in a model thermodynamic system based on which exact calculations could be made. The Carnot cycle is, perhaps, one of the most proficient possible engines, as it not only emits friction and other incidental wasteful processes, but also assumes no conduction of heat between parts of the engine at different temperatures. Carnot knew that the conduction of heat between bodies at different temperatures is a wasteful and irreversible process, and thus must be eliminated if the heat engine is to achieve maximum efficiency.As for the second question, he was certain that the level of utmost efficiency did not depend on the nature of the working fluid. He predicted that the efficiency of an idealized engine depended only on the temperature of its hottest and coldest parts and not on the substance that drove the mechanism. Carnot also introduced the concept of reversibility in his book, according to which motive power could be used to produce the temperature difference in the engine,a concept subsequently known as thermodynamic reversibility. Though formulated in terms of caloric, rather than entropy, this was an early rendition of the second law of thermodynamics. Though Sadi Carnot’s book garnered excellent reviews as soon as it was published, it acclaimed public attention only after Clapeyron published an analytic reformulation of it in 1834. Carnot's ideas were later incorporated into the thermodynamic theory of Clausius and Thomson.DeathA cholera epidemic of 1832 cost Carnot his life. Due to the contagious nature of the disease, many of Carnot’s belongings and writings were buried along with him as a means of curtailing the spread of the disease. It is due to this reason that only a handful of Carnot’s scientific writings have survived.

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