Entropy change in heat engines
Clausius' identification of S as a significant quantity was motivated by the study of reversible and irreversible thermodynamic transformations. In the next few sections, we will examine the steps leading to this identification, and its consequences for thermodynamics.
A thermodynamic transformation is a change in a system's thermodynamic properties, such as its temperature and volume. A transformation is said to be reversible if, at each successive step of the transformation, the system is infinitesimally close to equilibrium; otherwise, the transformation is said to be irreversible. As an example, consider a gas enclosed in a piston chamber, whose volume may be changed by moving the piston. A reversible volume change is one that takes place so slowly that the density of the gas always remains homogeneous. An irreversible volume change is one that takes place so quickly that pressure waves are created within the gas, which is a state of disequilibrium. Reversible processes are sometimes referred to as quasi-static processes.
A heat engine is a thermodynamic system that can undergo a sequence of transformations which ultimately return it to its original state. This sequence is called a cycle. During some transformations, the engine may exchange heat with large systems known as heat reservoirs, which have a fixed temperature and can absorb or provide an arbitrary amount of heat. The net result of a cycle is (i) work done by the system (which may be negative, which is the same as positive work done on the system), and (ii) heat transferred between the heat reservoirs. By the conservation of energy, the heat lost by the heat reservoirs is exactly equal to the work done by the engine plus the heat gained by the heat reservoirs. (See cyclic process.)
If every transformation in the cycle is reversible, the cycle is reversible. This means that it can be run in reverse, i.e. the heat transfers occur in the opposite direction and the amount of work done switches sign. The simplest reversible cycle is a Carnot cycle, which exchanges heat with two heat reservoirs.
In thermodynamics, absolute temperature is defined in the following way. Suppose we have two heat reservoirs. If a Carnot cycle absorbs an amount of heat Q from the first reservoir and delivers an amount of heat Q′ to the second, then the respective temperatures T and T′ are given by
Now consider a cycle of an arbitrary heat engine, during which the system exchanges heats Q1, Q2, ..., QN with a sequence of N heat reservoirs that have temperatures T1, ..., TN. We take each Q to be positive if it represents heat received by the system, and negative if it represents heat emitted by the system. We will show that
where the equality sign holds if the cycle is reversible.
To prove this, we introduce an additional heat reservoir at some arbitrary temperature T0, as well as N Carnot cycles that have the following property: the j-th such cycle operates between the T0 reservoir and the Tj reservoir, transferring heat Qj to the latter. From the above definition of temperature, this means that the heat extracted from the T0 reservoir by the j-th cycle is
We now consider one cycle of our arbitrary heat engine, accompanied by one cycle of each of the N Carnot cycles. At the end of this process, each of the reservoirs T1, ..., TN have no net heat loss, since the heat extracted by the heat engine is replaced by one of the Carnot cycles. The net result is (i) an unspecified amount of work done by the heat engine, and (ii) a total amount of heat extracted from the T0 reservoir, equal to
If this quantity is positive, this process would function as a