ENTROPY, EXTROPY AND THE PHYSICAL DRIVER
OF IRREVERSIBILITY

Attila Grandpierre

Schmid College of Science, Center of Excellence in Applied Computational and Fundamental
Science, Chapman University
Orange, The United States of America

INDECS 10(2), 73-79, 2012
DOI 10.7906/indecs.10.2.3
Full text available here.
 

Received: 12 July 2011
Accepted: 5 March 2012
Regular article

ABSTRACT

We point out that the fundamental irreversibility of Nature requires the introduction of a suitable measure for the distance from equilibrium. We show that entropy, which is widely held to be such a measure, suffers from the problem that it does not have a physical meaning, since it is introduced on the basis of mathematical arguments. As a consequence, the basic physics beyond irreversibility has remained obscure. We present here a simple but transparent physical approach for solving the problem of irreversibility. This approach shows that extropy, the fundamental thermodynamic variable introduced by Katalin Martinás, is the suitable measure for the distance from equilibrium, since it corresponds to the actual driver of irreversible processes. Since extropy explicitly contains in its definition all the general thermodynamic forces that drive irreversible processes, extropy is the suitable physical measure of irreversibility.


KEY WORDS

extropy, irreversibility, entropy, equilibrium, non-equilibrium, thermodynamics


CLASSIFICATION

JEL:Q57
PACS:05.70.Ln


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