2023
DOI: 10.3390/e25030532
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Entropy and Cities: A Bibliographic Analysis towards More Circular and Sustainable Urban Environments

Abstract: Cities are critical to a sustainable future for our planet; still, the construction and operation of cities rely on intensive resource and energy use and transformation, leading to the generation of waste, effluents, and pollution, representing negative externalities outside and inside the city. Within every process, transformation implies the use of energy and the increase of entropy. In an urban system, the transformation of energy and materials will trigger the creation of entropic landscapes, mainly in the… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 84 publications
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“…Even if cities are ontologically different from living organisms, they are nevertheless self-organizing dissipative structures, which import and export energy and matter across their boundaries. Their outputs and outcomes vary due to irreversible internal processes, referred to as dissipation [35][36][37][38][39][40]. Rees [34] points out that "[c]ities, however (indeed, the entire human enterprise), are open, growing, dependent subsystems of the materially closed, nongrowing finite ecosphere" (p. 252).…”
Section: City As a Dissipative Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Even if cities are ontologically different from living organisms, they are nevertheless self-organizing dissipative structures, which import and export energy and matter across their boundaries. Their outputs and outcomes vary due to irreversible internal processes, referred to as dissipation [35][36][37][38][39][40]. Rees [34] points out that "[c]ities, however (indeed, the entire human enterprise), are open, growing, dependent subsystems of the materially closed, nongrowing finite ecosphere" (p. 252).…”
Section: City As a Dissipative Structurementioning
confidence: 99%