Redneck in training
Elite Member
gases dont boil
Of course they do boil when changing from liquid to gas vapor. Then at higher temperatures they are superheated (Way above their boiling point). In example air is a mixture of superheated gases.
gases dont boil
I don't have a pressure chart for the gas. Do you know of one? Some of these gases are stored at very high pressure.
Liquids boil. As I said, gases dont.Of course they do boil when changing from liquid to gas vapor. Then at higher temperatures they are superheated (Way above their boiling point). In example air is a mixture of superheated gases.
Well I agree. I should have said liquid gas. In the common industrial jargon liquid gas is often called just gas and people know that is liquid based on the context of the discussion.Liquids boil. As I said, gases dont.
larry
That's pretty interesting JJ. I was looking at ammonia. It is pretty high on the list. Ammonia is used in some cooling applications. Hydrogen...way down there on the list. If the talk about using hydrogen as a fuel source...it looks like it would take a lot of energy to compress and cool it to make it usable. Seems like a problem waiting to happen. Just thinking out loud...
That is one of the problems with hydrogen. It takes energy to make, energy to compress, energy to cool, and since it has low energy density it takes a lot of energy to transport it. I cannot understand why they think it will be a viable energy source any time soon.
We just had a serious explosion here at a hydrogen filling station. They believe a tank was leaking.
Ken
I can assure you that hydrogen goes through otherwise undetectable cracks in 1/4" steel.