Potential work: A statistical-mechanical approach for systems in disequilibrium
- 15 October 1976
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 65 (8) , 3357-3364
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.433482
Abstract
A statistical measure of the maximal amount of work available from a system coupled to a reservoir is introduced and applied. The measure is valid for any initial state of the system and for any reservoir and reduces to known particular results in different limits. Any work not extracted due to irreversibility is shown to be compensated by a corresponding amount of heat. The measure of work is interpreted as the information content of the initial state. During a completely irreversible process the initial information content is degraded entirely into entropy of the reservoir (i.e., into heat). For a given change in energy it is shown that systems in thermal disequilibrium are more informative, i.e., yield more work. An explicit example, the work available from the vibrational state distribution of the nascent products of chemical reactions, is provided.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Energy distribution among reaction products. IX. F + H2, HD and D2Chemical Physics, 1976
- Chemical lasers: A thermodynamic analysis of a system in disequilibriumChemical Physics, 1975
- Thermodynamic efficiency of a finite gain laserChemical Physics, 1975
- Hall coefficient for non-Markoffian carrier motionsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1975
- Energy and InformationScientific American, 1971
- On stability of steady statesThe European Physical Journal A, 1971
- Produced entropy in quantum statisticsThe European Physical Journal A, 1971
- Information Theory and Statistical MechanicsPhysical Review B, 1957
- ber die Entropieverminderung in einem thermodynamischen System bei Eingriffen intelligenter WesenThe European Physical Journal A, 1929
- Über die Ausdehnung der phänomenologischen Thermodynamik auf die SchwankungserscheinungenThe European Physical Journal A, 1925