The present reflection on the development of research on carbon nanotubes (CNTs) stems from the publication of the report "Realizing the Promise of Carbon Nanotubes" by the US National Nanotechnology Initiative in 2015. The report is a critical assessment of the state-of-art of CNT research and highlights some unresolved issues related with this field. Starting from the results of this assessment, we carried out an analysis of the publications' pool in CNTs and related domains, by exploiting bibliometric tools. We focused on the item of competition/collaboration between disciplines and nations, with the purpose of evaluating the position of chemistry (as a discipline) as well as the position of the main European countries and the European Union (EU) as a whole in the context of CNT research. The results of such analysis outline very clearly the interdisciplinary landscape wherein CNT research is situated and show the highly competitive place occupied by EU in the field.
Abstract:The present work analyzes the cognitive process that led Clausius towards the translation of the Second Law of Thermodynamics into mathematical expressions. We show that Clausius' original formal expression of the Second Law was achieved by making extensive use of the concept of disgregation, a quantity which has subsequently disappeared from the thermodynamic language. Our analysis demonstrates that disgregation stands as a crucial logical step of such process and sheds light on the comprehension of such fundamental relation. The introduction of entropy-which occurred three years after the first formalization of the Second Law-was aimed at making the Second Law exploitable in practical contexts. The reasons for the disappearance of disgregation, as well as of other "pre-modern" quantities, from the thermodynamics language are discussed.
Abstract:The present work analyzes the foundations of Gibbs' thermodynamic equilibrium theory, with the general aim of understanding how the Second Law-as formulated by Clausius in 1865-has been embodied into Gibbs' formal system and extended to processes involving chemical reactions. We show that Gibbs' principle of maximal entropy (and minimal energy) is the implicit expression of Clausius' Second Law. In addition, by making explicit some implicit passages of Gibbs logical path, we provide an original formal justification of Gibbs' principle. Finally we provide an analysis of how Gibbs' principle-conceived for homogeneous isolated systems with fixed chemical composition-has come to be applied to systems entailing chemical transformations.
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