Continuity and boundary conditions in thermodynamics: From Carnot's efficiency to efficiencies at maximum power
Henni Ouerdane, Yann Apertet, Christophe Goupil, Philippe Lecoeur

TL;DR
This paper reviews the evolution of thermodynamic efficiency concepts from Carnot's ideal to maximum power efficiencies, emphasizing the role of boundary conditions and continuity, illustrated through thermoelectric generators.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive historical overview and demonstrates how boundary conditions influence efficiency limits in thermodynamics, using thermoelectric generators as a case study.
Findings
Boundary conditions are crucial in understanding efficiency limits.
The shift from Carnot to maximum power efficiency is natural with proper boundary considerations.
Thermoelectric generators exemplify the impact of boundary conditions on thermodynamic performance.
Abstract
[...] By the beginning of the 20th century, the principles of thermodynamics were summarized into the so-called four laws, which were, as it turns out, definitive negative answers to the doomed quests for perpetual motion machines. As a matter of fact, one result of Sadi Carnot's work was precisely that the heat-to-work conversion process is fundamentally limited; as such, it is considered as a first version of the second law of thermodynamics. Although it was derived from Carnot's unrealistic model, the upper bound on the thermodynamic conversion efficiency, known as the Carnot efficiency, became a paradigm as the next target after the failure of the perpetual motion ideal. In the 1950's, Jacques Yvon published a conference paper containing the necessary ingredients for a new class of models, and even a formula, not so different from that of Carnot's efficiency, which later would…
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