1. Introduction
The general industry of processes that work with equipment where there is energy transfer needs highly trained personnel in unit operations. People who possess that knowledge acquire the skills to find and solve efficiently different kind of problems in any industrial equipment or process. However, to have a complete understanding of this engineering area, it is necessary to understand its components. One of them is the heat transfer phenomenon, which is involved in many industries such as chemical and petrochemical, oil refineries, food industry, etc. This phenomenon must be profoundly understood when designing equipment that requires heat exchange due to the need to make use of maximum energy transfer. Hence the importance of studying the term entropy, since it is a particular physical quantity used to determine the part of the energy that cannot be used to produce work.
To train youth students in this area to be experts in energy systems in the future, the academy employs in their curricula particular tasks in unit operations laboratory, where the youth student can operate and understand the energy behavior of different systems. Although this methodology is highly valuable, it is complex to comprehend all phenomenological behavior entirely because it is essential to perform a significant number of experiments, which is not feasible in the time of dedication for all subjects. To mention an example, the experiments run in a shell and tube heat exchanger has to input many variables to control the exit temperature. Some variables can be handled but there are many others that cannot be manipulated, such as the number of deflectors, the number of tubes, length, diameter and material of the shell and tubes, number of tube passes, among others. Entropy and energy balances are affected by all the variables mentioned before. This situation makes it difficult for the student to understand all the internal phenomena happening inside a heat exchanger, causing a limitation in their total comprehension. This limitation affects the development of the educational skills of the students because it decreases their motivation during their learning process. The same problem happens when using other equipment. One way to help students to reach their goal of understanding all the phenomena in equipment is by using an essential complement such as computer tools, where the student using simulations can manipulate all the input variables they want and observe the behavior of all the output variables. Another way to help students is by using only books to complement their learning, but it takes lots of time to reach the goals, and it does not encourage students to obtain all the necessary knowledge as virtual media does [
1].
Developing software for training youth engineering students has become a necessary action because they allow interactive learning with high effectivity compared to traditional methods [
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7]. It means that the evolution of the learning process has created the need to use additional academic tools that are linked with the state of the art of technology. The creation and use of a different kind of software in all areas of knowledge [
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14] has been a solution to this problem. The new generation of students was born in a digital era [
15] where computers dominate over the books. This trend of learning addresses educators in the use of computers to teach their subjects.
Recent research on the development of educational skills has determined that schools and higher education institutions should not base their curricula on the knowledge acquisition in various areas of knowledge, but on the development of critical thinking [
16,
17,
18]. Current learning in engineering has the problem of gathering information which requires students with a good memory, but not with critical thinking. Therefore, critical thinking is not an innate ability of the student, but rather a skill acquired from an educational process oriented to the excellent exercise of the educating entity, as several educators have achieved through theoretical–practical activities [
19]. On the other hand, for the development of critical thinking, essential components of this good judgment of reason have been determined, such as knowledge, inference, evaluation, and metacognition [
20], which are based on comparison and analysis to make deductions from the processes in an inductive or deductive way, through the regulation of the cognitive system.
Through an evaluative guide, critical thinking of students is stimulated, since connections are established between two areas of knowledge. It helps to understand the proposed case studies more assertively, and also the analysis of processes, through a critical evaluation influenced by the acquired experience of thermodynamic phenomena [
21]. In this way, it is proposed the development of a thermodynamics software that encourages the cognitive and intellectual process of the student, thus generating professionals with broad metacognition [
20].
The Critical Thinking Community has defined critical thinking as the disciplined intellectual process of activating [
22], conceptualizing, applying, analyzing, synthesizing, and evaluating information gathered or generated by observation, experience, reflection, and reasoning with the help of a workshop related to the fundamental thermodynamic theory [
23,
24,
25,
26,
27], as well as being a guide for constructing propositions and acting [
28].
All thinking takes place within the framework of the specific area of knowledge, i.e., there are different ways of thinking: Biological, chemical, geographical, sociological, anthropological, historical, artistic, ethical, or philosophical, according to the domain of knowledge. Good learning implies thinking with discipline within the field of knowledge studied. It involves thinking logically, to formulate vital questions and problems, to express ideas clearly and precisely, to gather and evaluate information using ideas to interpret it, to formulate conclusions and solutions, to recognize and evaluate assumptions, implications, and consequences, to communicate effectively with others, and to relate what is learned in a subject with other subjects [
29].
To become a critical self-directed learner, which is the skill proposed through this educational tool to the engineering students, it is suggested seeking connections between what is known and what is sought to learn, identifying the underlying idea in the subject of study, learning the systematic way of thinking of field study, and identifying the thinking structure of the discipline [
30]. However, independent of the area of knowledge, there are eight essential elements of thinking present in all domains, where students think based on a purpose or point of view, which is supported by assumptions that lead to certain consequences [
31].
