1 M3 of water will make 1 tomme of steam
for converting cubic meter to ton , density or specific volume is needed. specific volume unite is m3/kg. steam cubic meter/ (cubic meter/kg)= steam (kg ) /1000= tone of steam
That would change according to how much pressure it was under.
You can't get an answer without knowing at the very least, the pressure and temperature of the steam and the volume of gas. With this information, see the ideal gas law, PV=nRT. n is number of moles and R is gas constant. number of moles is the mass / molecular mass (18g/mol for water). 1 cubic metre of water at 0C and standard pressure will have a density of 1g/ml, therefore, 1000kg or 1,000,000g.
What you meant by this question is uncertain. If you are asking about the definition then Boiler steam pressure is the pressure developed by a water steam boiler, else if you are asking about the Rated boiler steam pressure then it is the safe operating pressure a boiler can operate, else if you are asking about Maximum boiler steam pressure then it is the maximum pressure that a boiler can produce with out failure.
steam
Steam engines produce smoke from the coal or wood they burn to produce heat to boil water tocreate pressure to drive pistons to move drive wheels. The "smoke" most people see is actually steam vapor from stack released during operation.
It is converted to heat first; this heat is then used to produce superheated steam. The pressure of the steam is what drives the electric generators.
The main uses for packing steam in a turbine are to produce electricity and power. The steam creates pressure when in turn spins a turbine at very high rates of speed.
Steam is generated by heat from the combution of fuel in a furnace or by waste heat from a process. The heat is transferred to water in the boiler shell, which then evaporates to produce steam under pressure.
I'm currently benchmarking a number of plants in my company which produce steam for downstream processing. What is a typical kWh/kg of steam ratio I could set as a best practice target? Thanks Paul
A boiler produces steam at a high temperature and pressure. It is used to push a piston or a turbine, to produce mechanical energy. The steam coming out can then be used to drive a low-pressure turbine and so on. At the end the steam can be condensed to extract the latent heat, and then the water goes back to the boiler.
Assuming all the water becomes steam in that 1 minute: 1 gallon = 0.13368 cubic feet and the volumetric expansion of water into steam is 1675. Therefore 1 gallon of water will produce 1675 x 0.13368 = 223.914 cubic feet of steam. Which would also be 223.914 cubic feet per minute since the water is evaporated in 1 minute.