Does the Second Law of Thermodynamics Preclude Evolution?

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Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics & Origins

The idea that energy sources can somehow solve the origins problem is so prevalent that a few detailed examples are required. A flow of energy can maintain a living or a non-living system in a state of non-equilibrium. Consider a chemical reaction that proceeds as follows: if the temperature is less than 25 degrees Celsius, then C –> A + B. If the temperature is above 100 degrees Celsius, then the reaction proceeds in the opposite direction, A+B–> C. Now consider a body of water that is warmed by volcanic activity (figure 7.5).

Figure 7.5: A Non-Equilibrium System

non-equilibrium-systems.GIF (13218 bytes)



   In figure 7.5, there is a flow of heat from the volcano into the ocean around it. This sets up a temperature gradient. The water is very hot near the volcano and very cool away from it. Heat flows in the water as indicated by the arrow. The chemical reaction under consideration proceeds in the direction to create chemical C near the volcano. Away from the volcano, it proceeds to create the chemicals, A and B.

   Since this creates much more of chemical C near the volcano, C tends to move away toward the colder water (see arrows). Much more of the chemicals A and B exist in cold water. So these tend to travel toward the warmer water near the volcano (see arrows). This creates a cycle in which some chemicals are continually transported from warm water to cold water, and others from cold to warm.

   If the desired chemical is C, then it would be beneficial to heat the entire body of water to a temperature greater than 100 degrees. If the desired chemical is A or B, then it would be beneficial to have the entire ocean at a temperature less than 25 degrees Celcius. The flow of energy allows the chemicals to exist away from equilibrium, but they exist in an intermediate state between the two extremes. There is less of the chemical C than if the entire body of water is heated to 100 degrees Celsius, but there is more C than if the entire ocean is at 25 degrees Celsius. The same argument applies to A and B.

   The relevance of such a system to the origin of life is questionable at best. How this flow of energy and matter can create a complex biological molecule is not clear. Figure 7.4 is certainly a form of order. C flows to the left, and A and B flow to the right. The cycle is maintained by the flow of heat, but there is nothing if figure 7.4 that performs the function of an enzyme. There is no mechanism to couple an unfavorable reaction to a favorable one. Furthermore, there is no mechanism to preferentially create only the desired chemicals.

   Experimental evidence supports this theoretical conclusion. Because most if not all experiments designed to investigate the origin of complex chemicals make extensive use of non-equilibrium conditions. The most famous, Miller’s electric discharge experiment, will be discussed in the next chapter.

   So in this case, both theory and experiment converge to the same answer. Under plausible prebiotic conditions, without molecular knowledge, it is very difficult (if not impossible) to create the complex chemicals used by life today.

                  

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Chapter 7: The Second Law of Thermodynamics

        How Does Life Exist So Far from Equilibrium
        Is Life Really Different from Non-Life?
        Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics
        Chemical Oscillators
        Entropy and Biological Evolution

PDF: Implications of the Second Law (317 Kb)

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