Mark Gerstein

22%
Flag icon
Diesel started from first scientific principles. He became obsessed with the thermodynamics of the Carnot cycle, a theoretical idea by which an internal-combustion engine could reach 100 per cent efficiency, turning heat into work without changing temperature. In the 1890s he strove to get some way towards this goal by inventing an engine that used excess air and high compression, so that the fuel was ignited purely by compression, rather than a spark.
How Innovation Works: And Why It Flourishes in Freedom
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview