Joule-thomson Effect

The Joule-Thomson effect is a physical process in which the temperature of a gas is decreased by letting the gas expand adiabatically. It finds application in the Linde technique as a standard process in the petrochemical industry for example, where the cooling effect is used to liquefy gases. In general, when a gas expands adiabatically, the temperature may either decrease or increase, depending on the initial temperature and pressure. For a fixed pressure, a gas has a Joule-Thomson inversion temperature, above which expansion causes the temperature to rise, and below which expansion causes cooling. For most gases, at atmospheric pressure this temperature is fairly high (above room temperature), and so gases can be cooled by expansion. One notable exception is helium, whose Joule-Thomson inversion temperature at one atmosphere is about 40 K (−233 C). The only other gas which warms upon expansion at standard conditions is hydrogen. The change of temperature (ΔT) with respect to change of pressure (Δp) in a Joule-Thomson process is the Joule-Thomson coefficient \mu\ = {\Delta T \over \Delta p}; the Joule-Thomson inversion temperature is the temperature where it changes sign.

See also

References

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
indigenous dialogues
news corporation
chi square distribution
terms of endearment
funkadelic compilations
the big chill
the dresser
morgan state university
the right stuff
william h. prescott
tender mercies
sonny and cher
a passage to india
places in the heart
a soldier's story
kiss of the spider woman
101st airborne division
prizzi's honor
willem hendrik keesom
fernando flores
list of programming languages
u.s. 82nd airborne division
platoon (movie)
children of a lesser god
hannah and her sisters
the mission
a room with a view
jos ferrer
office of strategic influence
norma mccorvey
omagh bombing
1920 summer olympics
quodlibet
icy moon
space weather
estivation
grammatical conjunction
migration
anti aliasing
am broadcasting
talking animal
black scholes
fischer black
myron scholes