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The laws of thermodynamics describe the transport of heat and work in thermodynamic processes. These laws have become some of the most important in all of physics and other types of science associated with thermodynamics.[citation needed] Classical thermodynamics, which is focused on systems in thermodynamic equilibrium, can be considered separately from non-equilibrium thermodynamics. This article focuses on classical or thermodynamic equilibrium thermodynamics. The four principles (referred to as "laws"):
During the last 80 years writers have suggested additional laws, but none of them have become well accepted.
[edit] Zeroth lawMain article: Zeroth law of thermodynamics
When two systems are put in contact with each other, there will be a net exchange of energy between them unless or until they are in thermal equilibrium. That is the state of having equal temperature. Although this concept of thermodynamics is fundamental, the need to state it explicitly was not widely perceived until the first third of the 20th century, long after the first three principles were already widely in use. Hence it was numbered zero -- before the subsequent three. The Zeroth Law asserts that thermal equilibrium, viewed as a binary relation, is a transitive relation (and since any system is always in equilibrium with itself and if a system is in equilibrium with another, the latter is in equilibrium with the former, it is furthermore an equivalence relation). [edit] First lawMain article: First law of thermodynamics
The First Law states that energy cannot be created or destroyed; rather, the amount of energy lost in a steady state process cannot be greater than the amount of energy gained. This is the statement of conservation of energy for a thermodynamic system. It refers to the two ways that a closed system transfers energy to and from its surroundings – by the process of heating (or cooling) and the process of mechanical work. The rate of gain or loss in the stored energy of a system is determined by the rates of these two processes. In open systems, the flow of matter is another energy transfer mechanism, and extra terms must be included in the expression of the first law. The First Law clarifies the nature of energy. It is a stored quantity which is independent of any particular process path, i.e., it is independent of the system history. If a system undergoes a thermodynamic cycle, whether it becomes warmer, cooler, larger, or smaller, then it will have the same amount of energy each time it returns to a particular state. Mathematically speaking, energy is a state function and infinitesimal changes in the energy are exact differentials. All laws of thermodynamics but the First are statistical and simply describe the tendencies of macroscopic systems. For microscopic systems with few particles, the variations in the parameters become larger than the parameters themselves, and the assumptions of thermodynamics become meaningless. [edit] Fundamental thermodynamic relationThe first law can be expressed as the fundamental thermodynamic relation: Heat supplied to a system = increase in internal energy of the system + work done by the system Increase in internal energy of a system = heat supplied to the system - work done by the system Here, E is internal energy, T is temperature, S is entropy, p is pressure, and V is volume. This is a statement of conservation of energy: The net change in internal energy (dE) equals the heat energy that flows in (TdS), minus the energy that flows out via the system performing work (pdV). [edit] Second lawMain article: Second law of thermodynamics
In a simple manner, the second law states "energy systems have a tendency to increase their entropy rather than decrease it." This can also be stated as "heat can spontaneously flow from a higher-temperature region to a lower-temperature region, but not the other way around." Heat can appear to flow from cold to hot, for example, when a warm object is cooled in a refrigerator, but the transfer of energy is still from hot to cold. The heat from the object warms the surrounding air, which in turn heats and expands the refrigerant. The refrigerant is then compressed, expending electrical energy. A way of thinking about the second law for non-scientists is to consider entropy as a measure of ignorance of the microscopic details of the system. So, for example, one has less knowledge about the separate fragments of a broken cup than about an intact one, because when the fragments are separated, one does not know exactly whether they will fit together again, or whether perhaps there is a missing shard. Solid crystals, the most regularly structured form of matter, have very low entropy values; and gases, which are very disorganized, have high entropy values. This is because the positions of the crystal atoms are more predictable than are those of the gas atoms. The entropy of an isolated macroscopic system never decreases. However, a microscopic system may exhibit fluctuations of entropy opposite to that stated by the Second Law (see Maxwell's demon and Fluctuation Theorem). [edit] Third lawMain article: Third law of thermodynamics
Briefly, this postulates that entropy is temperature dependent and results in the formulation of the idea of absolute zero. [edit] Tentative fourth laws or principlesOver the years, various thermodynamic researchers have come forward to ascribe to or to postulate potential fourth laws of thermodynamics (either suggesting that a widely-accepted principle should be called the fourth law, or proposing entirely new laws); in some cases, even fifth or sixth laws of thermodynamics are proposed[2]. Most fourth law statements, however, are speculative and controversial. The most commonly proposed Fourth Law is the Onsager reciprocal relations, which give a quantitative relation between the parameters of a system in which heat and matter are simultaneously flowing. Other tentative fourth law statements are attempts to apply thermodynamics to evolution. During the late 19th century, thermodynamicist Ludwig Boltzmann argued that the fundamental object of contention in the life-struggle in the evolution of the organic world is 'available energy'. Another example is the maximum power principle as put forward initially by biologist Alfred Lotka in his 1922 article Contributions to the Energetics of Evolution.[3] Most variations of hypothetical fourth laws (or principles) have to do with the environmental sciences, biological evolution, or galactic phenomena.[4] [edit] HistoryThe first established principle which eventually became the Second Law was formulated by Sadi Carnot during 1824. By 1860, as formalized in the works of those such as Rudolf Clausius and William Thomson, there were two established "principles" of thermodynamics, the first principle and the second principle. As the years passed, these principles were termed "laws." By 1873, for example, thermodynamicist Josiah Willard Gibbs, in his “Graphical Methods in the Thermodynamics of Fluids”, clearly stated that there were two absolute laws of thermodynamics, a first law and a second law. [edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] Further reading
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