Distinguishing between Clausius, Boltzmann and Pauling Entropies of Frozen Non-Equilibrium States

In conventional textbook thermodynamics, entropy is a quantity that may be calculated by different methods, for example experimentally from heat capacities (following Clausius) or statistically from numbers of microscopic quantum states (following Boltzmann and Planck). It had turned out that these...

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Main Author: Rainer Feistel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-08-01
Series:Entropy
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/21/8/799
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spelling doaj-76c6b993972241419dadec902403312a2020-11-25T02:09:31ZengMDPI AGEntropy1099-43002019-08-0121879910.3390/e21080799e21080799Distinguishing between Clausius, Boltzmann and Pauling Entropies of Frozen Non-Equilibrium StatesRainer Feistel0Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research IOW, 18119 Rostock, GermanyIn conventional textbook thermodynamics, entropy is a quantity that may be calculated by different methods, for example experimentally from heat capacities (following Clausius) or statistically from numbers of microscopic quantum states (following Boltzmann and Planck). It had turned out that these methods do not necessarily provide mutually consistent results, and for equilibrium systems their difference was explained by introducing a residual zero-point entropy (following Pauling), apparently violating the Nernst theorem. At finite temperatures, associated statistical entropies which count microstates that do not contribute to a body’s heat capacity, differ systematically from Clausius entropy, and are of particular relevance as measures for metastable, frozen-in non-equilibrium structures and for symbolic information processing (following Shannon). In this paper, it is suggested to consider Clausius, Boltzmann, Pauling and Shannon entropies as distinct, though related, physical quantities with different key properties, in order to avoid confusion by loosely speaking about just “entropy” while actually referring to different kinds of it. For instance, zero-point entropy exclusively belongs to Boltzmann rather than Clausius entropy, while the Nernst theorem holds rigorously for Clausius rather than Boltzmann entropy. The discussion of those terms is underpinned by a brief historical review of the emergence of corresponding fundamental thermodynamic concepts.https://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/21/8/799empirical entropystatistical entropyresidual entropyNernst theoremPauling entropymetastable statesnon-equilibriumfrozen statessymbolic informationShannon entropy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rainer Feistel
spellingShingle Rainer Feistel
Distinguishing between Clausius, Boltzmann and Pauling Entropies of Frozen Non-Equilibrium States
Entropy
empirical entropy
statistical entropy
residual entropy
Nernst theorem
Pauling entropy
metastable states
non-equilibrium
frozen states
symbolic information
Shannon entropy
author_facet Rainer Feistel
author_sort Rainer Feistel
title Distinguishing between Clausius, Boltzmann and Pauling Entropies of Frozen Non-Equilibrium States
title_short Distinguishing between Clausius, Boltzmann and Pauling Entropies of Frozen Non-Equilibrium States
title_full Distinguishing between Clausius, Boltzmann and Pauling Entropies of Frozen Non-Equilibrium States
title_fullStr Distinguishing between Clausius, Boltzmann and Pauling Entropies of Frozen Non-Equilibrium States
title_full_unstemmed Distinguishing between Clausius, Boltzmann and Pauling Entropies of Frozen Non-Equilibrium States
title_sort distinguishing between clausius, boltzmann and pauling entropies of frozen non-equilibrium states
publisher MDPI AG
series Entropy
issn 1099-4300
publishDate 2019-08-01
description In conventional textbook thermodynamics, entropy is a quantity that may be calculated by different methods, for example experimentally from heat capacities (following Clausius) or statistically from numbers of microscopic quantum states (following Boltzmann and Planck). It had turned out that these methods do not necessarily provide mutually consistent results, and for equilibrium systems their difference was explained by introducing a residual zero-point entropy (following Pauling), apparently violating the Nernst theorem. At finite temperatures, associated statistical entropies which count microstates that do not contribute to a body’s heat capacity, differ systematically from Clausius entropy, and are of particular relevance as measures for metastable, frozen-in non-equilibrium structures and for symbolic information processing (following Shannon). In this paper, it is suggested to consider Clausius, Boltzmann, Pauling and Shannon entropies as distinct, though related, physical quantities with different key properties, in order to avoid confusion by loosely speaking about just “entropy” while actually referring to different kinds of it. For instance, zero-point entropy exclusively belongs to Boltzmann rather than Clausius entropy, while the Nernst theorem holds rigorously for Clausius rather than Boltzmann entropy. The discussion of those terms is underpinned by a brief historical review of the emergence of corresponding fundamental thermodynamic concepts.
topic empirical entropy
statistical entropy
residual entropy
Nernst theorem
Pauling entropy
metastable states
non-equilibrium
frozen states
symbolic information
Shannon entropy
url https://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/21/8/799
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