This one is driving me nuts; hopefully someone can help. As I understand it, the problem can be summarized as follows:
A wet blanket (6.25% moisture) at 75 degF travelling at a rate of 1fps is to be dried and raised to 400 degF. The blanket has a wet density of 1.6 pcf. The blanket has a heat capacity of 2btu/lb*degF. How much energy is required to evaporate the water and raise the blanket to 400 degF?
If you do some simple maths, you find that you need to evaporate 0.3lb/s of water and heat 4.5lb/s of blanket.
The NCEES solution is in two parts, first evaporate the water and second to heat the blanket to 400 degF:
Part 1:
"Water evaporation heat requirement: 0.3 x (975 - 50) = 277.5 btu/s"
Part 2:
"Blanket drying and curing heat requirement: 4.5 x 2 x (400-75) = 2,925 btu/s"
I have a number of problems with this solution:
1) Part 2 includes "blanket drying"; however the 4.5 lb/s is the mass of blanket ONLY. Water is not included in that mass.
2) In all the reference material I can find, the latent heat of vaporization of water is about 970 btu/lb. I have no idea where the "975" comes from
3) This solution appears to neglect the energy required to raise the temperature of the water from 75degF to 212 degF. My understanding is that to evaporate water you need to 1) provide sufficient energy to raise water to the boiling point and 2) provide the latent heat of vaporization to convert the liquid water (at 212 degF) to water vapor (at 212 degF).
4) The "water evaporation heat requirement" in the solution is LESS than the latent heat of evaporation for water. I'm pretty sure that it should be MORE than the latent heat. I think that the solution should be: massH2O/s x (latentHeat + 1btu/lb*degF x (212 degF - StartTemp)).
Any thoughts would be very much appreciated.
Thanks,
-Jeremy
A wet blanket (6.25% moisture) at 75 degF travelling at a rate of 1fps is to be dried and raised to 400 degF. The blanket has a wet density of 1.6 pcf. The blanket has a heat capacity of 2btu/lb*degF. How much energy is required to evaporate the water and raise the blanket to 400 degF?
If you do some simple maths, you find that you need to evaporate 0.3lb/s of water and heat 4.5lb/s of blanket.
The NCEES solution is in two parts, first evaporate the water and second to heat the blanket to 400 degF:
Part 1:
"Water evaporation heat requirement: 0.3 x (975 - 50) = 277.5 btu/s"
Part 2:
"Blanket drying and curing heat requirement: 4.5 x 2 x (400-75) = 2,925 btu/s"
I have a number of problems with this solution:
1) Part 2 includes "blanket drying"; however the 4.5 lb/s is the mass of blanket ONLY. Water is not included in that mass.
2) In all the reference material I can find, the latent heat of vaporization of water is about 970 btu/lb. I have no idea where the "975" comes from
3) This solution appears to neglect the energy required to raise the temperature of the water from 75degF to 212 degF. My understanding is that to evaporate water you need to 1) provide sufficient energy to raise water to the boiling point and 2) provide the latent heat of vaporization to convert the liquid water (at 212 degF) to water vapor (at 212 degF).
4) The "water evaporation heat requirement" in the solution is LESS than the latent heat of evaporation for water. I'm pretty sure that it should be MORE than the latent heat. I think that the solution should be: massH2O/s x (latentHeat + 1btu/lb*degF x (212 degF - StartTemp)).
Any thoughts would be very much appreciated.
Thanks,
-Jeremy