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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boltzmann_constant
Boltzmann constant
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Values of kB[1] Boltzmann, is a physical constant relating energy at the individual particle level with temperature. It is the gas constant R divided by 1.3806488(13) ! 10"23 the Avogadro constant NA: 8.6173324(78) ! 10"5 1.3806488(13) ! 10"16 It has the same dimension (energy divided by temperature) as entropy. The accepted value in SI units is 1.380!6488(13)!10"23 J/K
Contents
1 Bridge from macroscopic to microscopic physics 2 Role in the equipartition of energy 2.1 Application to simple gas thermodynamics 3 Role in Boltzmann factors 4 Role in the statistical denition of entropy 5 Role in semiconductor physics: the thermal voltage 6 History 7 Value in different units 7.1 Planck units 8 References 9 External links
where R is the gas constant (8.314!4621(75) J!K"1!mol"1[1]). Introducing the Boltzmann constant transforms the ideal gas law into an alternative form:
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where N is the number of molecules of gas. For n = 1 mol, N is equal to the number of particles in one mole (Avogadro's number). The left-hand side of the equation is a macroscopic amount of pressure-volume energy representing the state of the bulk gas. The right-hand side divides this energy into N units, one for each gas particle, each of which has an average kinetic energy equal to kBT.
gives
so the ideal gas equation is regained. The ideal gas equation is also obeyed closely by molecular gases; but the form for the heat capacity is more complicated, because the molecules possess additional internal degrees of freedom, as well as the three degrees of freedom for movement of the molecule as a whole. Diatomic gases, for example, possess a total of six degrees of simple freedom per molecule that are related to atomic motion (three
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translational, two rotational, and one vibrational). At lower temperatures, not all these degrees of freedom may fully participate in the gas heat capacity, due to quantum mechanical limits on the availability of excited states, at the thermal energy available.
where Z is the partition function. Again, it is the energy-like quantity kB which takes central importance. Consequences of this include (in addition to the results for ideal gases above) the Arrhenius equation in chemical kinetics.
This equation, which relates the microscopic details, or microstates, of the system (via W) to its macroscopic state (via the entropy S), is the central idea of statistical mechanics. Such is its importance that it is inscribed on Boltzmann's tombstone. The constant of proportionality kB serves to make the statistical mechanical entropy equal to the classical thermodynamic entropy of Clausius:
Boltzmann's grave in the Zentralfriedhof, Vienna, with bust and entropy formula.
One could choose instead a rescaled dimensionless entropy in microscopic terms such that
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This is a rather more natural form; and this rescaled entropy exactly corresponds to Shannon's subsequent information entropy. The characteristic energy kBT is thus the heat required to increase the rescaled entropy by one nat.
where q is the magnitude of the electrical charge on the electron with a value 1.602!176!565(35) ! 10"19 C[1] and k is the Boltzmann's constant, 1.3806488(13) ! 10"23 J/K. In electronvolts, the Boltzmann constant is 8.617 3324(78) ! 10"5 eV/K,[1] making it easy to calculate that at room temperature (# 300 K), the value of the thermal voltage is approximately 25.85 millivolts # 26 mV.[2] The thermal voltage is also important in plasmas and electrolyte solutions; in both cases it provides a measure of how much the spatial distribution of electrons or ions is affected by a boundary held at a xed voltage.[3][4]
History
Although Boltzmann rst linked entropy and probability in 1877, it seems the relation was never expressed with a specic constant until Max Planck rst introduced kB, and gave an accurate value for it (1.346 ! 10"23 J/K, about 2.5% lower than today's gure), in his derivation of the law of black body radiation in 19001901.[5] Before 1900, equations involving Boltzmann factors were not written using the energies per molecule and the Boltzmann constant, but rather using a form of the gas constant R, and macroscopic energies for macroscopic quantities of the substance. The iconic terse form of the equation S = kB log W on Boltzmann's tombstone is in fact due to Planck, not Boltzmann. Planck actually introduced it in the same work as his h.[6] As Planck wrote in his Nobel Prize lecture in 1920,[7]
This constant is often referred to as Boltzmann's constant, although, to my knowledge, Boltzmann himself never introduced it a peculiar state of affairs, which can be explained by the fact that Boltzmann, as appears from his occasional utterances, never gave thought to the possibility of carrying out an exact measurement of the constant.
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This "peculiar state of affairs" can be understood by reference to one of the great scientic debates of the time. There was considerable disagreement in the second half of the nineteenth century as to whether atoms and molecules were "real" or whether they were simply a heuristic, a useful tool for solving problems. Nor was there agreement as to whether "chemical molecules" (as measured by atomic weights) were the same as "physical molecules" (as measured by kinetic theory). To continue the quotation from Planck's 1920 lecture:[7]
Nothing can better illustrate the positive and hectic pace of progress which the art of experimenters has made over the past twenty years, than the fact that since that time, not only one, but a great number of methods have been discovered for measuring the mass of a molecule with practically the same accuracy as that attained for a planet.
