Steam Tables
Steam Tables
Steam Tables
What They Are…How to Use Them Total Heat of Steam (Column 6). The sum How the Table is Used
The heat quantities and temperature/ of the Heat of the Liquid (Column 4) and In addition to determining pressure/
pressure relationships referred to in this Latent Heat (Column 5) in Btu. It is the total temperature relationships, you can
Handbook are taken from the Properties heat in steam above 32°F. compute the amount of steam which will
of Saturated Steam table. be condensed by any heating unit of
Specific Volume of Liquid (Column 7). known Btu output. Conversely, the table
Definitions of Terms Used The volume per unit of mass in cubic feet can be used to determine Btu output if
per pound. steam condensing rate is known. In the
Saturated Steam is pure steam at the
temperature that corresponds to the application section of this Handbook, there
Specific Volume of Steam (Column 8). are several references to the use of the
boiling temperature of water at the existing
The volume per unit of mass in cubic feet steam table.
pressure.
per pound.
Absolute and Gauge Pressures
Properties of Saturated Steam
Absolute pressure is pressure in pounds
(Abstracted from Keenan and Keyes, THERMODYNAMIC PROPERTIES OF
per square inch (psia) above a perfect
STEAM, by permission of John Wiley & Sons, Inc.)
vacuum. Gauge pressure is pressure in
pounds per square inch above atmo- Col. 1 Col. 2 Col. 3 Col. 4 Col. 5 Col. 6 Col. 7 Col. 8
spheric pressure which is 14.7 pounds per Gauge Absolute Steam Heat of Latent Total Heat Specific Specific
square inch absolute. Gauge pressure Pressure Pressure Temp. Sat. Liquid Heat of Steam Volume of Volume of
(psia) (°F) (Btu/lb) (Btu/lb) (Btu/lb) Sat. Liquid Sat. Steam
(psig) plus 14.7 equals absolute pressure. (cu ft/lb) (cu ft/lb)
Or, absolute pressure minus 14.7 equals 29.743 0.08854 32.00 0.00 1075.8 1075.8 0.096022 3306.00
gauge pressure. 29.515 0.2 53.14 21.21 1063.8 1085.0 0.016027 1526.00
Inches of Vacuum
pressure/temperature combination, as 140.3 155.0 360.50 333.24 861.3 1194.6 0.018121 2.92
shown in the steam table. 150.3 165.0 365.99 338.53 857.1 1195.6 0.018183 2.75
160.3 175.0 370.75 343.57 852.8 1196.5 0.018244 2.60
180.3 195.0 379.67 353.10 844.9 1198.0 0.018360 2.34
200.3 215.0 387.89 361.91 837.4 1199.3 0.018470 2.13
225.3 240.0 397.37 372.12 828.5 1200.6 0.018602 1.92
250.3 265.0 406.11 381.60 820.1 1201.7 0.018728 1.74
300.0 417.33 393.84 809.0 1202.8 0.018896 1.54
400.0 444.59 424.00 780.5 1204.5 0.019340 1.16
450.0 456.28 437.20 767.4 1204.6 0.019547 1.03
500.0 467.01 449.40 755.0 1204.4 0.019748 0.93
600.0 486.21 471.60 731.6 1203.2 0.02013 0.77
900.0 531.98 526.60 668.8 1195.4 0.02123 0.50
1200.0 567.22 571.70 611.7 1183.4 0.02232 0.36
1500.0 596.23 611.60 556.3 1167.9 0.02346 0.28
1700.0 613.15 636.30 519.6 1155.9 0.02428 0.24
2000.0 635.82 671.70 463.4 1135.1 0.02565 0.19
2500.0 668.13 730.60 360.5 1091.1 0.02860 0.13
2700.0 679.55 756.20 312.1 1068.3 0.03027 0.11
3206.2 705.40 902.70 0.0 902.7 0.05053 0.05
2
Flash Steam (Secondary) The heat absorbed by the water in raising Condensate at steam temperature and
What is flash steam? When hot conden- its temperature to boiling point is called under 100 psig pressure has a heat
sate or boiler water, under pressure, is “sensible heat” or heat of saturated liquid. content of 308.8 Btu per pound. (See
released to a lower pressure, part of it is The heat required to convert water at Column 4 in Steam Table.) If this conden-
re-evaporated, becoming what is known boiling point to steam at the same sate is discharged to atmospheric
as flash steam. temperature is called “latent heat.” The pressure (0 psig), its heat content instantly
unit of heat in common use is the Btu drops to 180 Btu per pound. The surplus
Why is it important? This flash steam is which is the amount of heat required to of 128.8 Btu re-evaporates or flashes a
important because it contains heat units raise the temperature of one pound of portion of the condensate. The percentage
which can be used for economical plant water 1°F at atmospheric pressure. that will flash to steam can be computed
operation—and which are otherwise using the formula:
wasted. If water is heated under pressure,
however, the boiling point is higher than % flash steam = SH - SL x 100
H
How is it formed? When water is heated 212°F, so the sensible heat required is
at atmospheric pressure, its temperature greater. The higher the pressure, the SH = Sensible heat in the condensate at
rises until it reaches 212°F, the highest higher the boiling temperature and the the higher pressure before
temperature at which water can exist at higher the heat content. If pressure is discharge.
