When reading Concepts in Thermal Physics (second edition) by Stephen and Katherine about the concepts of the third law, I met with such a problem. The text reads as follows:
Consider a perfect crystal composed of $N$ spinless atoms. We are told by the third law that its entropy is zero. However, let us further suppose that each atom has at its centre a nucleus with angular momentum quantum number $I$. If no magnetic field is applied to this system, then we appear to have a contradiction. The degeneracy of the nuclear spin is $2I+1$ and if $I> 0$, this will not be equal to one. How can we reconcile this with zero entropy since the non-zero nuclear spin implies that the entropy $S$ of this system should be $S= Nk\ln(2I + 1)$,to however low a temperature we cool it?
Although this question is answered from other aspect at next paragraph:
The answer to this apparent contradiction is as follows: in a real system in internal equilibrium, the individual components of the system must be able to exchange energy with each other, i.e., to interact with each other. Nuclear spins actually feel a tiny, but non-zero, magnetic field due to the dipolar fields produced each other, and this lifts the degeneracy. Another way of looking at this is to say that the interactions give rise to collective excitations of the nuclear spins. These collective excitations are nuclear spin waves, and the lowest-energy nuclear spin wave, corresponding to the longest-wavelength mode, will be non-degenerate. At sufficiently low temperatures (and this will be extremely low!) only that longest- wavelength mode will be thermally occupied and the entropy of the nuclear spin system will be zero.
What I am asking is about the expression $S= Nk\ln(2I + 1)$. Entropy $S$ should be larger than zero for $I>0$. Why we can neglect this expression and say $S=0$ at $T=0$? Is it because $I$ becomes zero or this expression is no more valid at $T=0$?