water is a liquid, steam is a gas
The water heater has an electric heating element that is responsible to make the water hot if submerged to water. While the Calorifier is composed of steam coil where the steam from boiler passes through, is responsible to make the water hot if it get contact to the steam coil.
Water vapour is water in it's gas form. It's invisible, 'dissolved' into the air. Steam is where the hot water vapour has condensed out of the air, it's a lot of small water droplets mixed in with the air.
A block of frozen water is a solid. Melt the ice and it becomes water. Boil the water and it becomes vapour (steam/gas).
No, they are not. The forces between molecules in steam are not as strong as those present in liquid water.
These are same
water is a liquid but water vapours is steam... when we boil water it will turn into steam which is called water vapours...
a steam boat is on the water and a train is on railroad tracks
mist steam are the condensed water vapour and we can see them but we cant see the water vapours
A calorifier produces hot water, not steam, whilst a steam generator obviously produces steam
the difference is that water vapour is just one particle that joins together with more and more to form steam
The primary difference between a pressurized water reactor (PWR) and a boiling water reactor (BWR) is that in the BWR, water is actually boiled, and the steam is used to drive a steam turbine, while in the PWR, the primary coolant is not allowed to boil, but is circulated in a closed loop to boil water in a steam generator. The BWR circulates primary coolant through the steam turbine in a closed loop. The PWR contains the primary coolant in a loop that includes the steam generator, and not the steam turbine.
The water heater has an electric heating element that is responsible to make the water hot if submerged to water. While the Calorifier is composed of steam coil where the steam from boiler passes through, is responsible to make the water hot if it get contact to the steam coil.
They are in 2 different states? The 3 states - Solid/Liquid/Gas.
It is the difference between the saturation temperature corresponding to the steam inlet pressure of feed water heater and it's outlet temperature.
The main difference between a diesel and a steam engine is the diesel engine is an internal combustion and the steam engine is external combustion.
Water vapour is water in it's gas form. It's invisible, 'dissolved' into the air. Steam is where the hot water vapour has condensed out of the air, it's a lot of small water droplets mixed in with the air.
boiler use many type of working fluids like water, Mercury, liquid sodium, etc., but steam generator works only with water as working fluid. hence all steam generator are boilers but all boilers are not steam generators...