gunster
Petroleum
- Apr 7, 2015
- 5
I've always learned that sensible heat vs. latent heat was just a difference in temperature change with respect to enthalpy changes, where sensible heat occurs when heat causes temperature to change.
However, I was wondering for a specific fluid: if you had a enthalpy vs. temperature diagram, and you increase the enthalpy of the fluid while keeping constant temperature by changing pressure. If you are outside the two-phase envelope while this enthalpy change occurs, is this still considered sensible heat even though temperature is kept constant?
Or basically: is sensible heat a function of both temperature and pressure and can still be nonzero if temperature change is zero?
Thank you in advance
However, I was wondering for a specific fluid: if you had a enthalpy vs. temperature diagram, and you increase the enthalpy of the fluid while keeping constant temperature by changing pressure. If you are outside the two-phase envelope while this enthalpy change occurs, is this still considered sensible heat even though temperature is kept constant?
Or basically: is sensible heat a function of both temperature and pressure and can still be nonzero if temperature change is zero?
Thank you in advance