
The second law of thermodynamics as variation on a theme of Carathéodory
Author(s) -
J. D. Goddard
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
proceedings - royal society. mathematical, physical and engineering sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2946
pISSN - 1364-5021
DOI - 10.1098/rspa.2021.0425
Subject(s) - second law of thermodynamics , convexity , entropy (arrow of time) , thermodynamics , axiom , adiabatic process , mathematical economics , statistical physics , mathematics , theoretical physics , physics , geometry , economics , financial economics
This paper revisits the second law of thermodynamics via certain modifications of the axiomatic foundation provided by the celebrated 1909 work of Carathéodory. It is shown that his postulate ofadiabatic inaccessibility represents one of several constraints on the energy balance that serve to establish the existence of thermostatic entropy as a foliation of state space, with temperature representing a force of constraint. To achieve the thermostatic version of the second law, as embodied in the postulates of Clausius and Gibbs, work principles are proposed to define thermostatic equilibrium and stability in terms of the convexity properties of internal energy, entropy and related thermostatic potentials. Comparisons are made with the classic work of Coleman and Noll on thermostatic equilibrium in simple continua, resulting in a few unresolved differences. Perhaps the most novel aspect of the current work is an extension to irreversible processes by means of a non-equilibrium entropy derived from recoverable work, which generalizes similar ideas in continuum viscoelasticity. This definition of entropy calls for certain revisions of modern theories of continuum thermomechanics by Coleman, Noll and others that are based on a generally inaccessible entropy and undefined temperature.