Paul Boucherot AKA Paul Marie Joachim Boucherot Born: 3-Oct-1869 Birthplace: Paris, France Died: 7-Aug-1943 Location of death: Ardentes, France Cause of death: unspecified Remains: Buried, Cimetière du Père Lachaise, Paris, France
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Occupation: Engineer, Inventor Nationality: France Executive summary: Ocean thermal energy conversion French engineer Paul Boucherot invented the double-cage rotor that made self-starting induction motors possible -- before his work, ignition of an induction motor required a separate (and expensive) attachment. He studied the conduction of electrical energy, was a proponent of alternating current (AC), and calculated what is now called Boucherot's theorem, which defines the total reactive power of a closed AC system. Working with physicist Georges Claude, Boucherot designed a machine to exploit the difference between sea surface and deep undersea water temperatures to trigger flash evaporation for generating electricity. Though their ocean thermal energy conversion (OTEC) was beyond the technology of their time, it is presently being studied for development by the US National Renewable Energy Laboratory. University: École Normale Supérieure Teacher: Electrical Engineering, École Normale Supérieure
French Legion of Honor French Ancestry
Author of books:
Notice sur les Travaux Scientifiques et Techniques de P. Boucherot (Notice on the Scientific and Technical Work of P. Boucherot) (1924)
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