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Originally Posted by oliesteveo i used 144 and 970 btu for the change of state came up with10 degrees Correct. Nicely done.
i used 144 and 970 btu for the change of state came up with10 degrees
Originally Posted by oliesteveo here is another one 13080 btu were removed from 10 lbs of water at 218 degree f what would be the temp of the water Did you come up with this answer? Two hints: Specific heat of steam is 0.5 BTU/lb∙°F and Latent heat of Vaporization is 965 btu/lb (change steam to water).
I'm sure it's not as simple as 35.001 gallons and 98.6, and am dying to see the formula...
I remember in physics we had a question: A round tub with 2' height, made of standard steel has a volume of 50 gallons at 50*, and it is filled with 15 gallons of 50*F water. How many gallons of boiling water would it take to over flow the tub, and at what temp would the water be? Answer to the nearest 0.001gal and 0.1*F.
change of state at 212 degrees f 970 btu at this point
I converted to per pound because it was easier for me to follow, would have converted back at the end had I known its only 144 to ice. Guess I assumed more because there is so much energy in condensation. BTW, What is that exact number? Did not realize its 1 btu to drop ice 2 f, so would said 30 and gotten the answer wrong even knowing cost of getting to ice. Thanks for the formula and explanation on specific heat!
Originally Posted by oliesteveo If 11532 btu's were removed from 62 lbs of water at a 72 degrees f water temp , what would be the new temp of the water ? Homework Question....appreciate some help with a formula. Thanks Formula: BTU's = Lbs x Deg x SH (specific heat of material) Note: specific heat of water is 1.0. So with a little Algerbra: Btu ÷ (Lbs x SH) = Deg. Now to calculate Btu's required to lower temp from 72ºf to 32ºf (ICE), or 40ºf. 62 lbs x 40 deg x 1 SH = 2480 btu's 11532 - 2408 = 11408 btu's left at 32ºf Change of State - Latent heat of Fusion 144 btu/lb to change liquid to ice : 62 lbs x 144 btu's = 8928 btus Now we have used : 2480 (lowering temp to 32ºf) + 8928 (change of state) = 11408 btus 11532 - 11408 = 124 btus left Note: specific heat of ice is 0.5 124 Btu's ÷ (62 Lbs x 0.5 SH) = 4 degs 32ºf (ice) - 4ºf = 28ºf (final temperature)
Originally Posted by tedkidd 11532/62=186 per pound. 40 gets to freezing. How many btu to freeze a pound? probably more than 146, so I'd say new water temp 32f. This is it. You'll wind up with a water/ice slurry at 32 degrees. it will take 7440 BTU to drop the 62# from 72 to 32 (186 * 40) = 7440 This leaves 4092 extra BTUs for latent conversion You'll wind up with about 28# of ice by the time it's all done.
Originally Posted by oliesteveo yes sir...removing 11532 btu from 62 lbs of 72 degree f water there is a change of state latent and sensible i think here is another one 13080 btu were removed from 10 lbs of water at 218 degree f what would be the temp of the water Thanks for the help water at 218??? or STEAM at 218?
yes sir...removing 11532 btu from 62 lbs of 72 degree f water there is a change of state latent and sensible i think here is another one 13080 btu were removed from 10 lbs of water at 218 degree f what would be the temp of the water Thanks for the help
Originally Posted by oliesteveo If 11532 btu's were removed from 62 lbs of water at a 72 degrees f water temp , what would be the new temp of the water ? Homework Question....appreciate some help with a formula. Thanks 11532/62=186 per pound. 40 gets to freezing. How many btu to freeze a pound? probably more than 146, so I'd say new water temp 32f.
Either there is a typo here or you're getting into phase change, too. You're removing eleven thousand, five hundred and thirty two BTUs from sixty two pounds of water at seventy two degrees? I typed the full words out to prevent confusion. I ran a little math and this doesn't add up to a typical problem. Are you adding or removing heat? Also, moving thread to tech to tech. AOP is for equipment questions.
understand the definition, still confused on how to answer the question. Thanks for the response
It takes 1 BTU to raise 1 pound of water 1 degree F.
btu math help If 11532 btu's were removed from 62 lbs of water at a 72 degrees f water temp , what would be the new temp of the water ? Homework Question....appreciate some help with a formula. Thanks
btu math help
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