Jan 18, 2008 #1 JAIFAR Chemical Nov 2, 2007 11 0 0 GB Hi Do anyone could tell me please what is the correlation of TEG at different temperatures? regards
Jan 18, 2008 #2 dcasto Chemical Jul 7, 2001 3,570 0 0 US .51 btu/lb-f at 60 F and fairly linear to .57 at 260 F. from Dow gas conditioning fact book. Upvote 0 Downvote
Jan 20, 2008 Thread starter #3 JAIFAR Chemical Nov 2, 2007 11 0 0 GB Thanks dcasto This link may be useful as well, but i was struggling to use it since it is not for pure TEG. http://www.dow.com/PublishedLiterat...ycol/pdfs/noreg/612-00004.pdf&fromPage=GetDoc Upvote 0 Downvote
Thanks dcasto This link may be useful as well, but i was struggling to use it since it is not for pure TEG. http://www.dow.com/PublishedLiterat...ycol/pdfs/noreg/612-00004.pdf&fromPage=GetDoc
Jan 20, 2008 #4 dcasto Chemical Jul 7, 2001 3,570 0 0 US for simplicity you can just use the weight percent of TEG and weight percent of the other compound to get the weighted average Specific heat. The table should give the same result if the the other compound is water. Thats what the isotherm lines represent 100% TEG to 0% TEG 100 % water. Upvote 0 Downvote
for simplicity you can just use the weight percent of TEG and weight percent of the other compound to get the weighted average Specific heat. The table should give the same result if the the other compound is water. Thats what the isotherm lines represent 100% TEG to 0% TEG 100 % water.