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Page Title: PROPERTY DIAGRAMS AND STEAM TABLES
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Change of Phase Summary (Cont.)
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Thermodynamics Heat Transfer and Fluid Flow Volume 1 of 3
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Pressure-Temperature (P-T) Diagram

Thermodynamics PROPERTY DIAGRAMS AND STEAM TABLES PROPERTY DIAGRAMS AND STEAM TABLES Property  diagrams  and  steam  tables  are  used  in  studying  the  theoretical  and actual properties and efficiencies of a given system. EO 1.16 Given a Mollier diagram and sufficient information to indicate the state of the fluid, DETERMINE any unknown properties for the fluid. EO 1.17 Given a set of steam tables and sufficient information to indicate the state of the fluid, DETERMINE any unknown properties for the fluid. EO 1.18 DETERMINE the change in the enthalpy of a fluid as it passes through a system component, given the state of the fluid at the inlet and outlet of the component and either steam tables or a Mollier diagram. Property Diagrams The phases of a substance and the relationships between its properties are most commonly shown on property diagrams.   A large number of different properties have been defined, and there are some  dependencies  between  properties.    For  example,  at  standard  atmospheric  pressure  and temperature  above  212°F,  water  exists  as  steam  and  not  a  liquid;  it  exists  as  a  liquid  at temperatures  between  32°F  and  212°F;  and,  it  exists  as  ice  at  temperatures  below  32°F.    In addition,  the  properties  of  ice,  water,  and  steam  are  related.    Saturated  steam  at  212°F  and standard atmospheric pressure has a specific volume of 26.8 ft3/lbm.   At any other temperature and pressure, saturated steam has a different specific volume.  For example, at 544°F and    1000 psia pressure, its specific volume is 0.488 ft3/lbm. There  are  five  basic  properties  of  a  substance  that  are  usually  shown  on  property  diagrams. These are: pressure (P), temperature (T), specific volume (n), specific enthalpy (h), and specific entropy  (s).    When  a  mixture  of  two  phases,  such  as  water  and  steam,  is  involved,  a  sixth property, quality (x), is also used. There are six different types of commonly encountered property diagrams.  These are:  Pressure- Temperature (P-T) diagrams, Pressure-Specific Volume (P-n) diagrams, Pressure-Enthalpy (P-h) diagrams,  Enthalpy-Temperature  (h-T)  diagrams,  Temperature-entropy  (T-s)  diagrams,  and Enthalpy-Entropy (h-s) or Mollier diagrams. Rev. 0 Page 41 HT-01

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