thinkingcap81 said:
I don't know how better to explain my position. i hope that you get what i am trying to say.
Yes, this is very helpful. I would never have guessed that this is what you meant by randomness without this good explanation.
Unfortunately, I don’t think that this concept of randomness has any use in thermodynamics, so your best option will be to simply dispense with it entirely and focus only on the standard concepts like entropy. For example, the randomness of a gas does not increase with temperature.
thinkingcap81 said:
So when temperature increases from T1 to T2 the time spent by the particle in than region of space decreases. So the probability of finding a particle in the region decreases.
Actually, the time spent in that region decreases, but the frequency of visiting that region increases such that the probability of finding the particle in that region is constant. If you have a volume of gas ##V## then the probability of finding a given gas particle in a region of volume ##v## is simply ##v/V##. It does not depend in any way on temperature or pressure, just volume.
Imagine what would happen if the probability worked the way you think. Suppose we have a gas in a volume ##V## and we partition it into 1000 sub volumes ##v_i##. At a given temperature the probability of a molecule of gas being in each ##v_i## is 1/1000 so the sum of the probabilities is 1. Now, let’s say that, as you suggest, upon heating the gas the probability of being in ##v_i## decreases to 0.9/1000. The problem is that now when you sum across all ##v_i## the probability that it is found anywhere in ##V## is only 0.9. We know that this is incorrect.
In a liquid the situation is similar except that ##V## no longer is the volume of the container, but the volume of the liquid itself. This volume does change as temperature changes as determined by the coefficient of thermal expansion.
In a solid the situation is a bit different. There the atom is highly localized so the probability of a given atom being at a given point does not change much over time. However, that volume of localization for an individual atom also increases with temperature according to the coefficient of thermal expansion.
So in the end, your idea of randomness is basically just directly proportional to ##V## which is not a function of temperature for a gas but is a function of temperature for solids and liquids where the derivative with respect to temperature is given by the coefficient of thermal expansion.