The main contribution of this paper is the development of new educational software to study a specific area of thermodynamics in engineering, as a powerful tool to promote critical thinking development in undergraduate students. The software was created to let students manipulate different variables such as temperature, pressure, volume, and mass rate, among other variables, to analyze the behavior of entropy in different systems, depending if the process is reversible or irreversible, for different substances by the use of mathematical equations coded in Matlab® with the implementation of a graphical user interface. The computer program was evaluated with four cognitive skills, which are graph, document, graph-table, and analysis. The assessment of these cognitive skills was carried out under two case studies in undergraduate students of mechanical engineering in the class of thermodynamics at the Universidad del Atlántico, where 130 youth students run the software MOLECULARDISORDER. The selected case studies were heat transfer of a liquid with a metal bar in a container, and energy loss of stream in a pipe. Some student´s T-tests were used to compare the degree of difficulty of each criterion. The importance of the software was confirmed in the learning process due to the significant positive effect found in the T-test.
2. Material and Methods
2.1. Critical Thinking Development
To develop critical thinking through an educational tool in engineering, the elements of critical thinking must be fulfilled. Thus, a theoretical–practical guide based on the MOLECULARDISORDER software has been proposed, as shown in
Figure 1, where the student must identify the purpose of what is being thought (Element 1), and the question that the student must try to answer (Element 2). Similarly, the student is guided in the assumptions that precede this thought, which must be able to justify it considering the previous knowledge acquired (Element 3).
The other elements of critical thinking in the student are achieved through a workshop shown in
Figure 2, which requires the use of the software.
Figure 2 shows a workshop about the second law of thermodynamics that students must develop completely during the thermodynamics class time with the help of the software. The student must set some operating conditions, then, change some input variables, and finally determine some output variables. With the obtained results, the table shown in
Figure 2 has to be filled. After that, students must proceed to make the plot shown in
Figure 2 and analyze the behavior found of the dependent variables writing a discussion of the results. In other words, the student must use the concepts and present his point of view to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of his propositions (Element 4) by identifying the input data for the development of calculations and operations with the software (Element 5). The student must present the information and evidence through plots of the process (Element 6). The student must identify the fundamental concepts of his reasoning, which allow us to study and obtain quantitative values of the phenomenon (Element 7). Finally, the students must infer on the results obtained and explain all the patterns found in the plots (Element 8). It is required to promote a set of cognitive skills (CS) to evaluate the development of the critical thinking of the students through an educational activity [
32], such as the argumentative claim (CS1), modeling (CS2), interpreting data/information (CS3), and organization (CS4).
The main objective of the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) [
33] and the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) [
34] is to determine the topics that students should learn at different levels, for the proper development of professional practice. However, the CCSS standard focuses on the required skills in mathematics, English, and literacy, while the NGSS standard is specifically oriented to the science area. Both standards were developed independently, but their practices in mathematics (CCSS.MATH.PRACTICE) can be applied simultaneously in an effective way.
The CS1, according to the NGSS Science Practice 7 standard [
33], is oriented to measure the ability of the students to support the conclusions with the result data, developing a robust point of view/argument through clear, well-sequenced statements, and understanding the objective of the case study. Therefore, the undergraduate student might propose the idea and opinion with a robust reason based on the fundamental thermodynamic concepts in the result and discussion section of the Workshop (Element 4).
The CS2 according to the standards NGSS Science Practices 2 [
33] and CCSS.MATH.PRACTICE.MP2 [
34], is developed by mean of the graph construction from the results obtained from the case study (Element 6). In addition, the data interpretation and information statement (CS3) defined according to the standard NGSS Science Practice 4 [
33], and CCSS.MATH.PRACTICE.MP3 [
34], is developed when the youth student reads the problem (Element 2 and Element 3), interprets the case study, and completes the table and plot (Element 6 and 7) of the thermodynamic workshop shown in
Figure 2 properly. On the other hand, the last cognitive skill studied was the complete organization of the whole document (Element 8) based on the CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.CCRA.W.4 standard [
34], which aims to encourage the ability on the youth student to elaborate an effective, clear, and coherent communication through the text structure and documentation of the results.
2.2. General Aim of the GUI Algorithm
The innovative program named MOLECULARDISORDER is a friendly graphical user interface (GUI) that can be used by undergraduate mechanical and chemical engineering students. The GUI has some important instructive and pedagogical components for an educational level that let students have a better comprehension of the real meaning of the relation of energy–entropy in conventional systems to reach the educational objectives of thermodynamic courses and the program outcomes expected for the new engineers.
It was designed with inputs that depend on the kind of system chosen (Container with a bar, steam stream in a pipe, evaporator, a container with a vessel, turbine, compressor, a container with resistance, and container with division).
Figure 3a–d shows the schematic diagram of some systems that can be run in the software MOLECULARDISORDER. Workshops of all these systems are implemented in the thermodynamic class. However, only the systems of
Figure 3a,b are presented in this article.
The main parameters used by the software are the temperature of the fluid and metal surfaces, the pressure of the system, the mass of the fluid and solid, volume, velocity of the fluid, etc.
