Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1161306 Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 2011 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Landauer's Principle asserts that there is an unavoidable cost in thermodynamic entropy creation when data is erased. It is usually derived from incorrect assumptions, most notably, that erasure must compress the phase space of a memory device or that thermodynamic entropy arises from the probabilistic uncertainty of random data. Recent work seeks to prove Landauer's Principle without using these assumptions. I show that the processes assumed in the proof, and in the thermodynamics of computation more generally, can be combined to produce devices that both violate the second law and erase data without entropy cost, indicating an inconsistency in the theoretical system. Worse, the standard repertoire of processes selectively neglects thermal fluctuations. Concrete proposals for how we might measure dissipationlessly and expand single molecule gases reversibly are shown to be fatally disrupted by fluctuations. Reversible, isothermal processes on molecular scales are shown to be disrupted by fluctuations that can only be overcome by introducing entropy creating, dissipative processes.

► No demonstration of Landauer's Principle has succeeded. ► A new, indirect demonstration admits operations that can violate the second law. ► Fluctuations defeat all molecular scale, thermodynamically reversible processes. ► They can be overcome by entropy creation that exceeds the Landauer limit.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Physics and Astronomy (General)
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