Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Thermodynamic Rarity and the Loss of Mineral Wealth

View through CrossRef
The second law of thermodynamics and, specifically, exergy analysis have been traditionally used for the assessment and optimization of energy systems. Nevertheless, as shown in this paper, exergy could also constitute a powerful tool for the evaluation of mineral commodities. That said, new or re-defined exergy-based concepts need to be developed. This paper presents Thanatia as a baseline for evaluating the exergy of any mineral in the crust and opens the door to discuss the “thermodynamic rarity” concept as a basis for exergy analyses for mineral systems. Thermodynamic rarity is understood as the amount of exergy needed to obtain a given mineral from a completely degraded state, denoted as Thanatia. The rarer the mineral, the greater the associated exergy costs. It quantifies value, as it relates to concentration, chemical composition and cohesion, key aspects that determine whether a mine is exploitable. The theory further allows one to quantify the gradual loss of mineral capital on Earth as a consequence of “rarefaction processes” that occur at a mineral’s end-of-life, when a commodity is wasted, and at its beginning-of-life, where mining ore grades decline after extraction.
Title: Thermodynamic Rarity and the Loss of Mineral Wealth
Description:
The second law of thermodynamics and, specifically, exergy analysis have been traditionally used for the assessment and optimization of energy systems.
Nevertheless, as shown in this paper, exergy could also constitute a powerful tool for the evaluation of mineral commodities.
That said, new or re-defined exergy-based concepts need to be developed.
This paper presents Thanatia as a baseline for evaluating the exergy of any mineral in the crust and opens the door to discuss the “thermodynamic rarity” concept as a basis for exergy analyses for mineral systems.
Thermodynamic rarity is understood as the amount of exergy needed to obtain a given mineral from a completely degraded state, denoted as Thanatia.
The rarer the mineral, the greater the associated exergy costs.
It quantifies value, as it relates to concentration, chemical composition and cohesion, key aspects that determine whether a mine is exploitable.
The theory further allows one to quantify the gradual loss of mineral capital on Earth as a consequence of “rarefaction processes” that occur at a mineral’s end-of-life, when a commodity is wasted, and at its beginning-of-life, where mining ore grades decline after extraction.

Related Results

Rural versus urban wealth inequality in South Africa
Rural versus urban wealth inequality in South Africa
This study sought to understand wealth creation amongst South Africans living in rural areas versus those living in urban areas. The study made a distinction between income inequal...
Islamic Wealth Management: Qur'anic Approach
Islamic Wealth Management: Qur'anic Approach
Wealth has an important role in human life, especially in this era. Basically, human activities related to wealth consist of three things, namely activities to build wealth, to man...
Requirements of Map Compilation and Database Building of 1∶50 000 Mineral Geological Maps
Requirements of Map Compilation and Database Building of 1∶50 000 Mineral Geological Maps
1∶50 000 solid mineral geological surveys are long-term basic, public-spirited, and strategic geological work that guarantee national energy and resource security. They serve as bo...
Accounting for Wealth Concentration
Accounting for Wealth Concentration
Wealth – a household’s net worth – affects everyone’s lives. Wealth is distributed very unequally: about a fifth of households have negative or zero net worth, while some househo...
Comparison of modelled seismic loss against historical damage information
Comparison of modelled seismic loss against historical damage information
<p>The increasing loss of human life and property due to earthquakes in past years have increased the demand for seismic risk analysis for people to be better prepare...
Mineral Resources and Society
Mineral Resources and Society
Modern society cannot live without electric and electronic products, concrete, glass, fertilizers, ceramics, motor vehicles, airplanes, refrigerators, stoves, and medical equipment...
ON THE INFLUENCE OF MINERAL IMPURITIES ON THE MANIFESTATION OF DANGEROUS PROPERTIES OF COAL SEAMS
ON THE INFLUENCE OF MINERAL IMPURITIES ON THE MANIFESTATION OF DANGEROUS PROPERTIES OF COAL SEAMS
Purpose: to establish a possible correspondence between metamorphic processes with artificial thermal destruction of coals and their ashing in order to identify the components of m...
Ontology, archetypes and the definition of ‘mineral species’
Ontology, archetypes and the definition of ‘mineral species’
AbstractOntologydeals with questions concerning what things exist, and how such things may be associated according to similarities and differences and related within a hierarchy. O...

Back to Top