Replace the flappy door with a revolving door to do the same function and you'll quickly see that you have a box with a turbine on each end.
Sorry, but I think this is my fault. The turbine on the sketch is a symbolic one. It wouldn't actually work if it looked like it does on the sketch, because the pressure on the 'front' side of the arms is always equal to the one on the 'back' side of the arms. In reality, turbines are dynamic things, which aren't too easy to draw however. A standard turbine symbol (EDIT: Link to image NOT showing a standard turbine symbol removed) wouldn't tell most people anything unless they are mechanical engineers. However, we
know that turbines work. We don't necessarily have to use a turbine even. The problem is to get the overpressure, if we can get an overpressure, which is macroscopic by definition, we know that it can be turned to useful energy.
So, no, these two mechanisms are very different. The turbine would be a normal-sized one, by the way.
Why this isn't possible in real life seems really hard to understand, but seems to involve the fact that a one-way valve for atoms isn't possible.
This paper seems to address the problem for actual, or at least possible, devices.
Then there is something I don't understand about my device. That paper appears (I can only read the abstract) to be the usual kind of Maxwell's Demon, where there is some 'sensor' to control a mechanism that opens and closes the gate. And so we have the information storage problem. That problem doesn't seem to be the issue with my device - but again, maybe I'm just blind.
There is actually a running thread on learning QM in this forum where I did some recommendations; you might, I think, find Vincent Icke's The Force of Symmetry very interesting, and quite valuable if you know your way around Newtonian and Galilean physics pretty well.
Thanks. I'll definitely look out for that one, and I'll skim the QM thread too some day.
in an enclosed space (ie the box) with an increasing number of particles wouldn't you have more and more collisions with the limiting wall and thus lose more and more energy here through transfer?
No, that's not how heat transfer works. There will be more pressure inside the box, but it will have the same temperature. But anyway, you assume that the device already works! Again - inefficiency is not a problem here. If we have an increasing number of particles, it's because it works!
BTW How many atoms do you think would go in to the construction of the door? You say the opening on the left is big enough for one molecule. Do you think you can arrange for the door to be exactly the same size with no overlap of the adjacent walls? If you have the door overlapping the walls a bit then you've got a situation where the door can only have one molecule hitting it from the outside yet multiple molecules hitting it from the interior.
The door can be made of a single atom, in theory. Not only doesn't it have to overlap, it can actually be made smaller than the opening. The only thing that is required is that it obstructs enough of the opening that gas molecules can't pass through when it is closed.
Anyway, it doesn't matter if the door sometimes cannot open because a molecule is hitting from the inside at the same time. Assuming that the gas is thin enough, this is unlikely. Even if the probability is very high, it is lower than 100% (and for a normal gas, it would clearly be very low). So again we have only a problem of efficiency.
It was mentioned before but what "powers" the 'spring'?
We could see the spring as a chemical bond. These are flexible, you know, but they have a 'preferred' (minimum energy) orientation. We don't need to swing the hatch 180 degrees, by the way. Just a very small deflection would be enough, if that is all that's needed to make the difference from 'impassable' to 'passable, given a near-perfect hit'.
Merko, could you expand on how that turbine works a bit better?
See above. It's a normal, macro-scale turbine. We know turbines work.
Your device may work for a few nanoseconds until you reach temperature equillibrium with the outside, but after that, the door will recieve more pressure from the inside (all those molecules plus the spring force) than the outside, and remain forever shut.
Again, pressure is only a statistical property, it doesn't exist on this scale. See my reply to DanishDynamite in post 9.
But even here, won't all the work end up being done on the spring, where you will lose all the energy to heat losses?
I regain it through heat transfer, see point 3 in the OP.
On the other hand, if you are exhausting into vacuum, which you seem to be assuming, then you have introduced a temperature differential. You will get energy, but in exactly the same way you get energy from a water dam or a windmill.
No, I assume that the outside room is the same on both sides of the box, obviously (see point 4 in the OP). It contains a gas, perhaps one with large, heavy molecules, to make the construction easier.
The enclosed box and turbine obsfucates this point, because we all forgot to analyze the forces on the turbine.
