one kilogram staem condensed what is weight
i think 1 kg steam
A gram of water and a gram of steam are attracted by the Earth with equal "heaviness". Steam is less *dense* than water, until you get up to thousands of atmospheres of pressure.... then it doesn't seem to matter.
The difference is the evaporation heat (or the 'equal' condensation heat)
its the amount of water or any other high volatile substance evaporated ( in kg/hr)
4 kg/0.005m3 = 800 kg/m3
i think 1 kg steam
Latent heat of evaporation of water to steam is 2270 KJ/Kg
If the water content of the steam is 5% by mass, then the steam is said to be 95% dry and has a dryness fraction of 0.95.Dryness fraction can be expressed as:ζ = ws / (ww + ws) (1)whereζ = dryness fractionww = mass of water (kg, lb)ws = mass of steam (kg, lb)GAJANAN Nalegaonkar
A gram of water and a gram of steam are attracted by the Earth with equal "heaviness". Steam is less *dense* than water, until you get up to thousands of atmospheres of pressure.... then it doesn't seem to matter.
The answer will depend on the units for the temperature.
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
The answer will depend on the starting temperature of the water. It will also depend on the pressure.
The difference is the evaporation heat (or the 'equal' condensation heat)
18144 kg to CKG
Heat required to have such a change of state is called latent heat. If L J/kg is the latent heat per kg of water then for M kg of water we need M* L joule of heat energy
2260 kj/kg X 0.086 kg = 194 kj The heat of vaporization for water is 2260 kj/kg at 1 atmosphere pressure.
The energy required for a boiler to produce 1kg of steam is dependent on the size and pressure exerted by the boiler. The output is described as the boiler horsepower. Once the dimensions are known calculation is a simple ratio.