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Is it possible that in open systems can occur phase transitions if the required conditions (i.e., temperature and pressure) are met? Are there examples?

stafusa
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ralf htp
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    Pretty sure that ice can melt when I place it outside. Does that count or did you want something more complicated? – knzhou Aug 28 '18 at 06:00
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    Yes i have a question on aviation.stackexchange on the occurence of supercriticality of air in the compressor stage of a jet engine ( https://aviation.stackexchange.com/questions/54620/is-the-air-in-a-jet-engine-supercritical ), a jet engine is an open system and transition to supercriticality is a phase transition. i had to an extended discussion there that was now moved to chat https://chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/82343/discussion-on-answer-by-ymb1-is-the-air-in-a-jet-engine-supercritical – ralf htp Aug 28 '18 at 06:58

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Yes.

Some examples are found, e.g., in the 1978 paper Experimental Studies of Some Phase Transitions in Nonequilibrium Open Systems (namely, "onset of self-sustained electric oscillation, evolution of vortex around a sink hole and successive transitions in liquid crystals due to an electric field").

And not only phase transitions can take place in open systems, also critical states can be sustained, e.g., in systems displaying Self-Organized Criticality, such as a sand pile over which grains fall randomly.

stafusa
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Often open systems can be described as nonlinear dynamical systems so the formalism of chaos theory can be applied. In closed system a phase transition, that occurs above a critical point, requires equilibrium conditions.

In open systems ( nonlinear dynamical systems ) a critical point is generalized into a bifurcation point. As in open systems also critical points resp. bifurcation points exist, phase transitions can also occur in open systems :

Collections of identical atoms can behave in macroscopically different ways when their temperature and density are changed. For example, water exists as a gas, a liquid and a solid at different temperatures. Why? These "phases" are collective effects that emerge under equilibrium conditions. The changes, called "phase transitions", are a big object of study in Physics. Changes of temperature in the early universe at which new collective modes of motion emerged, like the symmetry breaking in the standard model, are also usually called phase transitions. Closed systems typically quickly reach thermodynamic equilibrium, after which nothing changes. Equilibrium can usually be assumed if the external conditions on a closed system are changed slowly enough. Open systems, on the other hand, are generally under non-equilibrium conditions.

The distinction between open and closed systems in crucial to the Second Law because open systems do not have to have increasing entropy. The Earth is an open system: it receives energy from the sun and exports an equal amount of energy to the cold night sky. The whole biosphere copiously produces entropy all the time, but this does not mean that the entropy of the biosphere must increase, because it is not open. For a more technical discussion, see here. (Many foolish people believe that biological evolution contradicts the Second Law --- there are many web pages about this -- but this is completely incorrect).

The Ising model of a magnetic phase transition. Here we see how a new ordered structure can spontaneously emerge as some external parameter (here the temperature) is varied continuously. The transition point, often called a critical point, is sharp and the new phase can appear continuously or discontinuously at that "tipping point". At lot has been written about such points, including much nonsense.

Near a critical point, fluctuations can become very large as the system becomes "soft" at the transition.
Such points are more generally called bifurcation points and they can occur in non-equilibrium systems as well, and can lead to the sudden appearance of new states of motion or even spatial patterns. A good example is the onset of period 2 in the logistic map. Pattern formation is the study of such non-equilibrium structures.

source : https://www.physics.utoronto.ca/~smorris/phy101/notes/open-and-closed-systems.html

ralf htp
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  • That's incorrect. 1) Nonlinear dynamical systems include closed systems, not only open ones, as implied; and 2) to say that "a critical point is generalized into a bifurcation point" is not accurate, check Are bifurcations in dynamical systems related to phase transitions?. – stafusa Aug 29 '18 at 08:10
  • the text does not exclude closed system from the category of nonlinear dynamical systems and the generalization of critical points into bifurcation points is in the quotation from https://www.physics.utoronto.ca/~smorris/phy101/notes/open-and-closed-systems.html ( above even marked bold ) – ralf htp Aug 29 '18 at 08:16
  • i think this explanation is better because it highlights the link of phase transitions to theory of nonlinear dynamical systems / chaos theory, with that many open systems can be described – ralf htp Aug 29 '18 at 08:18
  • "so the generalization of critical points in closed systems into bifurcation points in open systems is accurate" - To me it doesn't seem so, but it might be a disagreement on the language, rather than content. To me this sentence seems to imply that you have bifurcation points in open systems, and critical points in closed ones, when actually bifurcation points are the more general term in both closed and open systems. – stafusa Aug 29 '18 at 08:38
  • yes i delete the comment and change this ... – ralf htp Aug 29 '18 at 08:45
  • In https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/366504/are-bifurcations-in-dynamical-systems-related-to-phase-transitions is said at bifurcation points the statistical behavior of a system changes, what is accurate. However the same is valid for critical points in closed systems , so the generalization of critical points into bifurcation points is accurate – ralf htp Aug 29 '18 at 08:47