Entropy production due to non-stationary heat conduction

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Entropy production due to non-stationary heat conduction. Ian Ford, Zac Laker and Henry Charlesworth. Department of Physics and Astronomy and London Centre for Nanotechnology University College London, UK. Three kinds of entropy production. That due to relaxation (cooling of coffee) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Entropy production due to non-stationary heat conduction

Ian Ford, Zac Laker and Henry Charlesworth

Department of Physics and Astronomy

and

London Centre for Nanotechnology

University College London, UK

Three kinds of entropy production

• That due to relaxation (cooling of coffee)• That due to maintenance of a steady flow (stirring

of coffee; coffee on a hot plate)• That which is left over....

• In this talk I illustrate this separation using a particle in a space- and time-dependent heat bath

Stochastic thermodynamics

• (Arguably) the best available representation of irreversibility and entropy production

time

position

entropy

Microscopic stochastic differential equations of motion (SDEs) for position and velocity.

SDE for entropy change: with positive mean production rate.

What is entropy change?

• We use microscopic equations of motion that break time reversal symmetry.– friction and noise

• But what evidence is there of this breakage at the level of a thermodynamic process?

• Entropy change is this evidence. • A measure of the preference in probability for a ‘forward’ process

rather than its reverse• A measure of the irreversibility of a dynamical evolution of a system

Entropy change associated with a trajectory

• the relative likelihood of observing reversed behaviour

time

posi

tion

under forward protocol of driving

time

posi

tion

under reversed protocol

)(tx )(txR

Entropy change associated with a trajectory:

)(y trajectorseprob(rever

))(ctory prob(trajeln)]([tot tx

txktxs

R

0 tottot sS

In thermal equilibrium, for all trajectories 0 tot s

such thatSekimoto, Seifert, etc

Furthermore!

• trajectory entropy production may be split into three separate contributions – Esposito and van den Broek 2010, Spinney and Ford 2012

321tot ssss

0 1 s 0 2 s ? 3s

How to illustrate this?

• Non-stationary heat conduction

tem

per

atu

re

trap potential:force F(x) = -x

Trapped Brownian particle in a non-isothermal medium

position x

)(xTr

0

2

0 21)(

kT

xTxT T

r

0T

An analogy: an audience in the hot seats!

An analogy: an audience in the hot seats!

steady mean heat conduction

An analogy: an audience in the hot seats!

steady mean heat conduction

Stationary distribution of a particle in a harmonic potential well () with a harmonic temperature profile (T)

)(xp

x

T

T

kT

xxp T

0

2

21)( q-gaussian

Steady heat current gives rise to entropy production. Now induce production.

2 s1 s

Steady heat current gives rise to entropy production. Now induce production.

2 s1 s

Particle explores space- and time-dependent background temperature:

Particle probability distribution

),( txp

x

warm wings

Particle probability distribution

),( txp

x

hot wings

Now the maths.....

N.B. This probability distribution is a variational solution to Kramers equation

• distribution valid in a nearly-overdamped regime • maximisation of the Onsager dissipation functional

– which is related to the entropy production rate.

and some more maths....

),(

),,(ln

),,(1

vxp

tvxp

t

tvxpdxdv

dt

sd

st

2

,2

),(

),(

),(

),,(

vxp

vxJ

txD

tvxpdxdv

dt

sd

st

irstv

Spinney and Ford, Phys Rev E 85, 051113 (2012)D

the remnant....

• only appears when there is a velocity variable • and when the stationary state is asymmetric in

velocity• and when there is relaxation

),(

),(ln

),,(3

vxp

vxp

t

tvxpdxdv

dt

sd

st

st

Simulations: distribution over position

Distribution over velocity at x=0 and various t

Approx mean total entropy production rate

spatial temperature gradientrate of change of temperature

1 s2 s

Mean ‘remnant’ entropy production is zero at this level of approximation

3 s

Comparison between average of total entropy production and the analytical approximation

Mean relaxational entropy production 1 s

Mean steady current-related entropy production 2 s

Distributions of entropy production ns

Some of the satisfy fluctuation relations!

)exp()(

)(tot

tot

tot ssp

sp

tots

)(/)(ln tottot spsp

ns

Where are we now?

• The second law has several faces– new perspective: entropy production at the microscale

• Statistical expectations but not rigid rules• Small systems exhibit large fluctuations in entropy production

associated with trajectories• Entropy production separates into relaxational and steady

current-related components, plus a ‘remnant’– only the first two are never negative on average– remnant appears in certain underdamped systems only

I SConclusions

• Stochastic thermodynamics eliminates much of the mystery about entropy

• If an underlying breakage in time reversal symmetry is apparent at the level of a thermodynamic process, its measure is entropy production