Introduction

Carnot cycle: theoretical model for heat engines. Basis for second law of thermodynamics. Determines upper limit of efficiency. Operates between two thermal reservoirs. Idealized reversible cycle. Foundation for entropy concept.

"The most efficient engine possible is the Carnot engine, operating between two heat reservoirs." -- Sadi Carnot

Historical Background

Origin

Developed by Sadi Carnot, 1824. Motivated by steam engine efficiency improvement. Preceded formal thermodynamics laws.

Context

Introduced concept of reversible processes. Formulated maximum efficiency criteria. Influenced Clausius and Kelvin's work.

Impact

Foundation for second law of thermodynamics. Inspired entropy definition. Critical in heat engine design theory.

Definition and Overview

What is Carnot Cycle?

Idealized thermodynamic cycle. Consists of two isothermal and two adiabatic processes. Reversible and cyclic. Model for ideal heat engine.

Purpose

Determines maximum theoretical efficiency. Benchmark for real engines. Illustrates entropy changes in reversible cycles.

Basic Components

Heat source at high temperature (TH). Heat sink at low temperature (TC). Working substance (usually ideal gas). Engine performing work.

Four Stages of Carnot Cycle

Isothermal Expansion

Working substance expands at constant temperature TH. Absorbs heat QH from hot reservoir. Does work on surroundings.

Adiabatic Expansion

Expansion continues without heat exchange. Temperature drops from TH to TC. Internal energy decreases.

Isothermal Compression

Substance compressed at constant temperature TC. Releases heat QC to cold reservoir. Work done on substance.

Adiabatic Compression

Compression without heat exchange. Temperature rises from TC to TH. Returns to initial state.

Thermodynamic Processes Explained

Isothermal Process

Temperature constant. Heat transfer equals work done (Q = W). Internal energy unchanged.

Adiabatic Process

No heat transfer (Q = 0). Temperature changes due to work done. Reversible if frictionless and quasi-static.

Reversibility

Processes can be reversed without net entropy change. Essential for maximum efficiency.

Efficiency of Carnot Engine

Definition

Efficiency (η) = Work output / Heat input = 1 - (QC / QH).

Temperature Relation

Efficiency depends on reservoir temperatures: η = 1 - (TC / TH). TH and TC in Kelvin.

Significance

Represents theoretical maximum efficiency. No real engine can exceed this.

ParameterDescription
QHHeat absorbed from hot reservoir
QCHeat rejected to cold reservoir
ηThermal efficiency of Carnot engine

Entropy and Reversibility

Entropy Change

Total entropy change over Carnot cycle is zero. Entropy absorbed at TH equals entropy rejected at TC.

Reversible Processes

All four stages reversible. No entropy production internally. Idealization, unattainable in practice.

Second Law Implications

Carnot cycle illustrates second law: no engine more efficient than reversible engine. Entropy increase in irreversible processes.

Mathematical Formulation

Work Done

Work during isothermal expansion/compression: W = nRT ln(Vf/Vi).

Heat Transfer

Q = W for isothermal processes (constant T).

Efficiency Formula

Derived from heat transfers and temperatures:

η = 1 - (TC / TH)

Ideal Gas Relations

For adiabatic processes: PV^γ = constant, where γ = Cp/Cv.

Practical Implications

Benchmarking Real Engines

Sets upper limit for thermal efficiency. Guides design improvements.

Heat Engine Design

Emphasizes minimizing irreversibility. Importance of thermal reservoir temperatures.

Thermodynamic Cycle Analysis

Basis for analysis of Otto, Diesel, Rankine cycles. Helps identify efficiency losses.

Limitations and Idealizations

Ideal Gas Assumption

Working substance treated as ideal gas. Real gases deviate under high pressure/temperature.

No Friction or Losses

All processes reversible with no friction. Unrealistic in practical engines.

Infinite Time

Processes assumed quasi-static, infinitely slow. Real engines operate in finite time.

Comparison with Real Engines

Typical Efficiencies

Real engines achieve 30-50% efficiency. Carnot efficiency often exceeds 60-70% for same temperatures.

Sources of Irreversibility

Friction, heat losses, finite heat transfer rates, fluid turbulence reduce efficiency.

Practical Constraints

Material limits, cost, environmental factors influence design beyond Carnot ideal.

Engine TypeTypical Efficiency (%)Carnot Efficiency (%)
Automobile Petrol Engine25-3040-45
Steam Power Plant35-4050-60
Gas Turbine30-4055-65

Applications in Engineering

Heat Engine Development

Guides design of efficient engines. Influences material and process selection.

Refrigeration Cycles

Defines coefficient of performance limits. Basis for reversed Carnot cycle.

Power Plant Optimization

Used for benchmarking and thermodynamic analysis. Identifies efficiency improvement areas.

References

  • Sadi Carnot, "Reflections on the Motive Power of Fire," Bachelier, Paris, 1824.
  • Clausius R., "The Mechanical Theory of Heat," Macmillan, 1879.
  • Callen H.B., "Thermodynamics and an Introduction to Thermostatistics," Wiley, 1985, pp. 100-130.
  • Van Wylen G.J., Sonntag R.E., "Fundamentals of Classical Thermodynamics," Wiley, 1985, pp. 150-175.
  • Bejan A., "Advanced Engineering Thermodynamics," Wiley, 1997, pp. 200-240.