Heat; a Manual for Technical And Industrial Students

Cover Heat; a Manual for Technical And Industrial Students
Heat; a Manual for Technical And Industrial Students
John Arthur Randall
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Required to produce the steam at this pressure from water at 32. The number of B. T. U. In the steam is less than this value by an amount equal to the external work done during the pro- duction of the steam.
The specific heat of each gas is different from that of every other gas. In gas-engine computations and in com- putations involving flue gases or other mixtures of air and products of combustion, it is usual to take the specific heat, and any factors depending upon the specific heat, VIII.
...EXPANSION OF GASES 201 as the same as for air. Notice that in Table VI the value for CC>2 falls far enough below that given for air, and that the value for N is enough above to give an average result equaling the value for air.
In the general formula, PV= RT (see page 90), R equals . 37 when V is expressed in cubic feet and P ( in pounds per square inch. If P is expressed in pounds per square foot, R will equal . 37X144 (sq. In. ) or 53. 37. This value for R can also be obtained by expressing the values of the specific heat at constant pressure and at constant volume as shown in the following table: Gas.


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