this pressure. Additional heat does not reduced, a certain amount of sensible SL = Sensible heat in the condensate at
raise the temperature, but converts the heat is released. This excess heat will the lower pressure to which
water to steam. be absorbed in the form of latent heat, discharge takes place.
causing part of the water to “flash” into H = Latent heat in the steam at the
steam. lower pressure to which the
condensate has been discharged.
25 300
CU FT FLASH STEAM
PERCENTAGE OF FLASH STEAM
A
20 200
B
C
15 100
D
E
F
10 G BACK PRESS. 0 100 200 300 400
CURVE LBS/SQ IN
PRESSURE AT WHICH CONDENSATE
A – 10 IS FORMED – LBS/SQ IN
B –5
5 C 0
D 10
E 20
F 30
G 40
0
– 20 0 50 100 150 200 250 300
PSI FROM WHICH CONDENSATE IS DISCHARGED
3
Steam…Basic Concepts
Steam is an invisible gas generated by Steam at Work… Condensate Drainage…
adding heat energy to water in a boiler. How the Heat of Steam is Utilized Why It’s Necessary
Enough energy must be added to raise
Heat flows from a higher temperature Condensate is the by-product of heat
the temperature of the water to the
level to a lower temperature level in a transfer in a steam system. It forms in
boiling point. Then additional energy—
process known as heat transfer. Starting the distribution system due to unavoid-
without any further increase in tempera-
in the combustion chamber of the boiler, able radiation. It also forms in heating
ture—changes the water to steam.
heat flows through the boiler tubes to the and process equipment as a result of
water. When the higher pressure in the desirable heat transfer from the steam to
Steam is a very efficient and easily
boiler pushes steam out, it heats the the substance heated. Once the steam
controlled heat transfer medium. It is
pipes of the distribution system. Heat has condensed and given up its valuable
most often used for transporting energy
flows from the steam through the walls of latent heat, the hot condensate must be
from a central location (the boiler) to
the pipes into the cooler surrounding air. removed immediately. Although the
any number of locations in the plant
This heat transfer changes some of the available heat in a pound of condensate
where it is used to heat air, water or
steam back into water. That’s why is negligible as compared to a pound of
process applications.
distribution lines are usually insulated to steam, condensate is still valuable hot
minimize this wasteful and undesirable water and should be returned to the boiler.
As noted, additional Btu are required to
heat transfer.
make boiling water change to steam.
These Btu are not lost but stored in the
When steam reaches the heat exchang-
steam ready to be released to heat air,
ers in the system, the story is different.
cook tomatoes, press pants or dry a roll
Here the transfer of heat from the steam
of paper.
is desirable. Heat flows to the air in an air
heater, to the water in a water heater or
The heat required to change boiling
to food in a cooking kettle. Nothing
water into steam is called the heat of
should interfere with this heat transfer.
vaporization or latent heat. The quantity
is different for every pressure/tempera-
ture combination, as shown in the
steam tables.
Condensate Steam
1 lb water
at 70°F
+ 142 Btu =
+ 970 Btu =
Figure 4-2. These drawings show how much heat is required to generate one pound of steam
1 lb steam at 100 pounds per square inch pressure. Note the extra heat and higher temperature required to
at 212°F make water boil at 100 pounds pressure than at atmospheric pressure. Note, too, the lesser
amount of heat required to change water to steam at the higher temperature.
