Paul Boucherot
Encyclopedia
Paul Boucherot was an engineer
with the Chemin de Fer du Nord
(Railway of the North). He studied at the elite École supérieure de physique et de chimie industrielles de la ville de Paris
(ESPCI) where he later also taught electrical engineering
. He was a pioneer of DC electric power distribution, designed induction motors, and with Georges Claude, built early plants for obtaining thermal energy from the sea. He also contributed to electrical analysis, including the relationship between real and apparent power.
supplies to power asynchronous motor
s as early as 1894. The squirrel-cage rotor asynchronous motor was invented by Mikhail Dolivo-Dobrovolsky in 1889 and they were being built industrially from 1891. A problem with asynchronous machines is that they are difficult to start. The coupling to the rotor is weak until it gets moving and the current drawn by the motor is high. Boucherot solved this problem with his discovery of the double cage asynchronous motor in 1912. In fact, Dolivo-Dobrovolsky had already invented the double cage all the way back in 1893 but it was long since forgotten.
Reactive power is undesirable in electricity generating and transmission equipment as it leads to larger than necessary currents and hence larger than necessary losses for the distribution companies. As reactive power can be either positive or negative, this leads to the concept of cancelling it out. In most cases, the reactive power is inductive and can therefore be cancelled out with banks of capacitors. A circuit for doing this is called a Boucherot cell
.
The term Boucherot cell is sometimes also applied to circuits used to cancel the reactive part of a loudspeker load as seen by the amplifier. However a more common term for these circuits is Zobel network
, the Boucherot cell as originally devised works properly at only one spot frequency, the frequency of supply, whereas speaker impedance compensation is required to work over a wide band of frequencies. In point of fact though, neither man did any work in the field of audio reproduction; Otto Zobel's work was directed at telecommunications.
(OTEC). It was originally proposed by Jacques-Arsène d'Arsonval
in 1881.
Boucherot, together with his partner Georges Claude
built an experimental onshore plant in Cuba in 1926. The plant utilises the heat difference between the surface tropical water and cold water at depth. The pressure of the warm water is rapidly reduced in a vacuum chamber producing low pressure steam. This steam is then drawn through a turbine by the condensing action of cold water from the bottom of the plant. This system is called the Claude-Boucherot process. The plant managed to generate 22 kW but this was less than the power required to run the plant and it never succeeded in producing a net output.
Claude and Boucherot filed a number of patents concerning these plants and set about trying to raise funds to build a full scale offshore plant in the USA, presenting it as a low cost alternative to coal and oil. It was proposed that refrigeration could also be provided by the plant to semi-tropical areas of the US such as Florida and the desalinated water produced as a byproduct could be used for irrigation and fertilisation of farmland. However, the project never actually got off the ground and subsequent projects were destroyed in storms.
into the ground. It was used to transmit messages in Morse code
over distances of several kilometers.
He provided a model for the representation of magnetically coupled circuits, such as the mutual inductance between the windings of a transformer
. In a real transformer, parasitic elements are present on both windings. In Boucherot's model an equivalent circuit is developed with an ideal transformer and all the parasitic elements in just one circuit.
Engineer
An engineer is a professional practitioner of engineering, concerned with applying scientific knowledge, mathematics and ingenuity to develop solutions for technical problems. Engineers design materials, structures, machines and systems while considering the limitations imposed by practicality,...
with the Chemin de Fer du Nord
Chemin de Fer du Nord
Chemin de Fer du Nord , often referred to simply as the Nord company, was a rail transport company created in September 1845, in Paris, France. It was owned by among others de Rothschild Frères of France, N M Rothschild & Sons of London, England, Hottinger, Laffitte and Blount...
(Railway of the North). He studied at the elite École supérieure de physique et de chimie industrielles de la ville de Paris
École Supérieure de Physique et de Chimie Industrielles de la Ville de Paris
The école supérieure de physique et de chimie industrielles de la ville de Paris or ESPCI ParisTech is a chemistry and physics engineering college run by the city of Paris, France and a member of ParisTech...
(ESPCI) where he later also taught electrical engineering
Electrical engineering
Electrical engineering is a field of engineering that generally deals with the study and application of electricity, electronics and electromagnetism. The field first became an identifiable occupation in the late nineteenth century after commercialization of the electric telegraph and electrical...
. He was a pioneer of DC electric power distribution, designed induction motors, and with Georges Claude, built early plants for obtaining thermal energy from the sea. He also contributed to electrical analysis, including the relationship between real and apparent power.
Asynchronous motors
Boucherot was interested in using polyphasePolyphase
Polyphase may refer to:* Polyphase matrix, in signal processing* Polyphase system, in electrical engineering* Polyphasic sleep...
supplies to power asynchronous motor
Induction motor
An induction or asynchronous motor is a type of AC motor where power is supplied to the rotor by means of electromagnetic induction. These motors are widely used in industrial drives, particularly polyphase induction motors, because they are robust and have no brushes...
s as early as 1894. The squirrel-cage rotor asynchronous motor was invented by Mikhail Dolivo-Dobrovolsky in 1889 and they were being built industrially from 1891. A problem with asynchronous machines is that they are difficult to start. The coupling to the rotor is weak until it gets moving and the current drawn by the motor is high. Boucherot solved this problem with his discovery of the double cage asynchronous motor in 1912. In fact, Dolivo-Dobrovolsky had already invented the double cage all the way back in 1893 but it was long since forgotten.
