Sankey diagram

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File:Sankeysteam.png
Example of a Sankey diagram.
File:JIE Sankey V5 Fig1.png
Sankey's original 1898 diagram showing energy efficiency of a steam engine.

Sankey diagrams are a specific type of flow diagram, in which the width of the arrows is shown proportionally to the flow quantity.

Sankey diagrams are typically used to visualize energy or material or cost transfers between processes. They can also visualize the energy accounts or material flow accounts on a regional or national level.

Sankey diagrams put a visual emphasis on the major transfers or flows within a system. They are helpful in locating dominant contributions to an overall flow. Often, Sankey diagrams show conserved quantities within defined system boundaries.

History

Sankey diagrams are named after Irish Captain Matthew Henry Phineas Riall Sankey, who used this type of diagram in 1898 in a classic figure (see panel on right) showing the energy efficiency of a steam engine. While the first charts in black and white were merely used to display one type of flow (e.g. steam), using colors for different types of flows has added more degrees of freedom to Sankey diagrams.

One of the most famous Sankey diagrams is Charles Minard's Map of Napoleon's Russian Campaign of 1812. It is a flow map, overlaying a Sankey diagram onto a geographical map. It was created in 1869, so it actually predates Sankey's 'first' Sankey diagram of 1898.

Minard's classic diagram of Napoleon's invasion of Russia, using the feature now named after Sankey.

Active Examples

The United States Energy Information Administration (EIA) produces numerous Sankey diagrams annually in the Annual Energy Report which illustrate the production and consumption of various forms of energy. The report for year 2012 include the following diagrams:

The International Energy Agency (IEA) created an interactive Sankey web application that details the flow of energy for the entire earth. Users can select specific countries, points of time back to 1973, and modify the arrangement of various flows within the Sankey diagram.

The US Department of Energy's Lawrence Livermore Laboratory maintains a site of Sankey diagrams, including US energy flow and carbon flow.

Ben Schmidt, an Assistant Professor of History at Northeastern University, created a Sankey diagram relating majors in college to eventual careers.

Sankey Diagram Software Tools

The following software applications focus on drawing Sankey diagrams.

Name Creator First public release date Operating System OS Version
Sankey Diagram Creator InfoCaptor Dashboard Software 2015 Windows,Mac,Web,Linux Latest browsers with HTML5
Sankey for Android Jürgen Wilhelm 2014 Android 3.2 or higher
Sankey Editor Oliver Traun 2011 Windows XP or higher
Sankey Diagram squishLogic 2014 Apple iOS 7.0 or higher
e!Sankey ifu - The Hamburg Institute for Environmental IT 2006 Microsoft Windows Vista SP2 or higher
s.draw Altenburger Consulting 2010 Microsoft Windows 3.x or higher
Sankey Diagram Maker Dr. Hanny J Berchmans 2012 Microsoft Windows 7
Sankey Builder Rob Potschka 2014 Web based
Google Charts Google 2014 Web based
wikiBudgets wikiBudgets 2014 Web based
Python Library
for Making Sankey Diagrams
Matplotlib unknown Python based
Linux, Windows, MacOsX
and maybe other Python ports

See also

More Energy input means less energy wasted

References

External links