Well, you seem like a very smart kid. Let me ask you something: if you had one pound of naiveness in one hand and one pound of idiocy in the other, which one weighs more? Let me tell you a secret: Its the same!
It depends on volume of the container and the temperature of the steam, the pressure, volume and temperature of a gas are related by the _ideal gas law_:
(where N is the number of particles in the gas, and k is a constant depending on the particular properties of the gas).
Assuming the law of conservation of mass holds true, you could get 1 pound of steam from 1 pound of water.
a pound of steam!
1000 btus
Yes...
144
One pound of air is equal in mass to one pound of water
It takes a lot more energy, water, labour to produce a pound of meat than a pound of corn. It takes pounds of corn and water to feed just one pig.
400 pounds of plain water is about 48 gallons.
40
For plain water about 41.7 pounds at 8.345lbs per gallon.
One pound of steam condenses back to one pound of liquid water. Since one gallon of water weighs 8.337 pounds, simply divide the weight of the condensate by 8.337 to find out how many gallons of condensate you have.
What weighs more 2000 pound of rice or 2000 of steel? meaning they are the same.
hp Boiler = (4675 pound of water in an hour / 34.5 ) = (4675 pounds in an hour of steam at 212 oF / 34.5)
To raise the temperature of 1 pound of water 1 degree F requires one BTU. If one pound of water at 62 degreesF is raised to 212 degreesF liquid, 150 BTU's would be required. When one pound of water at 212 degreesF is converted to steam, an additional 970 BTU's are absorbed. The total number of BTU's absorbed in converting one pound of water at 62degreesF to steam is 1,120 BTU's. Water weighs 8.33 pounds per gallon One gallon of water, when converted to steam, will absorb 9,330 BTU's (8.33 times 1,120)
2000 lbs
10 imperial pounds, 8.35 US pounds. It is the weight of 1 gallon of water.
1 pound of water is about 32 tablespoons.
One pound of air is equal in mass to one pound of water
In a sealed chamber with no loss of mass, five pounds of water plus sufficient heat will produce five pounds of steam. The mass of the water remains the same, regardless of its state. Freeze it, and you'd have five pounds of ice instead.
About 1/8 gallon of water in a pound
Wind, water, steam or another liquid or gas.
it takes 2 pounds of it