Far from equilibrium maximal principle leading to matter self-organization
Piero Chiarelli

TL;DR
This paper derives a new extremal principle based on maximum stochastic free energy dissipation that explains matter self-organization far from equilibrium, unifying it with near-equilibrium thermodynamic principles.
Contribution
It introduces a novel extremal principle using stochastic free energy dissipation to describe far from equilibrium evolution and matter self-organization.
Findings
Near equilibrium, maximum stochastic free energy dissipation aligns with minimum entropy production.
In the absence of chemical reactions, it reduces to maximum free energy dissipation.
Matter self-organization occurs when systems tend to states with higher free energy.
Abstract
In this work an extremal principle driving the far from equilibrium evolution of a system of structureless particles is derived by using the stochastic quantum hydrodynamic analogy. For a classical phase (i.e., the quantum correlations decay on a distance smaller than the mean inter-molecular distance) the far from equilibrium kinetic equation can be cast in the form of a Fokker-Plank equation whose phase space velocity vector maximizes the dissipation of the energy-type function, named here, stochastic free energy. Near equilibrium the maximum stochastic free energy dissipation is shown to be compatible with the Prigogine s principle of minimum entropy production. Moreover, in the case of elastic molecular collisions and in absence of chemical reactions, in quasi-isothermal far from equilibrium states, the theory shows that the maximum stochastic free energy dissipation reduces to the…
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