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Purpose in Thermodynamics
Abstract
<jats:p>This is a review of the concepts of purpose, direction, and objective in the
discipline of thermodynamics, which is a pillar of physics, natural sciences, life
science, and engineering science. Reviewed is the relentless evolution of this discipline
toward accounting for evolutionary design with direction, and for establishing the
concept of purpose in methodologies of modeling, analysis, teaching, and design optimization.
Evolution is change after change toward flow access, with direction in time, and purpose.
Evolution does not have an ‘end’. In thermodynamics, purpose is already the defining
feature of methods that have emerged to guide and facilitate the generation, distribution,
and use of motive power, heating, and cooling: thermodynamic optimization, exergy-based
methods (i.e., exergetic, exergoeconomic, and exergoenvironmental analysis), entropy
generation minimization, extended exergy, environomics, thermoecology, finite time
thermodynamics, pinch analysis, animal design, geophysical flow design, and constructal
law. What distinguishes these approaches are the purpose and the performance evaluation
used in each method.</jats:p>
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22456Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.3390/en14020408Publication Info
Bejan, A; & Tsatsaronis, G (2021). Purpose in Thermodynamics. Energies, 14(2). pp. 408-408. 10.3390/en14020408. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22456.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Adrian Bejan
J.A. Jones Distinguished Professor of Mechanical Engineering
Professor Bejan was awarded the Benjamin Franklin Medal 2018 and the Humboldt Research
Award 2019. His research covers engineering science and applied physics: thermodynamics,
heat transfer, convection, design, and evolution in nature. He is ranked among the
top 0.01% of the most cited and impactful world scientists (and top 10 in Engineering
world wide) in the 2019 citations impact database created by Stanford University’s
John Ioannidis, in <a href="https://urldefen

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