scholarly journals A Unified Extended Thermodynamic Description of Diffusion, Thermo-Diffusion, Suspensions, and Porous Media

2005 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgy Lebon ◽  
Thomas Desaive ◽  
Pierre Dauby

It is shown that extended irreversible thermodynamics (EIT) provides a unified description of a great variety of processes, including matter diffusion, thermo-diffusion, suspensions, and fluid flows in porous media. This is achieved by enlarging the set of classical variables, as mass, momentum and temperature by the corresponding fluxes of mass, momentum and heat. For simplicity, we consider only Newtonian fluids and restrict ourselves to a linear analysis: quadratic and higher order terms in the fluxes are neglected. In the case of diffusion in a binary mixture, the extra flux variable is the diffusion flux of one the constituents, say the solute. In thermo-diffusion, one adds the heat flux to the set of variables. The main result of the present approach is that the traditional equations of Fick, Fourier, Soret, and Dufour are replaced by time-evolution equations for the matter and heat fluxes, such generalizations are useful in high-frequency processes. It is also shown that the analysis can be easily extended to the study of particle suspensions in fluids and to flows in porous media, when such systems can be viewed as binary mixtures with a solid and a fluid component.

1990 ◽  
Vol 195 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. del Rio ◽  
M. López de Haro

ABSTRACTA formalism of extended irreversible thermodynamics (EIT) is used to study the physical aspects of heat, momentum and mass transport through porous media.The thermodynamic space is enlarged with respect to that of classical linear irreversible thermodynamics (LIT) to include the mass, heat and momentum fluxes as independent variables. The time evolution equations for such variables are derived self-consistently and reduce to the usual constitutive equations of LIT when the appropriate limits are taken. Equations that involve effects characterized by terms of second order in the gradients of conserved variables (such as the Darcy-Brinkman law) may also be derived within the same formalism. Finally, EIT provides the natural framework beyond LIT to introduce non-isothermal effects in the study of transport phenomena in porous media.


2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 607-617
Author(s):  
Ruben Ibañez ◽  
Adrien Scheuer ◽  
Elena Lopez ◽  
Emmanuelle Abisset-Chavanne ◽  
Francisco Chinesta ◽  
...  

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