In 2013 the UK National Physical Laboratory used microwave and acoustic resonance measurements to determine the speed of sound of a monatomic gas in a triaxial ellipsoid chamber to determine a more accurate value for the constant as a part of the revision of the International System of Units. The new value was calculated as 1.380!651 56 (98) ! 10"23 J K"1 and is expected to be accepted by the International System of Units following a review.[8]
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Units J/K
Comments SI units, 2010 CODATA value, J/K = m2kg/(s2K) in SI base units[1] 2010 CODATA value[1] 1 electronvolt = 1.602!176!565(35) ! 10"19 J[1] 1/kB = 11!604.519(11) K/eV
eV/K
2.083! 6618(19) ! 1010 3.166! 8114(29) ! 10"6 1.380! 6488(13) ! 10"16 3.297! 6230(30) ! 10"24 1.832! 0128(17) ! 10"24 5.657! 3016(51) ! 10"24 0.695!034!76(63) 0.001!987!2041(18) 0.008!314!4621(75) 4.10 "228.599 1678(40) 1.442 695 041... 1
Hz/K EH/K erg/K cal/K cal/R ft!lb/R cm"1/K kcal/mol/K kJ/mol/K pNnm dBW/K/Hz bit nat
2010 CODATA value[1] 1 Hzh = 6.626!069!57(29) ! 10"34 J[1] EH = 2R$hc = 4.359!744!34(19) ! 10"18 J[1] = 6.579!683!920!729(33) Hzh[1] CGS system, 1 erg = 1 ! 10"7 J 1 Steam table calorie = 4.1868 J 1 degree Rankine = 5/9 K 1 foot-pound force = 1.355!817!948!331!4004 J 2010 CODATA value[1] 1 cm"1 hc = 1.986!445!683(87) ! 10"23 J per mole form often used in statistical mechanicsusing thermochemical calorie = 4.184 Joule per mole form often used in statistical mechanics kB in piconewton nanometer at 24C, used in biophysics in decibel watts, used in telecommunications (see JohnsonNyquist noise) in bits (logarithm base 2), used in information entropy (exact value 1/ln(2)) in nats (logarithm base e), used in information entropy (see Planck Units, below)
Since kB is a physical constant of proportionality between temperature and energy, its numerical value depends on the choice of units for energy and temperature. The small numerical value of the Boltzmann constant in SI units reects the small energy in Joule required to increase a particle's energy by raising
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the temperature by 1 K. 1 C is dened to be the same as 1 K. The characteristic energy kB is a term encountered in many physical relationships.
Planck units
The Boltzmann constant provides a mapping from this characteristic microscopic energy E to the macroscopic temperature scale T = E/kB. In physics research another denition is often encountered in setting kB to unity, resulting in the Planck units or natural units for temperature and energy. In this context temperature is measured effectively in units of energy and the Boltzmann constant is not explicitly needed.[9]
This simplies many physical relationships and makes the denition of thermodynamic entropy coincide with that of information entropy:
where Pi is the probability of each microstate. The value chosen for a unit of the Planck temperature is that corresponding to the energy of the Planck mass or 1.416!833(85) ! 1032 K.[1]
References
1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m P.J. Mohr, B.N. Taylor, and D.B. Newell (2011), "The 2010 CODATA Recommended Values of the Fundamental Physical Constants" (Web Version 6.0). This database was developed by J. Baker, M. Douma, and S. Kotochigova. Available: http://physics.nist.gov/constants [Thursday, 02-Jun-2011 21:00:12 EDT]. National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD 20899. 2. ^ 300 kelvin * k / elementary charge in millivolts - Google Search (http://www.google.com/search?hl=en& q=300+kelvin+*+k+%2F+elementary+charge+in+millivolts) 3. ^ Kirby BJ., Micro- and Nanoscale Fluid Mechanics: Transport in Microuidic Devices (http://www.kirbyresearch.com/textbook) 4. ^ Tabeling (2006), Introduction to Microuidics 5. ^ Planck, Max (1901), "Ueber das Gesetz der Energieverteilung im Normalspectrum" (http://www.physik.uni-augsburg.de/annalen/history/historic-papers/1901_309_553-563.pdf), Ann. Phys. 309 (3): 55363, Bibcode:1901AnP...309..553P (http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1901AnP...309..553P), doi:10.1002/andp.19013090310 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1002%2Fandp.19013090310). English translation: "On the Law of Distribution of Energy in the Normal Spectrum (http://dbhs.wvusd.k12.ca.us/webdocs/ChemHistory/Planck-1901/Planck-1901.html)". 6. ^ Duplantier, Bertrand (2005). "Le mouvement brownien, 'divers et ondoyant' " [Brownian motion, 'diverse and undulating'] (http://www.bourbaphy.fr/duplantier2.pdf) (PDF). Sminaire Poincar 1 (in French): 155212. 7. ^ a b Planck, Max (2 June 1920), The Genesis and Present State of Development of the Quantum Theory (Nobel Lecture) (http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1918/planck-lecture.html) 8. ^ Podesta, M. D.; Underwood, R. et al. (2013). "A low-uncertainty measurement of the Boltzmann constant".
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Metrologia 50 (4): 354. doi:10.1088/0026-1394/50/4/354 (http://dx.doi.org /10.1088%2F0026-1394%2F50%2F4%2F354). 9. ^ Kalinin, M; Kononogov, S (2005), "Boltzmann's Constant, the Energy Meaning of Temperature, and Thermodynamic Irreversibility", Measurement Techniques 48 (7): 63236, doi:10.1007/s11018-005-0195-9 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1007%2Fs11018-005-0195-9)
External links
Draft Chapter 2 for SI Brochure, following redenitions of the base units (http://www.bipm.org /utils/common/pdf/si_brochure_draft_ch2.pdf) (prepared by the Consultative Committee for Units) Big Step Towards Redening the Kelvin: Scientists Find New Way to Determine Boltzmann Constant (http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/09/110920075520.htm) Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Boltzmann_constant&oldid=601425093" Categories: Statistical mechanics Thermodynamics Fundamental constants Physical constants This page was last modied on 26 March 2014 at 23:01. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-prot organization.
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