On Aug 8, 2011 6:45 AM, "Abd ul-Rahman Lomax" <a...@lomaxdesign.com> wrote:

> Uh, Jouni, "the wetness in steam" is "liquid water
> droplets." What did you think it was?
>
You do not have sense of what is large droplet and and what is tiny droplet
such as in fog.

But I pardon me, that i should make this specification but i thought that it
was too obvious and this is a common sense, that people can make a
difference for liquid water and wetness of steam, but obviously I was wrong.

But i think that here is your trouble that since you do not have any
understanding of the droplet size, that differentias spilled water from wet
steam.

But, instead of talking this absolutely ridiculous "very wet steam", then
could you show at least one link that demonstrates steam quality that is
less than 90% in around 100°C. But I think that you just pick ideas from,
Joshua, Steven and Peter, but do not really understand what these basic
concepts are meaning.

Like I previously said, in normal tea pot, cutting forces that causes water
to be "atomized" are far larger than in E-Cat and still ALL TEA POTS IN THE
WORLD, produces good quality steam such as 98%. The reason for this is,
because you do not get very wet steam by boiling, but in order to make very
wet steam, you need to have first of all high velocity steam and then you
need to have aggressive cooling of the steam so that pressure and
temperature drops few megapascals rapidly. This also how fog is created,
when air temperature drops below dew point. But boiling does not produce
fog, but it is the contrary, the cooling of the steam. And if you want high
water content for the fog in temperatures above 100°C, you need to have very
high velocities. (Pressure difference measured in megapascals)

Very wet steam is analogous for super cooled liquid water. Where water stays
below freezing, because it has high velocity such as in rapids. You may get
very wet steam, e.g. 60% quality steam, in steam turbins, where high
pressure steam is cooling rapidly, but velocity is still high. In some
experimental settings, i think that even 10% quality steam has been
produced, when they have tested steam quality measurement instruments.

—Jouni

Ps. Since there is not much references for "vet wet steam", most of the
conclusions here are my own. Therefore, this message may contain minor
errors in some details.

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