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Statistical Interpretation of Entropy and the Second Law of Thermodynamics: The Underlying Explanation |
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The various ways of formulating the second law of thermodynamics tell what happens rather than why it happens. Why should heat transfer occur only from hot to cold? Why should energy become ever less available to do work? Why should the universe become increasingly disorderly? The answer is that it is a matter of overwhelming probability. Disorder is simply vastly more likely than order.
When you watch an emerging rainstorm begin to wet the ground, you will notice that the drops fall in a disorganized manner both in time and in space. Some fall close together, some far apart, but they never fall in straight, orderly rows. It is not impossible for rain to fall in an orderly pattern, just highly unlikely, because there are many more disorderly ways than orderly ones. To illustrate this fact, we will examine some random processes, starting with coin tosses.
What are the possible outcomes of tossing 5 coins? Each coin can land either heads or tails. On the large scale, we are concerned only with the total heads and tails and not with the order in which heads and tails appear. The following possibilities exist:
These are what we call macrostates. A macrostate is an overall property of a system. It does not specify the details of the system, such as the order in which heads and tails occur or which coins are heads or tails.
Using this nomenclature, a system of 5 coins has the 6 possible macrostates just listed. Some macrostates are more likely to occur than others. For instance, there is only one way to get 5 heads, but there are several ways to get 3 heads and 2 tails, making the latter macrostate more probable. [Table 1] lists of all the ways in which 5 coins can be tossed, taking into account the order in which heads and tails occur. Each sequence is called a microstate—a detailed description of every element of a system.
Individual microstates | Number of microstates | |
---|---|---|
5 heads, 0 tails | HHHHH | 1 |
4 heads, 1 tail | HHHHT, HHHTH, HHTHH, HTHHH, THHHH | 5 |
3 heads, 2 tails | HTHTH, THTHH, HTHHT, THHTH, THHHT HTHTH, THTHH, HTHHT, THHTH, THHHT | 10 |
2 heads, 3 tails | TTTHH, TTHHT, THHTT, HHTTT, TTHTH, THTHT, HTHTT, THTTH, HTTHT, HTTTH | 10 |
1 head, 4 tails | TTTTH, TTTHT, TTHTT, THTTT, HTTTT | 5 |
0 heads, 5 tails | TTTTT | 1 |
Total: 32 |
The macrostate of 3 heads and 2 tails can be achieved in 10 ways and is thus 10 times more probable than the one having 5 heads. Not surprisingly, it is equally probable to have the reverse, 2 heads and 3 tails. Similarly, it is equally probable to get 5 tails as it is to get 5 heads. Note that all of these conclusions are based on the crucial assumption that each microstate is equally probable. With coin tosses, this requires that the coins not be asymmetric in a way that favors one side over the other, as with loaded dice. With any system, the assumption that all microstates are equally probable must be valid, or the analysis will be erroneous.
The two most orderly possibilities are 5 heads or 5 tails. (They are more structured than the others.) They are also the least likely, only 2 out of 32 possibilities. The most disorderly possibilities are 3 heads and 2 tails and its reverse. (They are the least structured.) The most disorderly possibilities are also the most likely, with 20 out of 32 possibilities for the 3 heads and 2 tails and its reverse. If we start with an orderly array like 5 heads and toss the coins, it is very likely that we will get a less orderly array as a result, since 30 out of the 32 possibilities are less orderly. So even if you start with an orderly state, there is a strong tendency to go from order to disorder, from low entropy to high entropy. The reverse can happen, but it is unlikely.
Macrostate | Number of microstates | |
---|---|---|
Heads | Tails | (W) |
100 | 0 | 1 |
99 | 1 | $$ 1.0 \times 10^{2} $$ |
95 | 5 | $$ 7.5 \times 10^{7} $$ |
90 | 10 | $$ 1.7 \times 10^{13} $$ |
75 | 25 | $$ 2.4 \times 10^{23} $$ |
60 | 40 | $$ 1.4 \times 10^{28} $$ |
55 | 45 | $$ 6.1 \times 10^{28} $$ |
51 | 49 | $$ 9.9 \times 10^{28} $$ |
50 | 50 | $$ 1.0 \times 10^{29} $$ |
49 | 51 | $$ 9.9 \times 10^{28} $$ |
45 | 55 | $$ 6.1 \times 10^{28} $$ |
40 | 60 | $$ 1.4 \times 10^{28} $$ |
25 | 75 | $$ 2.4 \times 10^{23} $$ |
10 | 90 | $$ 1.7 \times 10^{13} $$ |
5 | 95 | $$ 7.5 \times 10^{7} $$ |
1 | 99 | $$ 1.0 \times 10^{2} $$ |
0 | 100 | 1 |
Total: $$ 1.27 \times 10^{30} $$ |
This result becomes dramatic for larger systems. Consider what happens if you
have 100 coins instead of just 5. The most orderly arrangements (most
structured) are 100 heads or 100 tails. The least orderly (least structured) is
that of 50 heads and 50 tails. There is only 1 way (1 microstate) to get the
most orderly arrangement of 100 heads. There are 100 ways (100 microstates) to
get the next most orderly arrangement of 99 heads and 1 tail (also 100 to get
its reverse). And there are $$ 1.0 \times 10^{29} $$ ways to get 50 heads and 50
tails, the least orderly arrangement. [Table 2] is an abbreviated
list of the various macrostates and the number of microstates for each
macrostate. The total number of microstates—the total number of different ways
100 coins can be tossed—is an impressively large $$ 1.27 \times 10^{30} $$ .
