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Look at the ammonia phase diagram.
You have to cool the ammonia - otherwise, the temperature will not drop. At a pressure of 1 Atm. liquid ammonia exists in the temperature range of ~-75 to -33°C.
Quote from: AWK on September 13, 2020, 03:10:29 PMYou have to cool the ammonia - otherwise, the temperature will not drop. At a pressure of 1 Atm. liquid ammonia exists in the temperature range of ~-75 to -33°C. This is the object of my question - how is the Ammonia being cooled below -33°C ?
when removing the thermometer it will drop significantly
I can witness liquid NH3 achieving sub 'boiling point' temperatures by simpling removing a thermocouple from a container of liquid, typically around -40 to -60°C.
In this case there is no cooling taking place other than the evaporative cooling, the liquid ammonia, sitting in an adiabatic container can be measured at -33, when removing the thermometer it will drop significantly. How do I calculate this?
Evaporation continues below the boiling point, only without bubbles, as we often observe with water. So, further cooling could occur.Though, from -33°C to -70°C is doubtful, and "by removing the thermometer" sounds like a observation gone wrongly.