evaporation
e·vap·o·rate
E0248200 (ĭ-văp′ə-rāt′)e·vap·o·ra·tion
(ĭ-văp′ə-rā′shən)evaporation
Noun | 1. | evaporation - the process of becoming a vapor |
2. | evaporation - the process of extracting moisture |
单词 | evaporation | ||||||
释义 | evaporatione·vap·o·rateE0248200 (ĭ-văp′ə-rāt′)e·vap·o·ra·tion(ĭ-văp′ə-rā′shən)evaporation
evaporationevaporationnounevaporate(iˈvӕpəreit) verbEvaporationevaporation,change of a liquid into vapor at any temperature below its boiling pointboiling point,temperature at which a substance changes its state from liquid to gas. A stricter definition of boiling point is the temperature at which the liquid and vapor (gas) phases of a substance can exist in equilibrium. ..... Click the link for more information. . For example, water, when placed in a shallow open container exposed to air, gradually disappears, evaporating at a rate that depends on the amount of surface exposed, the humidityhumidity, moisture content of the atmosphere, a primary element of climate. Humidity measurements include absolute humidity, the mass of water vapor per unit volume of natural air; relative humidity (usually meant when the term humidity ..... Click the link for more information. of the air, and the temperature. Evaporation occurs because among the molecules near the surface of the liquid there are always some with enough heat energy to overcome the cohesion of their neighbors and escape (see adhesion and cohesionadhesion and cohesion, attractive forces between material bodies. A distinction is usually made between an adhesive force, which acts to hold two separate bodies together (or to stick one body to another) and a cohesive force, which acts to hold together the like or unlike ..... Click the link for more information. ; mattermatter, anything that has mass and occupies space. Matter is sometimes called koinomatter (Gr. koinos=common) to distinguish it from antimatter, or matter composed of antiparticles. ..... Click the link for more information. ). At higher temperatures the number of energetic molecules is greater, and evaporation is more rapid. Evaporation is also increased by increasing the surface area of the liquid or by increasing the air circulation, thus carrying away the energetic molecules leaving the liquid before they can be slowed enough by collisions with air molecules to be reabsorbed into the liquid. If the air is humid some water molecules from the air will pass back into the liquid, thus reducing the rate of evaporation. An increase in atmospheric pressure also reduces evaporation. The process of evaporation is always accompanied by a cooling effect. For example, when a liquid evaporates from the skin, a cooling sensation results. The reason for this is that only the most energetic molecules of liquid are lost by evaporation, so that the average energy of the remaining molecules decreases; the surface temperature, which is a measure of this average energy, decreases also. Many refrigerationrefrigeration, process for drawing heat from substances to lower their temperature, often for purposes of preservation. Refrigeration in its modern, portable form also depends on insulating materials that are thin yet effective. ..... Click the link for more information. processes are based on this principle. Evaporationthe concentration of solutions (most often, solutions of solids in water) by the partial vaporization of the solvent during boiling. During this process the concentration, density, viscosity, and boiling point of the solution are raised. In a supersaturated solution, the dissolved material precipitates out. The boiling point of the solutions is always higher than the boiling point of the solvents; the difference between them, called the temperature depression, grows with an increase in the concentration of the dissolved substance and in external pressure. Evaporation is produced by the introduction of external heat. At temperatures lower than 200° C the heat carrier is water vapor; above 200° C, high-boiling liquids (diphenyl mixture, oil) and fuel gases. Heating takes place through the wall of the apparatus and, in very aggressive mediums, by bubbling gas through the solution or by atomizing the solution in a stream of gas. Evaporation is carried out at atmospheric, decreased, or increased pressure. In most cases it is economically feasible to work under pressure greater than 0.1 meganewton per sq m (1 kilogram-force per sq cm), since it is then possible to use the secondary vapor for heating other apparatus. When working with thermally unstable substances, a vacuum evaporator is used: this makes it possible to lower the boiling points of the solutions and to decrease the heat surface (as a result of an increase in the temperature difference between the heating agent and the boiling solution). A vacuum is created in the apparatus by condensing the secondary vapor and drawing out the uncondensed air-vapor mixture with a vacuum pump. Evaporation is used in the chemical and food industries, as well as in other branches of industry. There are more than 80 different steam-heated evaporation devices. In small-scale production, vertical and horizontal cylindrical evaporation devices heated by means of heating coils or jackets are usually used; in large-scale production there are devices with internal and outflow heating chambers; film devices, in which a stream of vapor draws up a thin film of solution, which creates favorable conditions for evaporation; and devices with forced circulation. The last are used when it is necessary to prevent the precipitation of salts on the heating surface, and also for the evaporation of viscous solutions. In single-shell devices, 1.2-1.25 kg of heating vapor are required to evaporate 1 kg of water. Multishell devices, the most widely distributed of which is the direct-flow type, are much more economical. In this type of device the weak solution and the heating