sugeet said:
what rules, energy or entropy??
The text of your message is very unclear, so I limit myself to the content of the subject line.
I remember the following classroom demonstration: a glass was put on the table and with some chemistry Iodine gas was produced. Iodine molecules are very heavy. Pure Iodine gas is much heavier than air. It also has a distinct brownish color. A piece of paper covered the glass, so that the Iodine gas wouldn't escape. A second glass was placed on top, inverted, so that when the piece of paper was pulled away the two compartments became one compartment.
Then we watched the brownish color climb up, and gradually it developed to an even distribution.
(I think it was Iodine gas, but maybe I don't remember correctly. Anyway, that detail is not important for the point I'm making.)
That was a demonstration of entropy overpowering energy. The gas mixture tends to develop towards the most probable state, and a uniform distribution is more probable. Iodine molecules migrated upward, against the gravitational potential.
The gain in gravitational potential energy is at the expense of thermal energy. If perfecly insulated from the environment the gas mixture will drop in temperature.
There are also circumnstances where energy overrules entropy. Example, spinning a tube containing blood in a centrifuge results in separation of constituent parts of the blood. Under normal gravity the proteins in the blood remain in suspension (entropy stronger than energy)
The centrifuge is pulling G's, far more than normal gravity. Now inside the blood containing tube there is a far steeper gradient in gravitational potential. Now energy overpowers entropy, and the proteins in the blood go out of suspension.
So, energy and entropy are independent, and there are lots of circumstances where the two have opposing influences. Depending on the precise circumstances one or the other is strongest.