1.I have found this about an irreversible process,
"An irreversible process is one in which the intermediate states cannot be specified by any set of macroscopic variables and which are not equilibrium states. Since the intermediate states are unknown this process cannot be reversed."
why this intermediate states cannot be specified by any set of macroscopic variables?
We know the relationship among this variables - which let us know how change in one variable affects the other. So I think we can definitely work out the inter-mediate state ( in terms of these variables).
2. "A reversible change in thermodynamics is a change that can be reversed by an infinitesimal modification of a variable."
Why "infinitesimal modification" is set as a requirement for a reversible process.
Suppose a gas cylinder is in equilibrium (the cylinder is completely insulating). Now, we put a weight on the piston ( frictionless one). The gas compress adiabatically. Let's say the change in volume is V (substantially large). Temperature increases after the process (i.e increase in internal energy). Now just remove the weight, what happens? I think the gas retain its initial condition. It expand ,completely losing the energy it gained before. It came back to original state! So it should be a reversible process though it doesn't fullfill the requirement -infinitesimal change in variable.
Any input should be appreciated.