vapor, moving in the same direction, enter the evaporation devices consecutively. In the last device, which is linked to a barometric condenser and a vacuum pump, a partial vacuum is created; as a result of this, the pressure and boiling point of the solution gradually decrease from the first to the last casing. Because of this, a cross flow and evaporation of the solution are created upon heating by the secondary vapor. In reverse-flow devices the solution and the heating vapor move toward each other; in a parallel feed, the weak solution is simultaneously supplied to all casings. In practice there are seldom more than five casings, since the useful temperature differential becomes very small upon further increase. In a three-shell device, 0.4 kg of heating vapor is required to evaporate 1 kg of water; in a five-shell device, 0.25-0.28 kg is required. Multishell evaporation de-vices are widely used in large-scale production requiring a large quantity of heating vapor (for example, in the production of sugar). REFERENCESKasatkin, A. G. Osnovnye protsessy i apparaty khimicheskoi tekhnologii, 7th ed. Moscow, 1961.Gel’perin, N. I. Vyparnye apparaty. Moscow-Leningrad, 1947. Kichigin, M. A., and G. N. Kostenko. Teploobmennye apparaty i vyparnye ustanovki. Moscow-Leningrad, 1955. Kolach, T. A., and D. V. Radun. Vyparnye slantsii. Moscow, 1963. Lunin, O. G. Teploobmennye apparaty pishchevoipromyshlennosti. Moscow, 1967. V. L. PEBALK Evaporationthe passage of a substance from the liquid or solid state of aggregation into the gaseous state (vapor). Evaporation is usually understood to mean the transition of a liquid to vapor that takes place on the free surface of the liquid. The evaporation of solids is called volatilization or sublimation. As a result of the thermal motion of molecules, evaporation is possible at any temperature, but as the temperature rises—that is, as the intensity of the thermal motion of molecules increases—the rate of evaporation increases. At a given constant temperature in a closed space or vessel, evaporation takes place until the space above the remaining liquid (or solid) is filled with saturated vapor. The saturation vapor pressure depends only on temperature and increases with it. The curve that depicts saturated vapor pressure as a function of temperature is called the equilibrium evaporation curve (see Figure 1). If the pressure of the saturated vapor that fills microscopic cavities in the liquid becomes equal to or somewhat greater than the pressure in the gaseous phase above the surface of the liquid, evaporation becomes boiling. The highest boiling temperature of a given substance is its critical temperature. The critical temperature and pressure define the critical point—the end point on the equilibrium evaporation curve. Beyond this point the coexistence in equilibrium of the two phases, liquid and vapor, is impossible. Upon passing from a liquid into a vapor a molecule must overcome the forces of molecular cohesion in the liquid. The work against these forces (the work function) and the work against the external pressure of the vapor already formed are accomplished by means of the kinetic energy of the thermal motion of the molecules. The liquid is cooled as a result of evaporation. Therefore, for the process of evaporation to be isothermic, that is, for it to proceed at constant temperature, a certain amount of heat λ (joules per kg or joules per mole), called the heat of evaporation, must be imparted to each unit of mass of the substance. The heat of evaporation decreases with rising temperature, decreasing particularly rapidly near the critical point, at which it vanishes. The heat of evaporation is related to the derivative of the saturation vapor pressure with respect to temperature by the Clausius-Clapeyron equation, on the basis of which the numerical values of X for liquids are determined. The rate of evaporation decreases sharply when a sufficiently strong film of a nonvolatile substance is applied to the surface of the liquid. The evaporation of a liquid takes place more slowly in a gaseous medium, such as air, than in rarefied space (a vacuum), since as a result of the collisions with gas molecules part of the vapor particles return once again to the liquid (condense). Evaporation is one of the first-order phase transitions, which are characterized by a nonzero heat of phase transition. In the process that is the inverse of evaporation—that is, in the formation of a liquid phase from vapor (condensation)—the heat of evaporation is released. Evaporation is used in technology as a means of purifying substances or separating liquid mixtures by distillation. It is the basis of steam power engineering, the operation of refrigeration units, and all processes used to dry materials. Under natural conditions evaporation is the only means by which moisture is transferred from the oceans and dry land into the atmosphere; it is the main component of water circulation on earth. REFERENCESKikoin, I. K., and A. K. Kikoin. Molekuliarnaia fizika. Moscow, 1963.Vukalovich, M. P., and I. I. Novikov. Tekhnicheskaia termodinamika, 3rd ed. Moscow-Leningrad, 1962. Konstantinov, A. R. Isparenie v prirode.Leningrad, 1963. P. A. REBINDER evaporation[i‚vap·ə′rā·shən]evaporatione·vap·o·ra·tion(ē-vap'ŏ-ra'shŭn),e·vap·o·ra·tion(ē-vap'ŏr-ā'shŭn)Synonym(s): volatilization. evaporationthe physical change when a liquid becomes a gas. Since such a change usually requires heat as an energy source, heat is drawn from the immediate environment, which produces a significant cooling effect. The size of the cooling effect depends on the latent heat of evaporation of the liquid. Evaporation of water is used by mammals in temperature regulation through sweating, and occurs in plants from the surface of the mesophyll cells during TRANSPIRATION.evaporation
Synonyms for evaporation
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