Tuyau

A tuyau (French for 'pipe') is an ancient invention for producing cool, dry compressed air from a flow of water. It is a remarkable device because it can produce almost any degree of compression and has no moving parts or seals to wear. A pipe is constructed. One end of the pipe points up stream, to capture a flow of water. As the water enters the pipe, nozzles entrain bubbles in the water. The pipe then goes down. As the pressure increases, the air in the bubbles is compressed. The bubbles shrink. At the bottom, the pipe turns up a bit to a plenum. It then flows sideways. The compressed bubbles rise to the plenum and pop. The pipe then turns down, emptied of air bubbles. It conveys the spent water back up to the surface to discharge the water. A small pipe from the plenum can be used to direct the compressed air to any use. Reportedly, tuyaus were used in place of bellows to feed Roman iron-working forges. Often the same forges had hammers powered by water-works.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
the art of computer programming
tapas
toledo
tristan da cunha
thomas r. marshall
the physiologus
the new yorker
t. h. white
the lizard
huckleberry finn
the seven samurai
theodosius dobzhansky
tor
treaty of berlin
the history of the decline and fall of the roman empire
trf
der ring des nibelungen
true basic
turgor
twilight 2000
technical and further education
tamil eelam
treaty of brest litovsk
times square
terry riley
tasmanian devil
tribulation
tantra
twelve step program
the washington times
type 209 submarine
tietze extension theorem
the nature of god in western theology
transgender
thomas j. watson
the life and times of scrooge mcduck
the clan mcduck
topaz
ted raimi
the monkees
thermobaric weapon
tabasco sauce
talc
tom collins