Entropy MCQ – Objective Questions with Answers
Mechanical Engineering › Thermodynamics | Free practice MCQs with detailed explanations
Last Updated: June 2026
📌 About this MCQ Set
Entropy is a property of a system that measures molecular disorder and the unavailability of energy for doing work. It is central to the Second Law.
These MCQs cover the definition of entropy, entropy change in processes, and the principle of increase of entropy.
8 questions • every answer comes with a worked explanation. Click Show Answer to check yourself.
📖 New to this topic? Read the full concept guide: Entropy →
Entropy MCQs
Q1. Entropy is a measure of:
Show Answer
Answer: B. Molecular disorder / randomness
Entropy quantifies the disorder or randomness of a system and the unavailability of energy to do useful work.
Q2. Entropy is a:
Show Answer
Answer: B. Point (state) function
Entropy depends only on the state of the system, so it is a point/state function.
Q3. The change in entropy for a reversible process is given by:
Show Answer
Answer: A. dS = δQ_rev / T
For a reversible process dS = δQ_rev/T, where T is absolute temperature.
Q4. For an adiabatic reversible (isentropic) process, the entropy change is:
Show Answer
Answer: C. Zero
Reversible + adiabatic means δQ = 0 and reversible, so dS = 0 — the process is isentropic.
Q5. The entropy of an isolated system during a spontaneous process:
Show Answer
Answer: C. Increases
The principle of increase of entropy: for any real process in an isolated system, entropy increases.
Q6. The units of specific entropy are:
Show Answer
Answer: B. kJ/kg·K
Specific entropy is energy per unit mass per unit absolute temperature: kJ/kg·K.
Q7. During heat addition at constant temperature, entropy change ΔS equals:
Show Answer
Answer: A. Q/T
At constant temperature, ΔS = Q/T.
Q8. The Clausius inequality for a cyclic process is:
Show Answer
Answer: B. ∮δQ/T ≤ 0
For any cycle ∮δQ/T ≤ 0; equality holds only for a reversible cycle.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is entropy in simple terms?
Entropy measures the disorder or randomness of a system and how much of its energy is unavailable to do useful work.
Is entropy a path or state function?
Entropy is a state (point) function — it depends only on the current state, not the path taken.
Can entropy decrease?
The entropy of a specific system can decrease (e.g. cooling), but the total entropy of the universe never decreases for a real process.