The software was coded with mathematical expressions of different fluid physical properties as a function of the temperature, such as heat capacity, dynamic viscosity, density, among others. With the help of the mentioned correlations, it is obtained the output variables such as enthalpy, entropy, changes in entropy, entropy production, heat transfer, etc., these outputs help not only students, but also engineers in the industry to understand the heat efficiency of some of their systems in a chemical plant.
The software was designed to give a continuous learning process on this part of thermodynamics. The performance of a proposed system using MOLECULARDISORDER increases with the increase of the grade of learning of the user. The learning process has important implications for plant design engineers when assessing their equipment. Also, this software was registered in the National Leadership Copyright (D.N.D.A. Dirección Nacional de Derechos de Autor, in Spanish), with registering number 13-73-132, the date 15 April 2019.
2.3. Flowchart of the GUI
The software MOLECULARDISORDER was coded and tested in Matlab
®. The requirements of the system depend on the version of Matlab used. MOLECULARDISORDER can work on any Microsoft 32-bit or 64-bit Windows PC on which Matlab/Simulink is installed. Eight different case studies were coded, where the users can change the operating conditions depending on their needs.
Figure 4 illustrates the main view of the program with three emerging windows, one of them shows the system that can be selected by the user (eight different case studies); the other two show the first and second case studies.
The following flowchart
Figure 5 shows the computational steps used to make the code.
2.4. Fundamental Equations
To solve the proposed problems, MOLECULARDISORDER was focused on energy balance and the entropy change of substances equations [
22,
35]. The essential equations used in the problems discussed in this article are shown below and normally are used to conduct energy, exergy, and thermo-economic studies of a thermal process [
36,
37,
38,
39,
40].
2.4.1. Determination of Entropy in an Isolated Container
This section shows the equations used to determine the entropy of the selected case studies. In the first case study, the entropy change inside the container was calculated with Equation (1) as follows:
where m is the mass, C is the specific heat of the material,
and
are the respective temperatures of states 1 and 2. After determining the entropy change of the materials, the total entropy production between the two states was calculated with Equation (2).
The entropy production only depends on the entropy change of the bar and the water, since the container is isolated and does not present heat transfer to the surroundings.
2.4.2. Determination of Entropy Production in a Pipe with Saturated Steam
To determine the entropy production in a pipe with saturated steam, it is proceeded to calculate the entropy change of the fluid with Equation (3).
where
is the mass flow that goes through the pipe, S
1 and S
2 are the entropies in the inlet and the outlet of the pipe, respectively. Then, it is proceeded to find the entropy change from the heat that is transferred by the wall of the tube, see Equation (4). This heat transfer causes the fluid to change from state 1 to state 2.
where
is the heat lost by the fluid, and
is the temperature of the wall of the pipe. Finally, the entropy change of the surroundings is calculated considering the surrounds as a closed system, where
and
is the temperature of the surrounds, see Equation (5).
The entropy production is defined by the two entropy changes happening in the system, Equation (6).
4. Conclusions
A new friendly graphical user interface to promote critical thinking in youth engineering students called “MOLECULARDISRODER” was presented and evaluated with two case studies where the student can measure its learning capacity in the thermodynamic subject by making a simple analysis of different heating systems.
An analysis of the quantitative data was done to verify the positive effect of the software MOLECULARDISORDER on the youth student learning process in the two case studies. It was done using the T-Student tests with a level of significance of 0.05. An increase in the means of the grades was obtained for all the CS evaluated in the answers given by the students. The result obtained statistically shows that with the help of the software, the youth student got an improvement when performing problem 1 since the p-value was 0.03, indicating that there are significant differences between the results before and after taking the software. The overall averages of the youth student grades were higher for P1 after using the software (4.04 > 3.74). The total averages for P2 were also higher after taking the software (3.75 > 3.44); however, the p-value was 0.094, indicating that there was no significant effect on the use of the software.
It was determined that youth students present difficulty in interpreting data/information (CS3) cognitive skill, which measure the skill to read the problem, interpret the phenomena, and use the ability of the inference and the knowledge to solve the case study. So, the absence of a clear knowledge in the youth student of the fundamental thermodynamic processes imply a learning process based on inductive inference, since youth student proposed conclusions from inferred information, and not by means of a deductive inference from the case study result.
Comparing all the results between P1 and P2 with a confidence level of 95%, there is only a significant difference for the Element 6 and 7 of the critical thinking theories, which was evaluated in this research with the cognitive skill 3. It is evidenced by the average scores and educational performance in all the cognitive skills with the P1 were higher than P2, demonstrating that P2 has a higher degree of complexity.
Some technical phenomena presented in the case studies of the workshop benefit the development of critical thinking, due to facilitating the adoption of the cognitive skill that normally, under a traditional class, is difficult to obtain. One of these technical phenomena is presented in the case study of the container isolated with water, where the youth student needs to explain the entropy production behavior, at the same initial temperature of water decreases in a non-linear approach as the final temperature of the bar decreases.