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Article
Student ideas regarding entropy and the second law of thermodynamics in an introductory physics course
American Journal of Physics
  • Warren M. Christensen, University of Maine
  • David E. Meltzer, Arizona State University
  • Craig Ogilvie, Iowa State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
10-1-2009
DOI
10.1119/1.3167357
Abstract
We report on students’ thinking regarding entropy in an introductory calculus-based physics course. We analyzed students’ responses to a variety of questions on entropy changes of an arbitrarily defined system and its surroundings. In four offerings of the same course we found that before instruction, no more than 6% of all students could give completely correct responses to relevant questions posed in both general and concrete contexts. Nearly two-thirds of the students showed clear evidence of conservation-type reasoning regarding entropy. These outcomes were little changed even after instruction. Targeted instruction that guided students to recognize that entropy is not a conserved quantity appears to yield improved performance on qualitative questions related to this concept.
Comments

This article is from American Journal of Physics 77 (2009): 907, doi:10.1119/1.3167357. Posted with permission.

Rights
This article is used in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Copyright Owner
American Association of Physics Teachers
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Warren M. Christensen, David E. Meltzer and Craig Ogilvie. "Student ideas regarding entropy and the second law of thermodynamics in an introductory physics course" American Journal of Physics Vol. 77 Iss. 10 (2009) p. 907 - 917
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/craig-ogilvie/46/