Real and apparent power
The apparent power delivered by a generator as calculated by a simplistic multiplication of the voltage and the current is, in general, greater than the actual (real) power delivered as measured by the work done or heat produced. What is more the total apparent power consumed by two different circuits is not, in general, equal to their arithmetic sum. Boucherot developed a theorem relating real and apparent power with the introduction of a new concept, reactive power. Reactive power represents the energy stored in electric and magnetic fields and is not consumed, hence does not figure in the total of real power. Boucherot's theorem states that the total reactive power can be found by an arithmetic sum of its components and the total real power can likewise be found by an arithmetic sum of its components. The square of the total apparent power, on the other hand, is equal to the sum of the square of the total real power and the square of the total reactive power.Reactive power is undesirable in electricity generating and transmission equipment as it leads to larger than necessary currents and hence larger than necessary losses for the distribution companies. As reactive power can be either positive or negative, this leads to the concept of cancelling it out. In most cases, the reactive power is inductive and can therefore be cancelled out with banks of capacitors. A circuit for doing this is called a Boucherot cell
Boucherot cell
A boucherot cell is an electronic filter, used in audio amplifiers to damp high frequency oscillations that might occur in the absence of loads at high frequencies...
.
The term Boucherot cell is sometimes also applied to circuits used to cancel the reactive part of a loudspeker load as seen by the amplifier. However a more common term for these circuits is Zobel network
Zobel network
Zobel networks are a type of filter section based on the image impedance design principle. They are named after Otto Zobel of Bell Labs who published a much referenced paper on image filters in 1923. The distinguishing feature of Zobel networks is that the input impedance is fixed in the design...
, the Boucherot cell as originally devised works properly at only one spot frequency, the frequency of supply, whereas speaker impedance compensation is required to work over a wide band of frequencies. In point of fact though, neither man did any work in the field of audio reproduction; Otto Zobel's work was directed at telecommunications.
Tropical sea-water plant
The idea of obtaining power from the heat stored in tropical sea-water is an idea that has been resurrected in recent times and is nowadays referred to by the term Ocean Thermal Energy ConversionOcean thermal energy conversion
Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion uses the difference between cooler deep and warmer shallow or surface ocean waters to run a heat engine and produce useful work, usually in the form of electricity....
(OTEC). It was originally proposed by Jacques-Arsène d'Arsonval
Jacques-Arsène d'Arsonval
Jacques-Arsène d'Arsonval was born in La Porcherie and was a French physician, physicist and inventor of the moving-coil galvanometer and probably of the thermocouple ammeter...
in 1881.
Boucherot, together with his partner Georges Claude
Georges Claude
Georges Claude was a French engineer and inventor. He is noted for his early work on the industrial liquefaction of air, for the invention and commercialization of neon lighting, and for a large experiment on generating energy by pumping cold seawater up from the depths...
built an experimental onshore plant in Cuba in 1926. The plant utilises the heat difference between the surface tropical water and cold water at depth. The pressure of the warm water is rapidly reduced in a vacuum chamber producing low pressure steam. This steam is then drawn through a turbine by the condensing action of cold water from the bottom of the plant. This system is called the Claude-Boucherot process. The plant managed to generate 22 kW but this was less than the power required to run the plant and it never succeeded in producing a net output.
Claude and Boucherot filed a number of patents concerning these plants and set about trying to raise funds to build a full scale offshore plant in the USA, presenting it as a low cost alternative to coal and oil. It was proposed that refrigeration could also be provided by the plant to semi-tropical areas of the US such as Florida and the desalinated water produced as a byproduct could be used for irrigation and fertilisation of farmland. However, the project never actually got off the ground and subsequent projects were destroyed in storms.
Other work
During the second world war, Boucherot developed a communication system for the military which injected an oscillating electric fieldElectric field
In physics, an electric field surrounds electrically charged particles and time-varying magnetic fields. The electric field depicts the force exerted on other electrically charged objects by the electrically charged particle the field is surrounding...
into the ground. It was used to transmit messages in Morse code
Morse code
Morse code is a method of transmitting textual information as a series of on-off tones, lights, or clicks that can be directly understood by a skilled listener or observer without special equipment...
over distances of several kilometers.
He provided a model for the representation of magnetically coupled circuits, such as the mutual inductance between the windings of a transformer
Transformer
A transformer is a device that transfers electrical energy from one circuit to another through inductively coupled conductors—the transformer's coils. A varying current in the first or primary winding creates a varying magnetic flux in the transformer's core and thus a varying magnetic field...
. In a real transformer, parasitic elements are present on both windings. In Boucherot's model an equivalent circuit is developed with an ideal transformer and all the parasitic elements in just one circuit.