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This is the second edition of the book "Thermodynamics of Fluids
under Flow," which was published in 2000 and has now been
corrected, expanded and updated. This is a companion book to our
other title Extended irreversible thermodynamics (D. Jou, J.
Casas-Vazquez and G. Lebon, Springer, 4th edition 2010), and of the
textbook Understanding non-equilibrium thermodynamics (G. Lebon, D.
Jou and J. Casas-Vazquez, Springer, 2008. The present book is more
specialized than its counterpart, as it focuses its attention on
the non-equilibrium thermodynamics of flowing fluids, incorporating
non-trivial thermodynamic contributions of the flow, going beyond
local equilibrium theories, i.e., including the effects of internal
variables and of external forcing due to the flow. Whereas the
book's first edition was much more focused on polymer solutions,
with brief glimpses into ideal and real gases, the present edition
covers a much wider variety of systems, such as: diluted and
concentrated polymer solutions, polymer blends, laminar and
turbulent superfluids, phonon hydrodynamics and heat transport in
nanosystems, nuclear collisions, far-from-equilibrium ideal gases,
and molecular solutions. It also deals with a variety of
situations, emphasizing the non-equilibrium flow contribution:
temperature and entropy in flowing ideal gases, shear-induced
effects on phase transitions in real gases and on polymer
solutions, stress-induced migration and its application to flow
chromatography, Taylor dispersion, anomalous diffusion in flowing
systems, the influence of the flow on chemical reactions, and
polymer degradation. The new edition is not only broader in scope,
but more educational in character, and with more emphasis on
applications, in keeping with our times. It provides many examples
of how a deeper theoretical understanding may bring new and more
efficient applications, forging links between theoretical progress
and practical aims. This updated version expands on the trusted
content of its predecessor, making it more interesting and useful
for a larger audience."
This is the first comprehensive monograph on a new thermodynamic theory that goes beyond the classical theory of irreversible processes. In contrast to the classical approach, the local equilibrium hypothesis is abandoned, and the basic variables are complemented by non-equilibrium quantities. The claims made for extended thermodynamics are confirmed by the kinetic theory of gases and statistical mechanics. The book covers a wide spectrum of applications, and also contains a wide discussion of the foundations and the scope of the most current theories of non-equilibrium thermodynamics. The present edition reflects new developments in the theory of applications, adds new problems and provides a more detailed comparison with other fields of active research. It contains 130 proposed problems, whose detailed solutions, as well as wide bibliography on extended irreversible thermodynamics and related topices, may be unloaded from the www.uab.es/dep-fisica/eit website.
The fast progress in many areas of research related to
non-equilibrium ther- dynamics has prompted us to write a fourth
edition of this book. Like in the previous editions, our main
concern is to open the subject to the widest au- ence, including
students, teachers, and researchers in physics, chemistry, engine-
ing, biology, and materials sciences. Our objective is to present a
general view on several open problems arising in non-equilibrium
situations, and to afford a wide perspective of applications
illustrating their practical outcomes and con- quences. A better
comprehension of the foundations is generally correlated to an
increase of the range of applications, implying mutual feedback and
cross fert- ization. Truly, thermodynamic methods are widely used
in many areas of science but, surprisingly, the active dynamism of
thermodynamics as a ?eld on its own is not suf?ciently perceived
outside a relatively reduced number of specialized researchers.
Extended irreversible thermodynamics (EIT) goes beyond the
classical f- malisms based on the local equilibrium hypothesis; it
was also referred to in an earlier publication by the authors
(Lebon et al. 1992) as a thermodynamics of the third type, as it
provides a bridge between classical irreversible thermodynamics and
rational thermodynamics, enlarging at the same time their
respective range of application. The salient feature of the theory
is that the ?uxes are incorporated into the set of basic variables.
This is the second edition of the book "Thermodynamics of Fluids
under Flow," which was published in 2000 and has now been
corrected, expanded and updated. This is a companion book to our
other title Extended irreversible thermodynamics (D. Jou, J.
Casas-Vazquez and G. Lebon, Springer, 4th edition 2010), and of the
textbook Understanding non-equilibrium thermodynamics (G. Lebon, D.
Jou and J. Casas-Vazquez, Springer, 2008. The present book is more
specialized than its counterpart, as it focuses its attention on
the non-equilibrium thermodynamics of flowing fluids, incorporating
non-trivial thermodynamic contributions of the flow, going beyond
local equilibrium theories, i.e., including the effects of internal
variables and of external forcing due to the flow. Whereas the
book's first edition was much more focused on polymer solutions,
with brief glimpses into ideal and real gases, the present edition
covers a much wider variety of systems, such as: diluted and
concentrated polymer solutions, polymer blends, laminar and
turbulent superfluids, phonon hydrodynamics and heat transport in
nanosystems, nuclear collisions, far-from-equilibrium ideal gases,
and molecular solutions. It also deals with a variety of
situations, emphasizing the non-equilibrium flow contribution:
temperature and entropy in flowing ideal gases, shear-induced
effects on phase transitions in real gases and on polymer
solutions, stress-induced migration and its application to flow
chromatography, Taylor dispersion, anomalous diffusion in flowing
systems, the influence of the flow on chemical reactions, and
polymer degradation. The new edition is not only broader in scope,
but more educational in character, and with more emphasis on
applications, in keeping with our times. It provides many examples
of how a deeper theoretical understanding may bring new and more
efficient applications, forging links between theoretical progress
and practical aims. This updated version expands on the trusted
content of its predecessor, making it more interesting and useful
for a larger audience.
The pedagogically presented lectures deal with viscoelastic
behaviour of fluids, the compatibility of rheological theories with
nonequilibrium thermodynamics, fluids under shear, and polymer
behaviour in solution and in biological systems. The main aims of
the book are to stress the importance of the study of rheological
systems for statistical physics and nonequilibrium thermodynamics
and to present recent results in rheological modelling. The book
will be a valuable source for both students and researchers.
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