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An Indicator to Evaluate the Thermodynamic Maturity of Industrial Process Units in Industrial Ecology
Author(s) -
Zvolinschi Anita,
Kjelstrup Signe
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of industrial ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.377
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1530-9290
pISSN - 1088-1980
DOI - 10.1111/j.1530-9290.2008.00024.x
Subject(s) - exergy , entropy production , industrial ecology , entropy (arrow of time) , exergy efficiency , measure (data warehouse) , mathematics , thermodynamic process , process (computing) , process engineering , computer science , environmental science , thermodynamics , ecology , engineering , data mining , physics , material properties , biology , sustainability , operating system
Summary The article suggests a measure to evaluate the thermodynamic maturity of industrial systems at the level of single process units. The measure can be quantified with reasonable confidence on the basis of entropy production as defined by irreversible thermodynamics theory. It quantifies, for one process unit, the distance between its actual state of operation and its state with minimum entropy production or optimum exergy efficiency, when the two states are constrained with a fixed production capacity of the process unit. We suggest that the minimum entropy production state is a mature state, or that processes that operate at this state are mature. We propose to call the measure “the thermodynamic maturity indicator” (π), and we define it as the ratio between the minimum entropy production and the actual entropy production. We calculated π on the basis of literature data for some examples of industrial process units in the chemical and process industry (i.e., heat exchanger, chemical reactor, distillation column, and paper drying machine). The proposed thermodynamic measure should be of interest for industrial ecology because it emerges from the entropy production rate, a dynamic function that can be optimized and used to understand the thermodynamic limit to improving the exergy efficiency of industrial processes. Although not a tool for replacing one process with another or comparing one technology to another, π may be used to assess actual operation states of single process units in industrial ecology.