Abstract

The Carnot cycle and its deduction of maximum conversion efficiency of heat inputted and outputted isothermally at different temperatures necessitated the construction of isothermal and adiabatic pathways within the cycle that were mechanically “reversible”, leading eventually to the Kelvin-Clausius development of the entropy function with differential such that where the heat absorption occurs at the isothermal paths of the elementary Carnot cycle. Another required condition is that the heat transfer processes take place infinitely slowly and “reversibly”, implying that rates of transfer are not explicitly featured in the theory. The definition of ‘heat’ as that form of energy that is transferred as a result of a temperature difference suggests that the local mode of transfer of “heat” in the isothermal segments of the pathway implies a Fourier-like heat conduction mechanism which is apparently irreversible, leading to an increase in entropy of the combined reservoirs at either end of the conducting material, and which is deemed reversible mechanically. These paradoxes are circumvented here by first clarifying the terms used before modeling heat transfer as a thermodynamically reversible but mechanically irreversible process and applied to a one dimensional atomic lattice chain of interacting particles subjected to a temperature difference exemplifying Fourier heat conduction. The basis of a “recoverable trajectory” i.e. that which follows a zero entropy trajectory is identified. The Second Law is strictly maintained in this development. A corollary to this zero entropy trajectory is the generalization of the Zeroth law for steady state non-equilibrium systems with varying temperature, and thus to a statement about “equilibrium” in steady state non-thermostatic conditions. An energy transfer rate term is explicitly identified for each particle and agrees quantitatively (and independently) with the rate of heat absorbed at the reservoirs held at different temperatures and located at the two ends of the lattice chain in MD simulations, where all energy terms in the simulation refer to a single particle interacting with its neighbors. These results validate the theoretical model and provides the necessary boundary conditions (for instance with regard to temperature differentials and force fields) that thermodynamical variables must comply with to satisfy the conditions for a recoverable trajectory, and thus determines the solution of the differential and integral equations that are used to model these processes. These developments and results, if fully pursued would imply that not only can the Carnot cycle be viewed as describing a local process of energy-work conversion by a single interacting particle which feature rates of energy transfer and conversion not possible in the classical Carnot development, but that even irreversible local processes might be brought within the scope of this cycle, implying a unified treatment of thermodynamically (i) irreversible (ii) reversible (iii) isothermal and (iv) adiabatic processes by conflating the classically distinct concept of work and heat energy into a single particle interactional process. A resolution to the fundamental and long-standing conjecture of Benofy and Quay concerning the Fourier principle is one consequence of the analysis.

Highlights

  • The definition of ‘heat’ as that form of energy that is transferred as a result of a temperature difference suggests that the local mode of transfer of “heat” in the isothermal segments of the pathway implies a Fourier-like heat conduction mechanism which is apparently irreversible, leading to an increase in entropy of the combined reservoirs at either end of the conducting material, and which is deemed reversible mechanically

  • A major objective of this work is to focus on heat conduction as it directly relates to the formulation of the Second law [1] where the definition of heat is concerned, and the implications of strictly conductive heat flow on how systems may be described by reference to such a phenomenon

  • A careful restatement of conductive heat based on the Benofy and Quay (BQ) study and analysis of heat conduction [5] lead to a description of any steady state system with a temperature gradient with the fluxes obeying Onsager reciprocity conditions to any order (Sec.4, Eqs (49–54), Appendix, Eqs (A3–A6) [6]) without the use of the cardinal time-reversibility arguments which was proven to be a mathematically inappropriate and frequently incorrect concept when applied to physical systems [7, 8]

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Summary

Introduction

A major objective of this work is to focus on heat conduction as it directly relates to the formulation of the Second law [1] where the definition of heat is concerned, and the implications of strictly conductive heat flow on how systems may be described by reference to such a phenomenon. General considerations taking into account conductive heat lead to rigorous theorems that describe conditions where various minimum entropy principles obtained under stated conditions, A new formulation of statistical mechanics for such disintegrating systems had to be constructed for such non-equilibrium (NE) and irreversible phenomena (Sec. 3, Eqs 24–32 [9]). This development could be written in variational form for the class used to derive the more precise form of the Kelvin relations (Eq 1 [12]) as

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