Zentropy Theory for Positive and Negative Thermal Expansions
Zi-Kui Liu, Yi Wang, Shun-Li Shang

TL;DR
This paper introduces zentropy theory, a thermodynamic framework based on multiscale entropy, to explain and predict why some materials exhibit negative thermal expansion where volume decreases with increasing temperature.
Contribution
The paper develops a general thermodynamic theory linking entropy and volume changes, providing a unified explanation for positive and negative thermal expansions in materials.
Findings
Predicts negative thermal expansion in Fe3Pt at certain conditions.
Demonstrates positive and negative divergencies of thermal expansion in Ce and Fe3Pt.
Provides temperature-pressure ranges for anomalous thermal expansion behaviors.
Abstract
It has been observed in both natural and man-made materials that volume sometimes decreases with increasing temperature. Though mechanistic understanding has been gained for some individual materials, a general answer to the question "Why does volume sometimes decrease with the increase of temperature?" remains lacking. Based on the thermodynamic relation that the derivative of volume with respect to temperature, i.e., thermal expansion, is equal to the negative derivative of entropy with respect to pressure, we developed a general theory in terms of multiscale entropy to understand and predict the change of volume as a function of temperature, which is termed as zentropy theory in the present work. It is shown that a phase at high temperatures is a statistical representation of the ground-state stable and multiple nonground-state metastable configurations. It is demonstrated that when…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermodynamic and Structural Properties of Metals and Alloys · Thermal properties of materials · Thermal and Kinetic Analysis
