Material Flow Analysis: Difference between revisions

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* Arrows between boxes are for flows and fluxes of ''materials''
* Arrows between boxes are for flows and fluxes of ''materials''
** They have a label describing the ''material'' (e.g. "Gasoline")
** They have a label describing the ''material'' (e.g. "Gasoline")
** Ovals are used for the rate of the flow or flux, and may be omitted due to space constraints.
** Ovals are used for the rates of the flows or fluxex, and the surrounding oval may be omitted due to space constraints.


Taken from section 2.1.4 Process of ''Practical Handbook of Material Flow Analysis''.
Taken from section 2.1.4 Process of ''Practical Handbook of Material Flow Analysis''.

Revision as of 23:26, 12 August 2020

Introduction

Material flow analysis (MFA) is a methodology to analyze the flow of "materials" in-and-out of a system.

Built upon the law of conservation of energy, where energy can never be created or destroyed, only transferred, you can use material-balance equations to model complex systems such as the Seed Eco-Home.

See Material flow Analysis on Wikipedia for additional information.

Unanswered Research Questions

  • Can the formal concept of "Material flow analysis (MFA)" prove useful in the design of close-looped sustainable systems?

Definitions & Terms [1]

Taken from Chapter 2.1 of Practical handbook of material flow analysis:

  1. Substance - any (chemical) element or compound composed of uniform units (e.g. Carbon (C), Nitrogen (N), Carbon Dioxide (CO2), and Ammonium (NH3)).
  2. Good - economic entities of matter with a positive or negative economic value (e.g. wood, drinking water[2], mineral ores, concrete, and automobiles)
  3. Material - umbrella term for Substance and Good
  4. Process - transformation, transportation, or storage of Materials.
  5. Flow and Flux
  6. Transfer Coefficient
  7. System and System Boundaries
  8. Activities
  9. Anthroposphere and Metabolism
  10. Material Flow Analysis
  11. Materials Accounting

Diagrams

Box and Arrow

Using mainly simple boxes and arrows to represent materials flows with a few observed conventions:

  • Usually, processes are defined as black boxes
    • This means processes within the box are not taken into account
    • Only the inputs and the outputs are of interest
  • Arrows between boxes are for flows and fluxes of materials
    • They have a label describing the material (e.g. "Gasoline")
    • Ovals are used for the rates of the flows or fluxex, and the surrounding oval may be omitted due to space constraints.

Taken from section 2.1.4 Process of Practical Handbook of Material Flow Analysis.

Mfa-box-and-arrow-diagram.png

Sankey

A diagram related to MFA that may prove useful are Sankey diagrams.

Resources

References and Footnotes

  1. Brunner, P. H., & Rechberger, H. (2004). Practical handbook of material flow analysis. Boca Raton: Lewis /CRC Press.
  2. includes, besides H2O, calcium and other trace elements and is therefore not a substance