Abstract
We propose a conservation-dissipation formalism (CDF) for coarse-grained descriptions of irreversible processes. This formalism is based on a stability criterion for non-equilibrium thermodynamics. The criterion ensures that non-equilibrium states tend to equilibrium in long time. As a systematic methodology, CDF provides a feasible procedure in choosing non-equilibrium state variables and determining their evolution equations. The equations derived in CDF have a unified elegant form. They are globally hyperbolic, allow a convenient definition of weak solutions, and are amenable to existing numerics. More importantly, CDF is a genuinely nonlinear formalism and works for systems far away from equilibrium. With this formalism, we formulate novel thermodynamics theories for heat conduction in rigid bodies and non-isothermal compressible Maxwell fluid flows as two typical examples. In these examples, the non-equilibrium variables are exactly the conjugate variables of the heat fluxes or stress tensors. The new theory generalizes Cattaneo's law or Maxwell's law in a regularized and nonlinear fashion.
Funding source: National Natural Science Foundation of China
Award Identifier / Grant number: 11204155, 11204150, 11471185
Funding source: Tsinghua University Initiative Scientific Research Program
Award Identifier / Grant number: 20121087902, 20131089184
© 2015 by De Gruyter
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Conservation-dissipation formalism of irreversible thermodynamics
- On stress relaxation timescales for dense binary particulate systems
- On the kinetic foundations of Kaluza's magnetohydrodynamics
- Thermal transport across a thin film composite due to laser short-pulse heating
- Quantum finite time availability for parametric oscillators
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Conservation-dissipation formalism of irreversible thermodynamics
- On stress relaxation timescales for dense binary particulate systems
- On the kinetic foundations of Kaluza's magnetohydrodynamics
- Thermal transport across a thin film composite due to laser short-pulse heating
- Quantum finite time availability for parametric oscillators