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________|________|________|__________| From the steam tables, the condensed Table 21 of the properties of steam at different pressures may be constructed. From such a table there may be drawn the following conclusions. TABLE 21 VARIATION IN PROPERTIES OF SATURATED STEAM WITH PRESSURE ___________________________________________________ | | | | | | | Pressure |Temperature | Heat of | Latent | Total | | Pounds | Degrees | Liquid | Heat | Heat | | Absolute | Fahrenheit |B. t. u. |B. t. u.|B. t. u.| |__________|____________|_________|________|________| | | | | | | | 14.7 | 212.0 | 180.0 | 970.4 | 1150.4 | | 20.0 | 228.0 | 196.1 | 960.0 | 1156.2 | | 100.0 | 327.8 | 298.3 | 888.0 | 1186.3 | | 300.0 | 417.5 | 392.7 | 811.3 | 1204.1 | |__________|____________|_________|________|________| As the pressure and temperature increase, the latent heat decreases. This decrease, however, is less rapid than the corresponding increase in the heat of the liquid and hence the total heat increases with an increase in the pressure and temperature. The percentage increase in the total heat is small, being 0.5, 3.1, and 4.7 per cent for 20, 100, and 300 pounds absolute pressure respectively above the total heat in one pound of steam at 14.7 pounds absolute. The temperatures, on the other hand, increase at the rates of 7.5, 54.6, and 96.9 per cent. The efficiency of a perfect steam engine is proportional to the expression (t - t_{1})/t in which t and t_{1} are the absolute temperatures of the saturated steam at admission and exhaust respectively. While actual engines only approximate the ideal engine in efficiency, yet they follow the same general law. Since the exhaust temperature cannot be lowered beyond present practice, it follows that the only available method of increasing the efficiency is by an increase in the temperature of the steam at admission. How this may be accomplished by an increase of pressure is clearly shown, for the increase of fuel necessary to increase the pressure is negligible, as shown by the total heat, while the increase in economy, due to the higher pressure, will result directly from the rapid increase of the corresponding temperature. TABLE 22 HEAT UNITS PER POUND AND WEIGHT PER CUBIC FOOT OF WATER
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