this is the book. I had to have it for all homework and classwork. The book itself was ~$650 and the property tables that was required was ~$50. Amazon didn't have it at the time and I panicked and bought it at an off campus bookstore since the professor had homework due the next class period. Since the book was new, as in published that year, no place around me had used editions. So yep, dumbass over here threw down ~$700 for a book. Thankfully the professor said the book would be used throughout the rest of my heat courses (hopefully).
It is this one, it is really a great book.
Nope. I'm referring to Carnot efficiency. If you have found a way around this, you will win a Nobel and a few other prizes, and revolutionize humanity as we know it.
If you are interested, look into a good thermo text. I use this one for most of the classes I teach:
http://www.amazon.com/Thermodynamics-Engineering-Approach-Yunus-Cengel/dp/0073398179
Including in this this class: http://www.colorado.edu/catalog/2012-13/courses/engr/b-mcen/3032-thermodynamics-2