Can Someone Explain How the Second Law of Thermodynamics Opposes the First Law?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion clarifies that the Second Law of Thermodynamics does not oppose the First Law; rather, they address different aspects of energy. The First Law states that energy is conserved, while the Second Law indicates that entropy, or disorder, in an isolated system tends to increase over time. Participants differentiate between heat engines, which convert heat into work, and refrigerators, which use work to transfer heat. The conversation emphasizes that there is no contradiction between the two laws, as they operate within their own frameworks. Understanding these principles is crucial for grasping thermodynamic processes.
kthouz
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1. i read all my notes about the thermodynamics laws and the second one was so interesting? As i found it opposes the first one so how ia that possible. If not just tell me the right thing.
2. I've tried to make a diffenrence between the heat engines and the refrigerator: heat engines absorb heat and transform it( not completely) into work whereas refrigerators transorm work (with some few additional heat) into heat. But the problem is that I'm not conviced about the refrigeratorm, so i want someone else to make me sure.
 
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You are correct. Refrigerators use mechanical work to move heat around, heat engines allow heat to move around to produce mechanical work.
 
You must have somehow misinterpreted your notes. The 1st law states that energy is conserved, and the second law states that the entropy of an isolated system not in equilibrium will increase, or tend to increase over time, approaching some maximum value at equilibrium. There is no ccontradiction whatsoever.
 
Yeah entropy (A measure of disorder) will tend to increase, meaning that everything will get more disordered as time progesses. Solids (Very ordered), Liquids (Disordered) and gases (Very disordered).
 
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