A Review of the System-Intrinsic Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics in Extended Space (MNEQT) with Applications
P.D. Gujrati

TL;DR
This paper reviews a novel extended space approach to nonequilibrium thermodynamics (MNEQT) that introduces internal variables and internal equilibrium, enabling a consistent definition of system temperature and entropy for irreversible processes.
Contribution
It introduces MNEQT, a new framework that identifies internal variables and defines a global temperature in nonequilibrium systems, solving longstanding issues in NEQT.
Findings
MNEQT provides a unique global temperature for nonequilibrium systems.
The approach converts Clausius inequality into an equality for irreversible processes.
Examples demonstrate the framework's applicability to various irreversible phenomena.
Abstract
The review deals with a novel approach (MNEQT) to nonequilibrium thermodynamics (NEQT) that is based on the concept of internal equilibrium (IEQ) in an enlarged state space involving internal variables as additional state variables. The IEQ-macrostates are unique in the enlarged state space and have no memory just as EQ macrostates are in the EQ state space. The approach provides a clear strategy to identify the internal variables for any model through several examples. The MNEQT deals directly with system-intrinsic quantities, which are very useful as they fully describe irreversibility. Because of this, MNEQT solves a long-standing problem in NEQT of identifying a unique global temperature T of a system, thus fulfilling Planck's dream of a global temperature for any system, even if it is not uniform such as when it is driven between two heat baths; T has the conventional…
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