Now, if we start with an orderly macrostate like 100 heads and toss the coins,
there is a virtual certainty that we will get a less orderly macrostate. If we
keep tossing the coins, it is possible, but exceedingly unlikely, that we will
ever get back to the most orderly macrostate. If you tossed the coins once each
second, you could expect to get either 100 heads or 100 tails once in
The fantastic growth in the odds favoring disorder that we see in going from 5
to 100 coins continues as the number of entities in the system increases. Let us
now imagine applying this approach to perhaps a small sample of gas. Because
counting microstates and macrostates involves statistics, this is called statistical analysis. The macrostates of a gas correspond to its macroscopic
properties, such as volume, temperature, and pressure; and its microstates
correspond to the detailed description of the positions and velocities of its
atoms. Even a small amount of gas has a huge number of atoms: $$
1.0{\text{cm}}^{3} $$ of an ideal gas at 1.0 atm and
The most likely conditions (or macrostates) for a gas are those we see all the time—a random distribution of atoms in space with a Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution of speeds in random directions, as predicted by kinetic theory. This is the most disorderly and least structured condition we can imagine. In contrast, one type of very orderly and structured macrostate has all of the atoms in one corner of a container with identical velocities. There are very few ways to accomplish this (very few microstates corresponding to it), and so it is exceedingly unlikely ever to occur. (See [Figure 2](b).) Indeed, it is so unlikely that we have a law saying that it is impossible, which has never been observed to be violated—the second law of thermodynamics.
The disordered condition is one of high entropy, and the ordered one has low entropy. With a transfer of energy from another system, we could force all of the atoms into one corner and have a local decrease in entropy, but at the cost of an overall increase in entropy of the universe. If the atoms start out in one corner, they will quickly disperse and become uniformly distributed and will never return to the orderly original state ([Figure 2](b)). Entropy will increase. With such a large sample of atoms, it is possible—but unimaginably unlikely—for entropy to decrease. Disorder is vastly more likely than order.
The arguments that disorder and high entropy are the most probable states are quite convincing. The great Austrian physicist Ludwig Boltzmann (1844–1906)—who, along with Maxwell, made so many contributions to kinetic theory—proved that the entropy of a system in a given state (a macrostate) can be written as
where
Thus the second law of thermodynamics is explained on a very basic level: entropy either remains the same or increases in every process. This phenomenon is due to the extraordinarily small probability of a decrease, based on the extraordinarily larger number of microstates in systems with greater entropy. Entropy can decrease, but for any macroscopic system, this outcome is so unlikely that it will never be observed.
Strategy
Noting that the number of microstates is labeled
Solution
The change in entropy is
This increase in entropy means we have moved to a less orderly situation. It is
not impossible for further tosses to produce the initial state of 60 heads and
40 tails, but it is less likely. There is about a 1 in 90 chance for that
decrease in entropy ( $$ - 2.7 \times 10^{-23} \text{J/K} $$ )
to occur. If we calculate the decrease in entropy to move to the most orderly
state, we get
- Disorder is far more likely than order, which can be seen statistically.
- The entropy of a system in a given state (a macrostate) can be written as
$$S=k_{B} \ln W, $$ $$k_{B} =1.38 \times 10^{-23} \text{J/K} $$ is Boltzmann’s constant, and$$\ln W $$ is the natural logarithm of the number of microstates$$W $$ corresponding to the given macrostate.
(c) If you were betting on two heads and 8 tails, the odds of breaking even are 252 to 45, so on average you would break even. So, no, you wouldn’t bet on odds of 252 to 45.
Macrostate | Number of Microstates (W) | |
---|---|---|
Heads | Tails | |
10 | 0 | 1 |
9 | 1 | 10 |
8 | 2 | 45 |
7 | 3 | 120 |
6 | 4 | 210 |
5 | 5 | 252 |
4 | 6 | 210 |
3 | 7 | 120 |
2 | 8 | 45 |
1 | 9 | 10 |
0 | 10 | 1 |
Total: 1024 |
(c) 64
(d) 9.38%
(e) 3.33 times more likely (20 to 6)
macrostate : an overall property of a system
microstate : each sequence within a larger macrostate
statistical analysis : using statistics to examine data, such as counting microstates and macrostates