Definitions
■ The Btu. A Btu—British thermal unit—is the amount of heat energy required to
raise the temperature of one pound of cold water by 1°F. Or, a Btu is the amount of
Figure 4-1. These drawings show how much heat energy given off by one pound of water in cooling, say, from 70°F to 69°F.
heat is required to generate one pound of ■ Temperature. The degree of hotness with no implication of the amount of heat
steam at atmospheric pressure. Note that it energy available.
takes1 Btu for every 1° increase in temperature ■ Heat. A measure of energy available with no implication of temperature. To
up to the boiling point, but that it takes more illustrate, the one Btu which raises one pound of water from 39°F to 40°F could
Btu to change water at 212°F to steam at 212°F. come from the surrounding air at a temperature of 70°F or from a flame at a
temperature of 1,000°F.
4
The need to drain the distribution The need to drain the heat transfer Non-condensable gases do not change
system. Condensate lying in the bottom unit. When steam comes in contact with into a liquid and flow away by gravity.
of steam lines can be the cause of one condensate cooled below the tempera- Instead, they accumulate as a thin film
kind of water hammer. Steam traveling at ture of steam, it can produce another on the surface of the heat exchanger—
up to 100 miles per hour makes “waves” kind of water hammer known as thermal along with dirt and scale. All are potential
as it passes over this condensate shock. Steam occupies a much greater barriers to heat transfer (Fig. 5-1).
(Fig. 5-2). If enough condensate forms, volume than condensate, and when it
high-speed steam pushes it along, collapses suddenly, it can send shock The need to remove air and CO2.
creating a dangerous slug which grows waves throughout the system. This form Air is always present during equipment
larger and larger as it picks up liquid in of water hammer can damage equip- start-up and in the boiler feedwater.
front of it. Anything which changes the ment, and it signals that condensate is Feedwater may also contain dissolved
direction—pipe fittings, regulating valves, not being drained from the system. carbonates which release carbon dioxide
tees, elbows, blind flanges—can be gas. The steam velocity pushes the
destroyed. In addition to damage from Obviously, condensate in the heat gases to the walls of the heat exchang-
this “battering ram,” high-velocity water transfer unit takes up space and reduces ers where they may block heat transfer.
may erode fittings by chipping away at the physical size and capacity of the This compounds the condensate drainage
metal surfaces. equipment. Removing it quickly keeps problem because these gases must be
the unit full of steam (Fig. 5-3). As steam removed along with the condensate.
condenses, it forms a film of water on
the inside of the heat exchanger.
yyyyy
,,,,,
,,,,,
yyyyy
,,,,,
yyyyy
STEAM
Figure 5-1.
NON-CONDENSABLE
,,,,,
yyyyy
GASES Potential barriers to
,,,,,
yyyyy
WATER heat transfer: steam
DIRT heat and temperature
,,,,,
yyyyy
SCALE must penetrate these
,,,,,
yyyyy
METAL
potential barriers to
FLUID TO BE HEATED COIL PIPE CUTAWAY
do their work.
Figure 5-2. Condensate allowed to collect in Figure 5-3. Coil half full of condensate can’t
pipes or tubes is blown into waves by steam work at full capacity.
A B passing over it until it blocks steam flow at
point A. Condensate in area B causes a
pressure differential that allows steam
pressure to push the slug of condensate along
like a battering ram.
Trap
Trap Trap Trap
Vent
Figure 5-4. Note that heat radiation from the distribution system causes condensate to form and, therefore, requires steam traps at natural low
points or ahead of control valves. In the heat exchangers, traps perform the vital function of removing the condensate before it becomes a barrier
to heat transfer. Hot condensate is returned through the traps to the boiler for reuse.
5
Steam…Basic Concepts
Effect of Air on Steam Effect of Air on Heat Transfer acid. Extremely corrosive, carbonic
Temperature The normal flow of steam toward the heat acid can eat through piping and heat
exchanger surface carries air and other exchangers (Fig. 7-2). Oxygen enters
When air and other gases enter the steam
gases with it. Since they do not condense the system as gas dissolved in the cold
system, they consume part of the volume
and drain by gravity, these non-condens- feedwater. It aggravates the action of
that steam would otherwise occupy. The
able gases set up a barrier between the carbonic acid, speeding corrosion and
temperature of the air/steam mixture falls
steam and the heat exchanger surface. pitting iron and steel surfaces (Fig. 7-3).
