A 200 years old fraudulent definition hiding the existence of isothermal heat engines:
"A heat engine is a system that converts heat to usable energy, particularly mechanical energy, which can then be used to do mechanical work...The heat engine does this by bringing a working substance FROM A HIGHER STATE TEMPERATURE TO A LOWER STATE TEMPERATURE." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_engine
"A NECESSARY component of a heat engine, then, is that TWO TEMPERATURES ARE INVOLVED. At one stage the system is heated, at another it is cooled." http://physics.bu.edu/~duffy/py105/Heatengines.html
"Two temperatures" are by no means "necessary". Isothermal (one-temperature) heat engines are commonplace, and all of them violate the second law of thermodynamics. For instance, pH-sensitive polymers can do work, at the expense of ambient heat, as they cyclically contract and swell (no "two temperatures" involved):
"When the pH is lowered (that is, on raising the chemical potential, μ, of the protons present) at the isothermal condition of 37°C, these matrices can exert forces, f, sufficient to lift weights that are a thousand times their dry weight." https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/12/1d/09/0fb416e99018cf/US5393602.pdf
Figure 4 here: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1367611/pdf/biophysj00645-0017.pdf
The upper picture here:
Increasing and then decreasing the concentration of the protons, if done quasistatically, involves, per se, zero net work. Accordingly, lifting the weight is the net work done by the isothermal cycle, in obvious violation of the second law of thermodynamics.
"A heat engine is a system that converts heat to usable energy, particularly mechanical energy, which can then be used to do mechanical work...The heat engine does this by bringing a working substance FROM A HIGHER STATE TEMPERATURE TO A LOWER STATE TEMPERATURE." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_engine
"A NECESSARY component of a heat engine, then, is that TWO TEMPERATURES ARE INVOLVED. At one stage the system is heated, at another it is cooled." http://physics.bu.edu/~duffy/py105/Heatengines.html
"Two temperatures" are by no means "necessary". Isothermal (one-temperature) heat engines are commonplace, and all of them violate the second law of thermodynamics. For instance, pH-sensitive polymers can do work, at the expense of ambient heat, as they cyclically contract and swell (no "two temperatures" involved):
"When the pH is lowered (that is, on raising the chemical potential, μ, of the protons present) at the isothermal condition of 37°C, these matrices can exert forces, f, sufficient to lift weights that are a thousand times their dry weight." https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/12/1d/09/0fb416e99018cf/US5393602.pdf
Figure 4 here: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1367611/pdf/biophysj00645-0017.pdf
The upper picture here:
Increasing and then decreasing the concentration of the protons, if done quasistatically, involves, per se, zero net work. Accordingly, lifting the weight is the net work done by the isothermal cycle, in obvious violation of the second law of thermodynamics.