The Steam Engine Considered As a Thermodynamic Machine a Treatise On the Thermo
The Steam Engine Considered As a Thermodynamic Machine a Treatise On the Thermo
James H James Henry Cotterill
The book The Steam Engine Considered As a Thermodynamic Machine a Treatise On the Thermo was written by author James H James Henry Cotterill Here you can read free online of The Steam Engine Considered As a Thermodynamic Machine a Treatise On the Thermo book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is The Steam Engine Considered As a Thermodynamic Machine a Treatise On the Thermo a good or bad book?
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We will now consider the case of a steam engine working under conditions of maximum efficiency. The figure (Fig. 19) shows the indicator diagram of an engine of 144 PERFECT THE HMO DYNAMIC MACHINES. [Cn. V. maximum efficiency, X being the line from which pressures are measured, and Y the line from which volumes are measured. At the point 1 the pressure and volume of 1 Ib. Of water in the boiler are represented, which water, during admission, is evaporated at constant pressure, as represented by... the straight line 1 2, the other extremity 2 of which represents the pressure and volume of the steam produced. The steam is then cut off, and expansion takes place without gain or loss of heat till the pressure has fallen to 3, which must be supposed the pressure in a surface condenser. At the end of the stroke the piston returns, and condensation takes place under that same constant pressure. So far the diagram is exactly the same as an ordinary indicator diagram in which expansion has been carried to its extreme limit, namely, till the pressure has fallen to the pressure of the condenser.
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