Crash Course Engineering

Reversibility & Irreversibility

How do we design the most efficient machines and processes? Today we’ll try to figure that out as we discuss heat & work, reversibility & irreversibility, and how to use efficiency to measure a system.

Reversibility & Irreversibility

11m 5s

  • Metals & Ceramics: Crash Course Engineering #19: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Metals & Ceramics: Crash Course Engineering #19

    S1 E19 - 10m 3s

    Today we’ll explore more about two of the three main types of materials that we use as engineers: metals and ceramics. We’ll discuss properties of metals, alloys, ceramics, clay, cement, and glass-ceramic materials. We’ll also look at the applications of our materials with microelectromechanical systems and accelerometers.

  • Reaching breaking point: Materials, Stresses, and Toughness:: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Reaching breaking point: Materials, Stresses, and Toughness:

    S1 E18 - 11m 23s

    Today we’re going to start thinking about materials that are used in engineering. We’ll look at mechanical properties of materials, stress-strain diagrams, elasticity and toughness, and describe other material properties like hardness, creep strength, and fatigue strength.

  • Mass Separation: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Mass Separation

    S1 E17 - 11m 16s

    Engineers use three processes to separate chemicals: distillation, which separates substances based on their different boiling points; liquid-liquid extraction, which uses differences in solubility to transfer a contaminant into a solvent; and reverse osmosis, which filters molecules from a solvent by pressurizing it through a semipermeable barrier.

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