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Caloric Theory





EARLY HISTORY

In the History Of Thermodynamics , the initial explanations of heat were thoroughly confused with explanations of Combustion . After J. J. Becher and Georg Ernst Stahl introduced the Phlogiston theory of combustion in the 17th Century , phlogiston was thought to be the ''substance of heat''.

The caloric theory was introduced by Antoine Lavoisier . Lavoisier had discovered the explanation of combustion in terms of Oxygen in the 1770s . In his book ''Réflexions sur le phlogistique'' ( 1783 ), Lavoisier argued that phlogiston theory was inconsistent with his experimental results, and proposed a 'subtle fluid' called caloric as the ''substance of heat''. According to this theory, the quantity of this substance is constant throughout the universe, and it flows from warmer to colder bodies.

Since heat was a material substance in caloric theory, and therefore could neither be created nor destroyed, Conservation of heat was a central assumption.

The introdution of the Caloric theory was also influenced by the experiments of . The two theories were considered to be equivalent at the time, but caloric theory was the more modern one, as it used a few ideas from atomic theory and could explain both combustion and calorimetry.


SUCCESSES

Quite a number of successful explanations can be, and were, made from these hypotheses alone. We can understand why a cup of ) to regions less dense in caloric (the cooler Air in the room).

We can explain the expansion of air under heat: caloric is absorbed into the Molecule s of air, which increases its Volume . If we say a little more about what happens to caloric during this absorption phenomenon, we can explain the Radiation of heat, the State Changes of matter under various temperatures, and deduce nearly all of the Gas Law s.

Sadi Carnot developed his principle of the Carnot Cycle , which As Of 2005 still forms the basis of Heat Engine theory, solely from the caloric viewpoint.

However, one of the greatest confirmations of the caloric theory was Pierre-Simon Laplace 's theoretical correction of Sir Isaac Newton ’s ''pulse equation''. Laplace, a calorist, added a constant to Newton’s equation, which we refer to today as the Adiabatic Index of a Gas . This addition not only substantially corrected the theoretical prediction of the Speed Of Sound , but also continued to make even more accurate predictions for almost a century afterward, even as measurements of the index became more precise.


LATER DEVELOPMENTS

In 1798 , Count Rumford published '' An Experimental Enquiry Concerning The Source Of The Heat Which Is Excited By Friction '', a report on his investigation of the heat produced while Manufacturing Cannon s. He had found that Boring a cannon repeatedly does not result in a loss of its ability to produce heat, and therefore no loss of caloric. This suggested that caloric could not be a conserved "substance" though the experimental uncertainties in his experiment were widely debated.

His results were not seen as a "threat" to caloric theory at the time, as this theory was considered to be equivalent to the alternative Kinetic Theory . In fact, to some of his contemporaries, the results added to the understanding of caloric theory.

Rumford's experiment inspired the work of James Prescott Joule and others towards the middle of the 19th century. In 1850 , Rudolf Clausius published a paper showing that the two theories were indeed compatible, as long as the calorists' principle of the conservation of heat was replaced by a principle of Conservation Of Energy . In this way, the caloric theory was absorbed into the annals of physics, and evolved into modern Thermodynamics , in which heat is the Kinetic Energy of molecules.


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