Carnot Efficiency: The Ultimate Limit for Heat Engine Performance

Carnot efficiency defines the maximum possible efficiency that any heat engine can achieve when operating between two thermal reservoirs — a hot source and a cold sink.

Key principles:

  • It was formulated by Sadi Carnot in the 19th century.
  • The Carnot efficiency depends only on the temperatures of the hot and cold reservoirs (measured in absolute units like Kelvin).
  • No real engine can exceed or even reach this efficiency due to irreversibilities (like friction and heat loss).

Why it matters:

Carnot efficiency provides a benchmark for all real-world heat engines. It shows that to improve engine efficiency, one must either increase the hot reservoir temperature or lower the cold reservoir temperature — but both come with practical limits. This principle underscores the second law of thermodynamics and the inevitable loss of usable energy in heat transfer.

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