bled ateam is used in turbines.
This simply means in a steam/water mixture the proportion of steam to the total mass of steam and water. This is relevant to BWR's which produce a steam/water mixture at the core outlet.
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The fuel does not matter, it would be more relevant to post if you are hot water or steam, that is where your problem lies. If steam try raising the boiler cutout pressure a little bit and if hot water look at the boiler pressure, does the pump work, is the coupling broken and do you have air in the system that needs to be bled?
Steam powered literally means powered by steam. In 1712 Thomas Newcomen developed the first steam engine in which steam is let into a cylinder, then condensed, the resulting vacuum pulling the piston into the cylinder. James Watt improved on the design by adding a separate condenser. Richard Trevithick pioneered high pressure steam, where steam under pressure forces the piston up the cylinder rather than relying on atmospheric pressure to push it into the cylinder as in Newcomen's engines. Sir Charles Parsons brought steam power into the modern era with his invention of the steam turbine in 1884.
The steam turbine will produce 400 J of output, and the steam engine 250 J. That's what the efficiency figure means.
'Insanguinated' means bled to death.
"Dismayed" would be a word that rhymes with "everyday" and also means "bled" in a sense of feeling distressed or upset.
Bleeding of steam means Extracting steam from Turbines for heating the feed-water. Normally, there are High Pressure Heaters & Low Pressure heaters in Condensate cycle. Steam bleed out from the turbine gets into these heaters and heats up the feed-water (generally termed as Sensible Heat Addition). The steam that was bled can be re-used as condensate in Deaerators. Steam Extractions although reduce net work output but helps in overall gain in efficiency in terms of Reduced Fuel Consumption.
kelp
If someone "bleeds out" or has "bled out" it means they died because they lost a great amount of blood due to a wound not being closed (or able to be closed).
That means there is air in the lines and must be bled out.
bled
The past participle of "bled" is also "bled." For example, "The wound had bled for hours."
obliged
Steam rate means how much mass of steam entering into system per time.........
The simple past of bleed is bled, and the past participle is also bled.
The participle of bleed is 'had bled' , 'has bled' or 'have bled'. The inclusion of 'had', 'have' , 'has' is what makes it participle.