Abstract

We derive a thermodynamic uncertainty relation (TUR) for systems with unidirectional transitions. The uncertainty relation involves a mixture of thermodynamic and dynamic terms. Namely, the entropy production from bidirectional transitions, and the net flux of unidirectional transitions. The derivation does not assume a steady-state, and the results apply equally well to transient processes with arbitrary initial conditions. As every bidirectional transition can also be seen as a pair of separate unidirectional ones, our approach is equipped with an inherent degree of freedom. Thus, for any given system, an ensemble of valid TURs can be derived. However, we find that choosing a representation that best matches the systems dynamics over the observation time will yield a TUR with a tighter bound on fluctuations. More precisely, we show a bidirectional representation should be replaced by a unidirectional one when the entropy production associated with the transitions between two states is larger than the sum of the net fluxes between them. Thus, in addition to offering TURs for systems where such relations were previously unavailable, the results presented herein also provide a systematic method to improve TUR bounds via physically motivated replacement of bidirectional transitions with pairs of unidirectional transitions. The power of our approach and its implementation are demonstrated on a model for random walk with stochastic resetting and on the Michaelis-Menten model of enzymatic catalysis.

Highlights

  • The last three decades have seen significant progress in our understanding of out-of-equilibrium systems and processes

  • We have derived a thermodynamic uncertainty relation that can be applied to models with unidirectional transitions

  • The thermodynamic uncertainty relation (TUR) turns out to depend on the entropy production of bidirectional transitions and on the total activity of the unidirectional transitions

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The last three decades have seen significant progress in our understanding of out-of-equilibrium systems and processes. While this paper was being written, Koyuk and Seifert presented a TUR that applies for processes with time-dependent rates [45] These two works significantly extend the applicability of TURs. There is still a class of systems for which the TURs do not apply, namely systems with unidirectional transitions. It was found that the addition of resetting can reduce the mean time taken to complete the search, due to elimination of realizations with extremely long search completion times This seminal result has led to an extensive research effort focused on the properties of stochastic resetting systems [68,69,70,71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78,79,80,81,82,83].

MODEL AND SETUP
TUR WITH UNIDIRECTIONAL TRANSITIONS
APPLICATIONS
Stochastic resetting systems
Enzyme kinetics
TUR for a Michaelis-Menten model
Comparison of entropic and kinetic bounds
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUDING
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