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Approximately 30,000 gallons of water is required to condense one ton of steam.
No. It is water vapor. It acts similar to gases in some respects, but it is truly water vapor and will add to the atmosphere, when released, as moisture which can then condense and precipitate out, which gases will not do at ambient temperatures.
Clouds and steam are forms of evaporated water. Water is the main base for evaporation to occur. Bot clouds and steam can condense in a cool temperature, while water can bothe condense and evaporate. So they are not much alike.
As the steam releases thermal energy inside the radiator, it begins to cool down and condense back into water. This water then flows back to the boiler to be reheated and turned into steam again in a continuous cycle to provide heat.
When it is under 100 degrees celsius
Either reduce its temperature or increase the pressure on it, and provide something on which the steam can condense.
the work of the condensor is to condense the hot steam and change its state so that it can be used again in boiler
Condensate is what you get when you condense steam (water) that was heated in a boiler to make the steam. I'm not sure what else you are looking for.
When we boil water and expose the steam (water vapor) to a cold surface, it will condense into tiny drops of water on the cold surface. If you can see the 'steam'rising above the water, it has already condensed into tiny droplets of water in the cool air.
The steam condensed into droplets.
Heat the solution and condense the steam that comes off.
When steam turns to water, the particles lose energy and slow down, coming closer together. This causes the steam to condense into liquid water.