ETD Chapter 5
ETD Chapter 5
ETD Chapter 5
PSYCHROMETRY
psychrometry is a term used to describe the field of engineering concerned with the
determination of physical and thermodynamic properties of gas-vapor mixtures.
Common applications
The principles of psychrometry apply to any physical system consisting of gas-vapor
mixtures. The most common system of interest, however, air mixtures of water vapor and air
because of its application in heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning and meteorology.
Psychrometric ratio
The psychrometric ratio is the ratio of the heat transfer coefficient to the product of mass
transfer coefficient and humid heat at a wetted surface. It may be evaluated with the following
equation
where:
r = Psychrometric ratio, dimensionless
hc = convective heat transfer coefficient, W m-2 K-1
ky = convective mass transfer coefficient, kg m-2 s-1
cs = humid heat, J kg-1 K-1
Humid heat is the constant-pressure specific heat of moist air, per unit mass of dry air.
The psychrometric ratio is an important property in the area of psychrometrics as it relates the
absolute humidity and saturation humidity to the difference between the dry bulb temperature
and the adiabatic saturation temperature.
PSYCHROMETIC CHART
The chart graphically expresses how various properties relate to each other, and is thus a
graphical equation of state. The thermophysical properties found on most psychrometric charts
are:
Dew point temperature (DPT) is that temperature at which a moist air sample at the same
pressure would reach water vapor saturation. At this saturation point,water vapor would begin to
condense into liquid The dew point temperature is measured easily and provides useful
information, but is normally not considered an independent property.
Relative humidity (RH) is the ratio of the mole fraction of water vapor to the mole fraction of
saturated moist air at the same temperature and pressure. RH is dimensionless, and is usually
expressed as a percentage. Lines of constant RH reflect the physics of air and water: they are
determined via experimental measurement.
Humidity ratio (also known as moisture content, mixing ratio, or specific humidity) is the
proportion of mass of water vapor per unit mass of dry air at the given conditions (DBT, WBT,
DPT, RH, etc.). It is typically the y-axis, the vertical axis, of the graph. For a given DBT there
will be a particular humidity ratio for which the air sample is at 100% relative humidity: the
relationship reflects the physics of water and air and must be measured. Humidity ratio is
dimensionless ,but is sometimes expressed as grams of water per kilogram of dry air or grains of
water per pound of air.
Specific enthalpy symbolized by h, also called heat content per unit mass, is the sum of the
internal (heat) energy of the moist air in question, including the heat of the air and water vapor
within. In the approximation of ideal gases, lines of constant enthalpy are parallel to lines of
constant WBT. Enthalpy is given in (SI) joules per kilogram of air or BTU per pound of dry air.
Specific volume, also called inverse density, is the volume per unit mass of the air sample. The
SI units are cubic meters per kilogram of dry air; other units are cubic feet per pound of dry air.
The versatility of the psychrometric chart lies in the fact that by knowing three independent
properties of some moist air (one of which is the pressure), the other properties can be
determined. Changes in state, such as when two air streams mix, can be modeled easily and
somewhat graphically using the correct psychrometric chart for the location's air pressure or
elevation relative to sea level. For locations at or below 2000 ft (600 m), a common assumption
is to use the sea level psychrometric chart.
DBT: This can be determined from the abscissa on the x-axis, the horizontal axis
DPT: Follow the horizontal line from the point where the line from the horizontal axis possible
arrives at 100% RH, also known as the saturation curve.
WBT: Line inclined to the horizontal and intersects saturation curve at DBT point.
RH: Hyperbolic lines drawn asymptotically with respect to the saturation curve which
corresponds to 100% RH.
Humidity ratio: Marked on the y-axis.
Specific enthalpy: lines of equal values slope from the upper left to the lower right.
Specific volume: Equally spaced parallel family of lines.
Specific humidity: Specific humidity is the ratio of water vapor to air (including water vapor
and dry air) in a particular mass.
Relative humidity: The relative humidity of an air-water mixture is defined as the ratio of the
partial pressure of water vapor in the mixture to the saturated vapor pressure of water at a
prescribed temperature. Relative humidity is normally expressed as a percentage.
Adiabatic Saturation: Consider an unsaturated mixture entering a chamber. Suppose water was
sprayed into the stream, so that the humidity increases and it leaves as a saturated mixture. This
is accompanied by a loss of temperature due to heat being removed from the air which is used for
vaporization. If the water supplied is at the temperature of exit of the stream, then there is no heat
transfer from the water to the mixture. The final temperature of the mixture is called adiabatic
saturation temperature.
Sensible Heating Process
Sensible Heating Process is a process during which the dry-bulb temperature of air is increased.
The process occurs at constant moisture content. The air passes over a hot and dry surface which
might be pipe coil using steam or hot water, electrical resistance or an air-to-air heat recovery
unit.
Two Marks
2. Define psychrometry.
The science which deals with the study of behaviour of moist air (mixture of dry air and
water vapour is known as phychrometry.
10. What is dew point temperature? How is it related to dry bulb and wet bulb?
Temperature at the saturation condition?
It is the temperature at which the water vapour present in air begins to condense the air is
cooled.For saturated air, the dry bulb, wet bulb and dew point temperature are all same.
16 .What are the assumption made while mixing two air streams?
1. Surrounding is small.
2. Process is fully adiabatic.
3. There is no work interaction
4. Change in kinetic and potential energies are negligible
12 MARKS
Solution Fig shows the mixing process of two air streams. The equations
3. Saturated air at 210C is passed through a drier so that its final relative humidity is 20%. The
drier uses silica gel adsorbent. The air is then
Solution:
6. Find the increase in entropy when 2 kg of oxygen at 600C are
Solution