We can remove the turbine for now. If we then get an overpressure in the box, we can re-add it. Because we
know that we can turn overpressure into useful, macro-scale energy. That is evidently
not the problem.
Show me how a molecule has the ability to move all the way from the door, through the turbine, and out back into the room, despite losing energy to the door, spring, walls, and turbine.
Sure. Our molecule will lose energy (speed) hitting the door. This energy turns to heat in the door, which is transfered to the rest of the box, and on to inside and outside molecules. Our molecule regains this energy (speed) from collisions with the inside wall. It does so, because normal laws of heat transfer say that the wall will transfer heat between the gas on the outside and the inside, until they have the same temperature. Same temperature, means that the molecules have, on average, the same energy (speed). Our molecule then again loses energy (speed) in the turbine. This energy is converted in to electricity and used to solve the world's problems. So when the molecule exits, it will indeed be cooler, have less energy, less speed. That's the point of the device. It extracts energy from heat in an even-temperatured room, which is impossible according to the second law of thermodynamics.
Here is how I see the device in a classical world.
You can't think about it like that. When we scale it up, we get macro-scale effects back again such as pressure. The device absolutely requires being nano-scale.
If you want more detail, the force required to enter the chanbe will be equal to the force being exerted from inside the chamber. Energy required to get in will equal energy required to force molecule out (ignoring any leakage such as friction heat). Ergo, no net energy produced.
This is not the explanation. Again, this is covered in point 3 in the OP. The molecules regain this energy through normal heat transfer.
The door swings open because it has had energy imparted to it by the molecule. So where exactly does this energy go? If it is absorbed by the swing or the frame in some way (usually through heating), then entropy increases and the 2LOT is not violated, if we imagine a perfectly elastic door and spring (or doorframe and spring), then once hit by a molecule, the door will continue to swing open and shut and not function as an adequate partition between the two sides.
Once again, covered in point 3 of the OP.
The design was first proposed by Maryan Smoluchowski in 1912, and is usually called "Smoluchowski's Trapdoor" rather than Maxwell's Demon in his honour. You can read a refutation of it
here.
Wow, thanks! However, that doesn't seem to be a refutation at all. It is an attempt to describe the problem in more detail. The author adds a few caveats here and there to explain that he doesn't think it will work, and a few hints of why that may be the case. But he doesn't actually explain any mechanism (as far as I understand) of failure. Additionally, while it is similar, it is clearly different, because it relies on different properties of the door. In my device, the door is closed by a spring force, such as that of a chemical bond. In that device, the door is left swinging, and is assumed to close by itself sooner or later.
For one thing, any molecule from the exterior that opens the door is going to be rebounding to the left after the collision not proceeding to the right in to the chamber.
Not necessarily. If the gas molecule is heavier than the door, and/or moves faster than the door will after collision, it can continue to the right.
So the molecule that opens the door is virtually precluded from being the one that enters unless it engages in further collisions.
But it
will engage in further collisions, sometimes.
It's probability of it's motion changing due to collision is now exactly the same as any other gas molecule in or out of the chamber. It has no more chance of being the one through the door than any other molecule.
The probability of changing direction is indeed the same, but it has one advantage: it is close to the door. Imagine that the gas is very, very thin. The chance of a molecule being close to the door at any time is very, very small. If a molecule hits from the outside and opens the door, it may go through directly, or bounce around a bit. But simply because it
must be close to the door, there is an increased chance that it will enter, one way or the other, compared to a random molecule on the inside. (EDIT: Or a random molecule on the outside.)
Physics is a lot harder, and these machines are often ingenious, so the errors are often hard to find. But it's still just apples. If I give you an apple, I no longer have that apple. If I give you energy via photons, I no longer have that energy. A closed system will always sum to zero.
That analogy works for the first law of thermodynamics, but not for the second law. This device also 'sums to zero', it doesn't break the first law. The second law is much, much more complex to prove, and in fact there isn't a watertight proof for it that shows it can't be circumvented by nano-scale mechanisms.
Of course, very few respectable scientists actually believe it
can be circumvented.
I also don't believe it can be circumvented. I don't believe that this device would actually work. But it is definitely not enough to say that it can't, because so far, it has not been proven.