science
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Dissemination of Gibbs’s work (Path 1): Gibbs ➔ Maxwell ➔ Pupin ➔ Helmholtz ➔ van’t Hoff ➔ community
Gibbs’ work spread throughout Europe along two separate paths. As already mentioned (here), the first started with Maxwell. It was his book that indirectly led Gibbs’s work to Helmholtz along an interesting path taken by Michael Pupin (1858-1935).[1] As a doctoral student in experimental physics at the University of Berlin under Helmholtz, Pupin was familiar… Continue reading
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Clausius: “The entropy of the universe tends to a maximum” – a statement built on an assumption
Before continuing my journey into the thermodynamic world of J. Willard Gibbs, I wanted to take a step back and revisit Rudolf Clausius’s final sentence in his ninth and final memoir on the mechanical theory of heat (here is link to all nine memoirs that ran from 1850 to 1865). Clausius’s Ninth Memoir Realizing that… Continue reading
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My favorite graph of J. Willard Gibbs

To truly understand Gibbs’s groundbreaking 3rd paper on thermodynamics “On the Equilibrium of Heterogeneous Substances” (1875-1878), one should first read his first two papers (1872, 1873) to gain proper background and context. [1] Gibbs’ first two papers and the rise of graphical techniques There’s opportunity at interfaces. If you want to find a fertile field… Continue reading
Block by Block – The Historical and Theoretical Foundations of Thermodynamics. “Hanlon has written a masterpiece.” – Mike Pauken, Senior Engineer, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and author of Thermodynamics for Dummies

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About Me

Hi! I’m Bob Hanlon. After earning my Sc.D. in chemical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and enjoying a long career in both industry and academia, I’ve returned to school, my own self-guided school, seeking to better understand the world of thermodynamics. Please join me on my journey.

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