Steepest-entropy-ascent quantum thermodynamic modeling of heat and mass diffusion in a far-from-equilibrium system based on a single particle ensemble
Guanchen Li, Michael R. von Spakovsky

TL;DR
This paper develops a nonequilibrium thermodynamic model based on steepest entropy ascent for heat and mass diffusion, applicable far from equilibrium, and demonstrates its consistency with Onsager relations and classical thermodynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a variational model using steepest entropy ascent that captures far-from-equilibrium thermodynamics without assuming local equilibrium.
Findings
Model reproduces Onsager relations in nonequilibrium systems.
Describes linear and nonlinear relaxation behaviors.
Derives phenomenological transport coefficients near equilibrium.
Abstract
This paper presents a nonequilibrium thermodynamic model for the relaxation of a local, isolated system in nonequilibrium using the principle of steepest entropy ascent (SEA), which can be expressed as a variational principle in thermodynamic state space. The model is able to arrive at the Onsager relations for such a system. Since no assumption of local equilibrium is made, the conjugate fluxes and forces, which result, are intrinsic to the subspaces of the system's state space and are defined using the concepts of hypoequilibrium state and nonequilibrium intensive properties, which describe the non-mutual equilibrium status between subspaces of the thermodynamic state space. The Onsager relations are shown to be a thermodynamic kinematic feature of the system independent of the specific details of the micro-mechanical dynamics. Two kinds of relaxation processes are studied with…
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