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Show that the entropy of a two-state paramagnet, expressed as a function of temperature, is S=Nk[ln(2coshx)−xtanhx], where x=μB/kT. Check that this formula has the expected behavior as T→0and T→∞.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The entropy of the two-state paramagnet as the function of temperature is expressed asS=Nk[ln(2coshx)−xtanhx],where x=μB/kT.

The entropy at temperature T→0and T→∞shows expected behavior with consistency with the third law of thermodynamics.

Step by step solution

01

Given Information

The given substance is a two-state paramagnet of which the graph of entropy as a function of temperature is to be sketched.

We have to show that:

S=Nk[ln(2coshx)−xtanhx]

Where,

x=μB/kT

02

Calculation

The magnetization for two-state paramagnet is given as:

M=μNtanh(μBkT)

Also, magnetization is given as:

M=μ(N↑−N↓)

On comparing both the above equations, we get,

Ntanh(μBkT)=(N↑−N↓)tanh(μBkT)=2N↑−NNtanh(μBkT)=2N↑N−1tanh(μBkT)=2n−1n=12{1+tanh(x)}

Where,

x=μBkT

The entropy of a two-state paramagnet is given as:

S=k[NlnN−N↑lnN↑−N↓lnN↓]

On solving the above equation,

S=kNlnN-N↑lnN↑-N↓lnN↓Sk=NlnN-N↑NNlnN↑NN-N-N↑NNlnN-N↑NNSNk=lnN-N↑NlnN↑NN-1-N↑NlnN1-N↑NSNk=lnN-nln(nN)-(1-n)lnN(1-n)SNk=lnN-nlnn-nlnN-(1-n)lnN-(1-n)ln(1-n)SNk=(1-n)lnN-nlnn-(1-n)lnN-(1-n)ln(1-n)SNk=-nlnn-(1-n)ln(1-n)SNk=-nlnn-ln(1-n)+nln(1-n)SNk=nln(1-n)n-ln(1-n)……(1)

Further,

(1-n)n=1-12{1+tanh(x)}12{1+tanh(x)}(1-n)n=12{1-tanh(x)}12{1+tanh(x)}(1-n)n={1-tanh(x)}21-tanh2(x)(1-n)n={1-tanh(x)}2cosh2x(1-n)n=1-ex-e-xex+e-x2ex+e-x2(1-n)n=2e-x22(1-n)n=2e-2xln(1-n)n=-2x

Also,

(1-n)=1-12{1+tanh(x)}(1-n)=12{1-tanh(x)}(1-n)=121-ex-e-xex+e-x(1-n)=122e-xex+e-x(1-n)=e-x2ex+e-x/2(1-n)=e-x2coshxln(1-n)=-x-2ln(coshx)

Now, by substituting these values in equation (1), we get,

SNk=nln(1-n)n-ln(1-n)SNk=12{1+tanh(x)}(-2x)-{-x-2ln(coshx)}SNk=-x-xtanh(x)+x+2ln(coshx)SNk=2ln(coshx)-xtanh(x)SNk=2lncoshμBkT-μBkTtanhμBkT

AtT→0,

x=μBkT→∞

Hence, the entropy becomes

SNk=2lncoshμBkT-xtanhμBkTSNk=2ln(coshx)-xtanh(x)SNk=2lnex+e-x2-xex-e-xex+e-xSNk=ln2×ex2-xexexSNk=xlne-xSNk=x-xSNk=0

At T→∞,

x=μBkT→0

Hence, the entropy becomes,

SNk=2lncoshμBkT-xtanhμBkTSNk=2ln(coshx)-xtanh(x)SNk=2ln(cosh0)-xtanh(0)SNk=ln(2cosh0)SNk=ln(2×1)SNk=0.693

03

Final answer

The entropy of the two-state paramagnet as the function of temperature is S=Nk[ln(2coshx)−xtanhx]with x=μB/kT.

The entropy at temperature T→0and T→∞shows expected behavior along with consistency with the third law of thermodynamics.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

An ice cube (mass 30g)0°Cis left sitting on the kitchen table, where it gradually melts. The temperature in the kitchen is 25°C.

(a) Calculate the change in the entropy of the ice cube as it melts into water at 0°C. (Don't worry about the fact that the volume changes somewhat.)

(b) Calculate the change in the entropy of the water (from the melted ice) as its temperature rises from 0°Cto 25°C.

(c) Calculate the change in the entropy of the kitchen as it gives up heat to the melting ice/water.

(d) Calculate the net change in the entropy of the universe during this process. Is the net change positive, negative, or zero? Is this what you would expect?

Sketch a qualitatively accurate graph of the entropy of a substance (perhapsH2O ) as a function of temperature, at fixed pressure. Indicate where the substance is solid, liquid, and gas. Explain each feature of the graph briefly.

Figure 3.3 shows graphs of entropy vs. energy for two objects, A and B. Both graphs are on the same scale. The energies of these two objects initially have the values indicated; the objects are then brought into thermal contact with each other. Explain what happens subsequently and why, without using the word "temperature."

Experimental measurements of the heat capacity of aluminum at low temperatures (below about 50K) can be fit to the formula

CV=aT+bT3

where CVis the heat capacity of one mole of aluminum, and the constants aand bare approximately a=0.00135J/K2and b=2.48×10-5J/K4. From this data, find a formula for the entropy of a mole of aluminum as a function of temperature. Evaluate your formula at T=1Kand at T=10K, expressing your answers both in conventional units (J/K)and as unitless numbers (dividing by Boltzmann's constant).

Estimate the change in the entropy of the universe due to heat escaping from your home on a cold winter day.

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