Contradiction/breach 2nd law? Simply with carnot engine + negative temperature

In summary: take the temperature of the ideal paramagnetic system and divide it by the temperature of the system it is in contact with to get the ratio of heat input/output.
  • #106
DaleSpam said:
I agree, but the solution isn't to mess with the definition of temperature but rather to derive an equation for a generalized Carnot cycle for a negative temperature system. That was my point way back in post 11.

Temperature and entropy are much more fundamental concepts, and the Carnot cycle equations are derived from them under certain assumptions. We are violating one of those assumptions (ideal gas -> positive temperatures) in this system, so we have to re-do the derivation, not redefine the fundamentals.

What your proposing is pretty much what I'm doing. Instead of coming up with a new equation, which would use -Tk, i am taking that -Tk and simply converting it to a positive number before i put it into the equation. Both ways would accomplish the same thing, calculating the energy transfer between 2 sources and the amount of work one would get out of the engine.
 
Science news on Phys.org
  • #107
Drakkith said:
Both ways would accomplish the same thing, calculating the energy transfer between 2 sources and the amount of work one would get out of the engine.
Are you certain of that? I am not. To prove that would require a derivation of the Carnot cycle for a negative temperature system anyway.
 
  • #108
DaleSpam said:
Are you certain of that? I am not. To prove that would require a derivation of the Carnot cycle for a negative temperature system anyway.

I am certain enough to explain why I think so, whether it is wrong or right. I am also certain that I have addressed the underlying problem shown in the original post of this thread and how to avoid it. If not, please tell me why.

I think everyone can safely agree that the way temperature is defined for a negative temperature, and the use of that temperature in thermodynamics math needs to be clarified or expanded on. This whole thread is a case in point.
 
  • #109
Mr.Vodka, I still don't see any contradiction in your thought experiment.
The point is that a system with negative temperature allways has a tendency to emit energy spontaneously (that is irreversibly) and become colder and colder until its temperature becomes - infinity and then + infinity and finally positive, as you said in your first post. Think of a system of spins with population inversion. You will agree that the whole process is driven by the increase of entropy of the system. On the other hand, you can only keep up the negative temperature of the system by
isolating it to stop it loosing energy or, as this is not possible completely, you have to continuously pump the system to maintain inversion. Think e.g. of a laser.

In the course of the Carnot cycle you consider, the total entropy of the two systems remains constant and they finally reach the same temperature.
You could also consider mixing the two systems directly, but in that case entropy will increase, as it is a spontaneous irreversible process.
For a system with negative temperature, a higher entropy means a lower temperature. You may check this in a spin system. Formally, it follows from the positivity of heat capacity C, which is required for the stability of the system. C=T dS/dT.
That is what we expected from the considerations in the first paragraph. The system uses every chance to increase its entropy and reduce its temperature. To keep entropy constant in the Carnot process, we have to invest work.
 
  • #110
Hello Dru, thanks for the post.

I'm not sure if I'm getting your point. Is it the following?
"The reason that when you have a reversible cycle using 1 as the hot reservoir (at -200K) and 2 as the cold reservoir (at -273K), the heat going into the cycle is LESS than the heat going out (into the cold reservoir), is because you have to supply work into the cycle to make it reversible"?
 
  • #111
mr. vodka said:
Hello Dru, thanks for the post.

I'm not sure if I'm getting your point. Is it the following?
"The reason that when you have a reversible cycle using 1 as the hot reservoir (at -200K) and 2 as the cold reservoir (at -273K), the heat going into the cycle is LESS than the heat going out (into the cold reservoir), is because you have to supply work into the cycle to make it reversible"?

Mr V, you were you saying originally that the heat coming out of T1, is LESS than the heat going into T2 right? If so, could you elaborate why you think that? I've reread your posts a dozen times now, but i just want to make sure I'm understanding you correctly.
 
  • #112
mr. vodka said:
Hello Dru, thanks for the post.

I'm not sure if I'm getting your point. Is it the following?
"The reason that when you have a reversible cycle using 1 as the hot reservoir (at -200K) and 2 as the cold reservoir (at -273K), the heat going into the cycle is LESS than the heat going out (into the cold reservoir), is because you have to supply work into the cycle to make it reversible"?
Exactly!
 
  • #113
DrDu said:
Exactly!

But if it is reversible, then turn it around and now you get work OUT of it, and you end up transferring heat from a cold to a hot source. This is a clear breach of the 2nd law.
 
  • #114
mr. vodka said:
But if it is reversible, then turn it around and now you get work OUT of it, and you end up transferring heat from a cold to a hot source. This is a clear breach of the 2nd law.

No, you dont. The heat would only flow from the hot to the cold unless you applied work. The problem is in your math. Like I've said. Multiple times.
 
  • #115
Well, at least of a formulation of the second law which was stated when people couldn't think of states with negative temperature.
Considering the change of entropy, everything is ok.

Note that also other older statements of the second law that are violated, e.g. the statement of Kelvin and Planck:

"There is no change of state whose only result is a body becoming colder and a weight being risen."
However, for a system with negative temperature this is possible as I already showed.
Again this at once becomes obvious when considering a collections of spins in the field of a magnet. The energetic splitting of the two orientations of the spin depends on the strength of the magnetic field B. In a system with negative temperature, the upper levels are occupied more than the lower levels.
The temperature of a collection of spins is [tex] T= \frac{\epsilon}{k} /\ln \frac{N-n}{n} [/tex] where[tex]2\epsilon=\mu B[/tex] is the energetic splitting of the two levels of the spin with magnetic moment [tex] \mu [/tex] in the field B. and N is the total number of spins, n the number of upper levels occupied and N-n the number of lower levels.
Apparently, if n>N/2, the temperature is negative. If the field strength B is reduced at fixed n, the temperature decreases (given that T is negative). But as the energy of the whole system [tex] U=n\epsilon/2 -(N-n)\epsilon/2=(n-N/2)\epsilon [/tex] decreases, too, with decreasing B, a force is excerted on the magnet or work is done.

There is a third statement of the second law due to Clausius, according to which it is impossible to do nothing else than transfer heat from a colder to a hotter body.
This statement holds true for systems with negative temperature.
From the picture above you can convince yourself that then the other two statements have to be wrong for states with negative energy, simultaneously.
http://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php...bile_2._Art_.jpg&filetimestamp=20070522114239
 
  • #116
Btw, I remember having read a popular article about negative temperatures in Scientific American (or in its German edition, Spektrum der Wissenschaft) some eons ago, probably in the late 80ies. It is well possible that they discussed also the modifications made necessary on the various formulations of the second law.
This forum is powered by Scientific American, so maybe someone can dig it out?
 
  • #117
Scientific American
Volume 239, Number 2, August, 1978
W. G. Proctor Negative absolute temperatures . . . . . 78--85
 

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
778
Replies
1
Views
765
Replies
20
Views
1K
Replies
8
Views
12K
Replies
26
Views
2K
Replies
17
Views
2K
  • Thermodynamics
Replies
1
Views
1K
Replies
4
Views
974
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • Thermodynamics
Replies
4
Views
2K
Back
Top