Properties of a uniform system or a uniform flow?

A uniform system (open or closed) requires only a single state (a set of properties) to describe its extended state. The system state is an extended state that builds upon the underlying thermodynamic state and includes, beside extrinsic properties, useful total (extensive) properties such as mass, volume, total energy, total entropy, etc., relevant to a system occupying a fixed volume at a given time.

When an evacuated propane tank is filled with propane from a large reservoir, propane within the tank can be described by system states (which, obviously changes during filling), while the flow at the neck of the bottle can be described by a flow state.

A uniform flow also requires only a single state to describe its extended state. The flow state  is an extended state that builds upon the underlying thermodynamic state and includes, besides extrinsic properties, useful transport (extensive) properties relevant to a flow such as the mass flow rate, volume flow rate, and rate of transport of energy, entropy, etc.

In order to evaluate the mass flow rate of steam at a turbine inlet, the flow state daemon is more useful than the system state daemon.

Extended States (System or Flow) and Their Thermodynamic (Equilibrium) Core
Copyright 1998-: Subrata Bhattacharjee