below that of pure steam. Figure 6-1
explains the effect of air in steam lines. The excellent insulating properties of air
reduce heat transfer. In fact, under certain Eliminating the Undesirables
Table 6-1 and Chart 6-1 show the various
temperature reductions caused by air at ^
conditions as little as of 1% by volume To summarize, traps must drain conden-
various percentages and pressures. of air in steam can reduce heat transfer sate because it can reduce heat transfer
efficiency by 50% (Fig. 7-1). and cause water hammer. Traps should
evacuate air and other non-condensable
When non-condensable gases (primarily gases because they can reduce heat
air) continue to accumulate and are not transfer by reducing steam temperature
removed, they may gradually fill the heat and insulating the system. They can also
exchanger with gases and stop the flow foster destructive corrosion. It’s essential
of steam altogether. The unit is then to remove condensate, air and CO2 as
Figure 6-1. Chamber containing air and “air bound.” quickly and completely as possible.
steam delivers only the heat of the partial A steam trap, which is simply an auto-
pressure of the steam, not the total pressure. Corrosion matic valve which opens for condensate,
Two primary causes of scale and corrosion air and CO2 and closes for steam, does
are carbon dioxide (CO2) and oxygen. this job. For economic reasons, the
CO2 enters the system as carbonates steam trap should do its work for long
dissolved in feedwater and when mixed periods with minimum attention.
with cooled condensate creates carbonic
6
What the Steam Trap Must Do steam at any time and especially on therefore, the steam trap must be able to
start-up. Air must be vented for efficient operate in the presence of dirt.
The job of the steam trap is to get conden-
heat transfer and to prevent system
sate, air and CO2 out of the system as
binding. A trap delivering anything less than
quickly as they accumulate. In addition,
all these desirable operating/design
for overall efficiency and economy, the
5. CO2 venting. Venting CO2 at steam features will reduce the efficiency of the
trap must also provide:
temperature will prevent the formation of system and increase costs. When
carbonic acid. Therefore, the steam trap a trap delivers all these features the
1. Minimal steam loss. Table 7-1 shows
must function at or near steam tempera- system can achieve:
how costly unattended steam leaks
ture since CO2 dissolves in condensate
can be.
which has cooled below steam 1. Fast heat-up of heat transfer
temperature. equipment
2. Long life and dependable service.
2. Maximum equipment temperature
Rapid wear of parts quickly brings a trap
6. Operation against back pressure. for enhanced steam heat transfer
to the point of undependability. An efficient
Pressurized return lines can occur both 3. Maximum equipment capacity
trap saves money by minimizing trap
by design and unintentionally. A steam 4. Maximum fuel economy
testing, repair, cleaning, downtime and
trap should be able to operate against the 5. Reduced labor per unit of output
associated losses.
actual back pressure in its return system. 6. Minimum maintenance and a long
trouble-free service life
3. Corrosion resistance. Working trap
7. Freedom from dirt problems. Dirt is
parts should be corrosion resistant in
an ever-present concern since traps are Sometimes an application may demand a
order to combat the damaging effects
located at low points in the steam system. trap without these design features, but in
of acidic or oxygen-laden condensate.
Condensate picks up dirt and scale in the vast majority of applications the trap
the piping, and solids may carry over which meets all the requirements will
4. Air venting. Air can be present in
from the boiler. Even particles passing deliver the best results.
through strainer screens are erosive and,
Condensate Steam
Figure 7-2. CO2 gas combines with Figure. 7-3. Oxygen in the system speeds
condensate allowed to cool below steam corrosion (oxidation) of pipes, causing pitting
temperature to form carbonic acid which such as shown here.
corrodes pipes and heat transfer units. Note Figs. 7-2 and 7-3 courtesy of Dearborn
groove eaten away in the pipe illustrated. Chemical Company.
Table 7-1. Cost of Various Sized Steam Leaks at 100 psi (assuming steam costs $5.00/1,000 lbs)
Size of Orifice Lbs Steam Wasted Total Cost Per Month Total Cost Per Year
(in) Per Month
1/2 835,000 $4,175.00 $50,100.00
7 637,000 3,185.00 38,220.00
/16
3 470,000 2,350.00 28,200.00
/8
5 325,000 1,625.00 19,500.00
/16
1 210,000 1,050.00 12,600.00
/4
3 117,000 585.00 7,020.00
/16
1 52,500 262.50 3,150.00
/8
The steam loss values assume clean, dry steam flowing through a sharp-edged orifice to
atmospheric pressure with no condensate present. Condensate would normally reduce these
losses due to the flashing effect when a pressure drop is experienced.