This depends on infinitely various contextual variables within the scenario and the precise meaning of the question. Certain events are assured to occur in consequence, and an indeterminate but almost near-infinite number of other consequences are potential.
Water is heated to produce steam. The steam is used to power the engine. The power from the engine does the work or powers other instruments that do the work.
steam quality increase
steam is lost in the plant through variuos way. But generally it is through heat transfer to the product to be heated by the steam. Also heat transfer through the conducting passage.
The property of steam is the precipitants ingress through the water in to the steam cycle The steam conductivity and silica contents so called property of steam. there fore the boiler drum chlorides(cause of higher conductivity in the Super heated steam) and water PH has to be controlled to get pure Super heated Steam from boiler drum risers. Silica can cause of turbine blades erosion. Higher Conductivity cause of Chlorides which can cause of Corrosion on turbine blades. PH controlled to avoid acid attack and pitting and scales deposition.
Steam has a minimum temperature of 212 degrees Fahrenheit or 100 degrees Celsius, because those are the temperature at which water boils under normal pressure. Once steam goes below those temperatures it turns back into water. Steam can be heated above those temperatures under certain conditions and is then called superheated steam.
the ice melts and condenses into steam
the dirty water evaporates to forms steam and the dirt stays behind this steam is the condensed, pure water can be collected.This process is called distillation.
Magnesium burns brightly when heated in steam to form magnesium oxide and hydrogen. Mg(s) + H2O(g) --> MgO(s) + H2(g)
Steam comes from boiling water.
Steam
Steam Heated Islands - 1925 was released on: USA: 10 May 1925
Super heated steam which is more than 2000C
It is a steam engine.
steam
1st it "changes" into water, and if heated long enough, at high enough temperature, it "changes" to steam, then, it eventually evaporates.
If your distilled water is turning brown when heated, it wasn't distilled very well.
When water is heated it begins to vaporize into the air as steam. If the water is allowed to boil for a while, it will totally evaporate into the air.