1. Heat Transfer in a Room with a Hot Box

Scenario:
A room contains a box at 500°C, and the room is filled with still air.

Question:
Rank the modes of heat transfer (conduction, convection, radiation) at:

  • Initial Stage
  • Intermediate Stage
  • Final Stage

Answer:

  • Initial Stage:
    • Radiation dominates due to high temperature difference and no air movement.
    • Natural Convection begins to set in gradually.
    • Conduction occurs only at points of direct contact (negligible for still air).
  • Intermediate Stage:
    • Natural Convection becomes more prominent as air starts circulating.
    • Radiation continues but reduces slightly as temperature difference decreases.
    • Conduction remains minimal.
  • Final Stage (Thermal Equilibrium):
    • Convection dominates as air movement becomes steady.
    • Radiation and conduction become minor as temperature gradients reduce.

💧 2. Absorption & Absorption Tower Mechanics

a) Difference between Absorption and Adsorption:

ParameterAbsorptionAdsorption
MechanismBulk phenomenon (enters phase)Surface phenomenon (sticks to surface)
Phases involvedGas-liquid, liquid-liquidSolid-gas, solid-liquid
ReversibilityOften difficultEasier to reverse

b) Counter-Current Absorption Tower:

  • Diagram: Draw a vertical tower with:
    • Gas Inlet (bottom)
    • Liquid Inlet (top)
    • Gas Outlet (top)
    • Liquid Outlet (bottom)
    • Flow directions: Opposite (counter-current)

c) Failure Conditions of Absorption Tower:

  • Flooding due to high gas velocity
  • Channeling due to poor packing
  • Weeping or Entrainment due to incorrect flow rates
  • Corrosion or material incompatibility

d) What if gas is replaced by liquid?

  • The tower will no longer function as a gas-liquid absorber.
  • System would need to be designed for liquid-liquid extraction, which has different flow behavior, solubility constraints, and residence time.

e) Is the tower suitable for liquid-liquid extraction?

  • No, not directly.
  • Requires modifications like:
    • Mixer-settler design
    • Specific internals for immiscible liquids
    • Longer residence time

🌫️ 3. Humidification & Psychrometry

a) Define Humidification:

  • The process of adding moisture (water vapor) to air.

b) How to Calculate Wet Bulb Temperature:

  • Use a psychrometer (dry bulb + wet bulb thermometer).
  • Use psychrometric chart or equations involving enthalpy balance.

c) What is Relative Volatility?

  • It is the ratio of vapor pressures (or K-values) of two components.
  • High relative volatility = easier separation via distillation.

d) Wet Bulb Depression:

  • Difference between dry bulb and wet bulb temperature.
  • Indicates moisture content in air.

e) Which Air is More Humid?

ParameterAir 1Air 2More Humid?
Wet Bulb DepressionLowerHigherAir 1 (more humid)
Relative HumidityHigherLowerAir 1 (more humid)

f) Graph – Wet Bulb Depression Across Seasons:

  • Summer: High WBD (dry air)
  • Monsoon: Low WBD (humid air)
  • Winter: Moderate WBD
  • Spring/Autumn: Transitional behavior

(Graph: X-axis = Months; Y-axis = Wet Bulb Depression)


🧯 4. Pumping System Analysis

Scenario:

  • Pump is at 1st floor
  • Draws water from ground floor (12 m below)
  • Needs to deliver water 20 m above 1st floor
  • Pump head = 40 m

Question:
Can it perform the task?

Solution:

  • Total Static Head = 12 m (suction) + 20 m (delivery) = 32 m
  • Since pump head (40 m) > total head (32 m),
    Yes, the pump can perform the task.

What is Priming?

  • The process of filling the pump casing and suction line with liquid to remove air before starting.

Why is Priming Required?

  • To avoid cavitation and ensure proper suction.
  • Especially critical in centrifugal pumps, which cannot pump air.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *