According to the NCEES syllabus, fuels and combustion are fair game on the HVAC exam (see applications/equipment and components/boilers and furnaces/fuel types and combustion). Inorganic chemistry...I'm not studying that, but maybe it is helpful for combustion problems.I'm using the PPI online HUB to help me study for the HVAC PE Exam. For the Energy/Mass Balances section of the test it's saying to read Ch. 20-21 which are inorganic chemistry and fuels and combustion... Is this a mistake? If so, which chapters in MERM should I use to study for this section? View attachment 16412
@MikeGlass1969 can tell you Combustion was actually an important part when he took the HVAC exam. He doesn’t seem to be active on the boards anymore, but search his old posts.I'm taking the HVAC exam as well. My plan for studying fuels and combustion was to just familiarize myself with the reference manual. I'm not sure if that's a good strategy or not, but that's what I'm doing. I could be wrong, but the combustion probably makes up a tiny portion (if any) of the HVAC exam. If they do ask you a question or two you can probably find the answer right in the reference manual. I guess I will find out.
Thanks for the feedback! I guess this makes sense. I never really think about combustion in regards to HVAC."I ain't dead yet, Slay"!!!!
Slay speaks truth, combustion problems had a significant presence on my exam. I would study these hard.
For example be able to calculate the partial pressure of water in the flue gas. or something along those lines
Can I PM you to check my answer or should I post here?Also recommend “reverse” combustion analysis, in which the composition of combustion products is provided (given the composition of combustion products of a known hydrocarbon fuel, do you know how to calculate, say, the air-fuel ratio?)
Also, something like the attached (we consider this “advanced”)
View attachment 16415
This problem is discussed in pages 2 and 3 of this thread (click the link below). However, we can talk about it here, absolutely. Can you show your work?Can I PM you to check my answer or should I post here?
The water enters as a compressed liquid at 70F, so that is the inlet temperature of the water. So, for the water, the enthalpy at the inlet is calculated with the saturated liquid approximation for compressed liquids:Here’s what doesn’t make sense to me about this problem (unless I made a mistake somewhere).
Based on the information given, the water vapor in the exhaust gas would condense at 134F. Yet the saturation temperature of the water that is evaporating is 281F. So it’s impossible to get the water vapor in the exhaust gases to condense at 134F if the water is evaporating at 281F.
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