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Second law Clausius

The work of Carnot, published in 1824, and later the work of Clausius (1850) and Kelvin (1851), advanced the formulation of the properties of entropy and temperature and the second law. Clausius introduced the word entropy in 1865. The first law expresses the qualitative equivalence of heat and work as well as the conservation of energy. The second law is a qualitative statement on the accessibility of energy and the direction of progress of real processes. For example, the efficiency of a reversible engine is a function of temperature only, and efficiency cannot exceed unity. These statements are the results of the first and second laws, and can be used to define an absolute scale of temperature that is independent of ary material properties used to measure it. A quantitative description of the second law emerges by determining entropy and entropy production in irreversible processes. [Pg.13]

In the discussions of the second law, Clausius introduced the quantity entropy (S) that remained unchanged over a cycle. Entropy is considered as a... [Pg.85]


See other pages where Second law Clausius is mentioned: [Pg.444]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.12 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.249 ]




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