Clausius Implies That Nearly Anything Can Be A Thermometer
Wayne M. Saslow

TL;DR
The paper demonstrates that, based on Clausius' thermodynamic principles, nearly any stable material can serve as a thermometer by using heat flow measurements and the Clausius condition, potentially improving temperature measurement accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces a method to derive temperature scales from the Clausius condition applicable to any stable material, expanding the concept of thermometry beyond traditional models.
Findings
Any stable material can be used as a thermometer.
The method can improve measurement accuracy by combining proxy scales with Clausius-based calibration.
The approach generalizes thermometry using thermodynamic principles.
Abstract
There are three types of thermometries. One is a proxy, such as the purely phenomenological resistivity. More fundamental are those based on thermodynamics, as in the Carnot cycle, and those based on statistical mechanics, such as the ideal gas law. With heat flow and temperature , a temperature scale in principle (but not in practice) can be based on the simple Carnot cycle relation , with a temperature specified. More generally, a thermodynamics based temperature scale may be determined by the Clausius condition for every closed path in a given region of - space. Taking a discretized grid (from which such closed paths can be composed), for some parametrized model temperature function a root-mean-square minimization of yields the best set of model 's parameters.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Phase Equilibria and Thermodynamics · Chemical Thermodynamics and Molecular Structure
