mwemag
Materials
- Mar 28, 2006
- 42
I am looking for a method and calculation parameters for preventing net evaporation of a hot static fluid in a closed box. The aim is to keep the fluid (or at least a certain amount of it) in its liquid state.
I'm not very familiar with thermodynamic calculations, but I suppose that the solution would be to create a equilibrium state in which the evaporation rate equals the condensation rate. This idea is based on the rule, that evaporation in a closed container will proceed until there are as many molecules returning to the liquid as there are escaping. At this point the vapor is said to be saturated, and the pressure of that vapor is called the saturated vapor pressure.
The inner space of the box is around 200 times larger than the volume of the fluid, (e.g. box volume 2 Liters, fluid volume 1 cl). The air in the box could also be any gas, whose pressure could be increased to around 30 atmospheres, or even higher if necessary. The constant temperature of the fluid would be a little below its boiling point at atmospheric pressure. It's evaporation rate at atmospheric pressure at the given temperature is around 1 g-cm2-s, vapor pressure at that temperature: ca. 50k Pa, and assuming the fluid having a flat surface.
The problem is that I don't know how to calculate the conditions for creating an equilibrium state in the given case. Actually every description of this topic I could find states that the saturated vapor pressure depends only on temperature, not on ambient gas pressure or volume sizes of container or fluid.
But in contrast to this rule, e.g. a small drop of water in a large closed vessel will probably evaporate completely because of the large air volume surroundig it, whereas a water volume of 3/4 of the vessel will likely reach an equilibrium state and therefore keep most of its volume liquid, indicating that the volume ratio indeed matters.
Second, by encreasing the pressure of the ambient air/gas the boiling temperature of any fluid will increase too, thereby also considerably reducing the evaporation rate of the fluid at lower temperatures, so ambient pressure is important too.
Obviously I have difficulties to understand the whole evaporation / saturated vapor pressure concept...
I appreciate any help.
Thanks
I'm not very familiar with thermodynamic calculations, but I suppose that the solution would be to create a equilibrium state in which the evaporation rate equals the condensation rate. This idea is based on the rule, that evaporation in a closed container will proceed until there are as many molecules returning to the liquid as there are escaping. At this point the vapor is said to be saturated, and the pressure of that vapor is called the saturated vapor pressure.
The inner space of the box is around 200 times larger than the volume of the fluid, (e.g. box volume 2 Liters, fluid volume 1 cl). The air in the box could also be any gas, whose pressure could be increased to around 30 atmospheres, or even higher if necessary. The constant temperature of the fluid would be a little below its boiling point at atmospheric pressure. It's evaporation rate at atmospheric pressure at the given temperature is around 1 g-cm2-s, vapor pressure at that temperature: ca. 50k Pa, and assuming the fluid having a flat surface.
The problem is that I don't know how to calculate the conditions for creating an equilibrium state in the given case. Actually every description of this topic I could find states that the saturated vapor pressure depends only on temperature, not on ambient gas pressure or volume sizes of container or fluid.
But in contrast to this rule, e.g. a small drop of water in a large closed vessel will probably evaporate completely because of the large air volume surroundig it, whereas a water volume of 3/4 of the vessel will likely reach an equilibrium state and therefore keep most of its volume liquid, indicating that the volume ratio indeed matters.
Second, by encreasing the pressure of the ambient air/gas the boiling temperature of any fluid will increase too, thereby also considerably reducing the evaporation rate of the fluid at lower temperatures, so ambient pressure is important too.
Obviously I have difficulties to understand the whole evaporation / saturated vapor pressure concept...
I appreciate any help.
Thanks