Extracting mechanical work from a scalar field potential via dissipative structures
Mark Gibbons

TL;DR
This paper explores how dissipative structures in a scalar field potential can generate mechanical work from a polar dielectric fluid under non-equilibrium conditions, involving complex interactions like spin ice and van der Waals forces.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mechanism linking scalar field potentials and dissipative structures to extract mechanical work from a complex fluid system.
Findings
Long-range van der Waals interactions influence phase changes.
Magnetic monopoles exchange energy with van der Waals forces.
Mechanical work is produced via energy exchange on a hyperbolic manifold.
Abstract
Further thermodynamic investigations into the behaviour of a polar dielectric working fluid under non-equilibrium and negative pressure conditions are reported. The establishment of a long-range van der Waals interaction between clathrate hydrates and their former guest molecules is revisited. The dissipative nature of these inclusion compounds appears responsible for second-order phase changes that maintain a constant Hamiltonian function despite distinct changes in phase symmetry. A scalar field potential, as derived from the Lagrangian function, is deemed responsible for the flow of energy within the system. The inclusion compounds are embedded in a geometrically frustrated fluid lattice which together form a spin ice material. The effective magnetic monopoles of the spin ice appear to exchange energy with the long-range van der Waals interaction on a hyperbolic manifold to produce…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMethane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
